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ILLEGAL TO BOIL THEM ALIVE
Updated | Instead
of throwing live lobsters into a boiling pot of water to cook them,
chefs in Switzerland will now have to follow more humane practices.
Beginning March 1, cooking live lobsters is no longer permitted in restaurants.
The crustaceans “must now be stunned before they are put to death,” The Guardian reports.
“If
stunned electrically or if the brain is destroyed mechanically they are
effectively dead,” Robert Elwood, an ecology professor at Queen’s
University Belfast, told Newsweek via
email. “They would not recover consciousness if left in an attempt to do
so.”
Once
the crustaceans are stunned, they can then be boiled pain-free. The new law
comes after an abundance of evidence has shown that lobsters, crabs,
prawns and other invertebrates feel pain. Elwood has studied
crustaceans for decades and has explored whether the animals do in fact feel
pain—a belief that’s often debated. In a 2013 experiment, Elwood examined how crabs react to
being electrically shocked.
He gave the crabs two different
options for shelter: one that caused repeated shocks and another which didn’t.
The results revealed that the crabs were more likely to leave the shelter which
gave off the shocks, whereas the animals in the other shelter remained there.
“Assessing
pain is difficult, even with humans,” Elwood said, according to the journal Nature’s news
blog. But there’s “clear-long-term motivational change [in these experiments]
that’s entirely consistent with the idea of pain.”
Along
with the new cooking methods, the Swiss law also outlines new guidelines on
transporting the animals from the oceans to stove and ultimately, your dinner
table. According to the new law, “live crustaceans, including the lobster, may
no longer be transported on ice or in ice water,” reported euronews, a news media service in France. “Aquatic
species must always be kept in their natural environment.”
A similar law, which ruled it’s
cruel to put lobsters on ice, was passed last June in Italy’s highest
court.
“While
the particular method of cooking can be considered legal by recognizing that it
is commonly used, the suffering caused by detaining the animals while they wait
to be cooked cannot be justified in that way,” the judges wrote, Reuters reports.
The Swiss laws also addresses a number of other animal rights
issues, including puppy farms and devices that punish dogs for barking,
according to Reuters.
This article has been updated with a new quote by Robert
Elwood.
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