Recommendations for measuring and standardizing light for laboratory mammals to improve welfare and reproducibility in animal research

PLoS Biol. 2024 Mar 12;22(3):e3002535. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002535. eCollection 2024 Mar.

Abstract

Light enables vision and exerts widespread effects on physiology and behavior, including regulating circadian rhythms, sleep, hormone synthesis, affective state, and cognitive processes. Appropriate lighting in animal facilities may support welfare and ensure that animals enter experiments in an appropriate physiological and behavioral state. Furthermore, proper consideration of light during experimentation is important both when it is explicitly employed as an independent variable and as a general feature of the environment. This Consensus View discusses metrics to use for the quantification of light appropriate for nonhuman mammals and their application to improve animal welfare and the quality of animal research. It provides methods for measuring these metrics, practical guidance for their implementation in husbandry and experimentation, and quantitative guidance on appropriate light exposure for laboratory mammals. The guidance provided has the potential to improve data quality and contribute to reduction and refinement, helping to ensure more ethical animal use.

MeSH terms

  • Animal Experimentation*
  • Animals
  • Animals, Laboratory*
  • Circadian Rhythm / physiology
  • Mammals
  • Reproducibility of Results

Grants and funding

The workshop was supported by awards from UFAW (11-22/23), the Committee International de l-Eclairage, NASA Ames Research Center, and the University of Manchester. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.