sentience in marine invertebrates Flashcards

1
Q

what is Sentience

A

Sentience = the capacity to have feelings — mental states that are consciously experienced as good or bad e.g. love, joy, anger
- does not necessarily mean a sentient animal can reflect on its feelings, or understand the feelings of others – doesn’t mean conciousness

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1
Q

why does Sentience matter

A
  • means there are limits on what a human can ethically do to that being
  • also unethical to not show consideration of that being’s interests
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2
Q

who developed 8 criteria used to evaluate the argument for sentience in cephalopods and decapod crustaceans and what are they

A

Birch et al. (2021)
7-8: very strong evidence of sentience
5-6: strong evidence of sentience
3-4: substantial evidence of sentience

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3
Q

how many Confidence levels are there and what are they

A

5
- Very high confidence: weight of scientific evidence leaves no room for reasonable doubt
- High confidence: convinced, after carefully considering all the evidence, that the animals satisfy/fail the criterion, even though some room for reasonable doubt remains
- Medium confidence: some concerns about the reliability of the evidence, preventing high confidence
- Low confidence: there is little evidence that an animal satisfies or fails the criterion
- Very low or no confidence: evidence is either seriously inadequate or non-existent

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4
Q

how many criterion are there when it comes to if an animal has sentience or not

A

8

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5
Q

what is the first criteria

A

animal possesses receptors sensitive to noxious stimuli (nociceptors)

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6
Q

what is the second criteria

A

animal possesses integrative brain regions - capable of integrating information from different sensory sources

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7
Q

what is the third criteria

A

animal possesses neural pathways connecting the nociceptors to the integrative brain regions

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8
Q

what is the fourth criteria

A

animal’s behavioural response to stimulus is affected by chemical compounds affecting the nervous system e.g. either by an endogenous neurotransmitter system or local anaesthetics, analgesics

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9
Q

what is the fifth criteria

A

animal shows motivational trade-offs that show a balancing of threat against opportunity for reward

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10
Q

what is the sixth criteria

A

animal shows flexible self-protective behaviour (e.g. wound- tending, guarding, grooming, rubbing) in response to an injury or threat

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11
Q

what is the seventh criteria

A

animal shows associative learning in which noxious stimuli become associated with neutral stimuli, and/or ways of avoiding noxious stimuli are learned through reinforcement

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12
Q

what is the last criteria

A

animal shows that it values a local analgesic or anaesthetic when injured in one or more of the following ways:
a. animal learns to self-administer putative analgesics or anaesthetics when injured
b. animal learns to prefer, when injured, a location at which analgesics or anaesthetics can be accessed
c. animal prioritises obtaining these compounds over other needs (such as food) when injured

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13
Q

what were the Findings of Birch et al. (2021)

A
  • It was thought there would be a substantial gap between octopods and other invertebrates – review showed this was not actually the case
  • The balance of evidence tilts towards sentience in all the invertebrate groups considered
  • evidence is very strong in octopods + decapod crustaceans, true crabs (Brachyura)
  • There is substantial evidence in other coleoid cephalopods (squid, cuttlefish), anomuran crabs, and astacid lobsters/crayfish
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14
Q

what are Birch et al. (2021) recommendations

A

main = “We recommend that all cephalopod molluscs and decapod crustaceans be regarded as sentient animals”
- rather than having laws that protect only well-studied species, it is better to aim for broad coverage in high-level legislation
- Reinstating the ban on de-clawing
- Ending online retail (e.g. by Amazon) of live animals
- Clear regulations for handling, storage and slaughter of decapods, banning the least humane slaughter methods in cases in which a more humane method is clearly available
- In particular: prohibiting live boiling without prior stunning, in cases where an effective stunning method or a faster alternative is available (same goes for live dismemberment and osmotic shock)

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15
Q

what are the outcomes of Birch’s study

A
  • The UK government amended the Animal Welfare (Sentience) Bill, expanding it to cover all cephalopod molluscs and all decapod crustaceans
  • The bill recently became law, and the Animal Welfare (Sentience) Act 2022 now legally recognizes these invertebrates as sentient
  • Invertebrates also receive some legal protection in other countries, including Switzerland, New Zealand and Norway
16
Q

what will the future look like following Birch’s study

A
  • Decapod crustaceans will probably be added to the Animals in Scientific Procedures Act (1986) in the future (cephalopods are already included)
  • Much more research needed into welfare
  • POSITIVE affective states (linked to dopamine) have been recorded in insects