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San Fernando Valley : Waystation Reveals Death of Chimp

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He was never actually free.

Yet when Spike, a laboratory research chimpanzee from New York, was brought to the Wildlife Waystation in the Angeles National Forest in October, he came as close as he had ever come to a life of peace and liberty.

But Spike died of liver failure in November, less than a month after his arrival at the Waystation with eight other ex-laboratory chimps.

Spike’s death deprived him of what would have been his first opportunity to live in open contact with other chimps. His demise saddened those who cared for Spike, the youngest of the chimps brought to the refuge from New York University’s Laboratory for Experimental Medicine and Surgery in Primates. He died two days shy of his 16th birthday.

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Waystation founder Martine Colette revealed Spike’s death this week in a conversation about the status of the former lab chimps.

“It’s a tough one, for me, and for those at the Waystation,” said Dr. James Mahoney, deputy director of the NYU lab. “He never really had a chance to get settled and get to know anyone,” said Mahoney, who delivered Spike by caesarean section. Spike’s mother died four days after giving birth, and Mahoney raised Spike in his own home for nine months.

“This animal was a symbol to me,” Mahoney said. “He represented the plight of animals used in research. We owed him a better life.”

At the NYU lab, many chimps--social animals by nature--are held in separate cages to prevent disease from spreading. By retiring some lab chimps at Colette’s refuge, Mahoney had hoped to restore a modicum of comfort and relief to such animals.

Colette said she has begun the process of socializing five of the remaining eight NYU chimps, all of whom are in good health, according to Colette and Mahoney.

“It’s going very well,” she said. “We’re monitoring them closely, constantly changing the dynamics, seeing how they react to each other. It’s a very gradual process.”

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