Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 54— - TRANSPORTATION, SALE, AND HANDLING OF CERTAIN ANIMALS › § 2143
The Secretary must make clear, minimum rules for how dealers, research centers, exhibitors, carriers, and handlers must treat animals humanely. The rules must cover housing, feeding, watering, cleaning, ventilation, shelter from extreme weather, veterinary care, and separating species when needed. Dogs must get exercise set by a veterinarian under general rules, and primates must have environments that support their mental well‑being. For animals in research, extra rules must limit pain and distress, require vets and investigators to use anesthetics, pain relievers, and proper pre‑ and post‑surgical care when needed, forbid paralytics without anesthesia, limit repeated major surgeries on the same animal unless really necessary, and allow exceptions only when written into the study plan and reported to the facility’s review committee. Each research facility must have at least one review committee of at least three members appointed by the facility head. The committee must include a veterinarian and at least one member who is not affiliated with the facility and who represents the community. The committee must inspect animal areas at least twice a year, report any problems (including minority views), keep reports for three years, and give the facility time to fix issues. If problems are not fixed, the committee must notify federal inspectors and funding agencies. Federal research sites follow the same rules but report to their agency head, who must fix problems and approve inspection exceptions. Facilities must train staff on humane care, alternatives to animal use, and how to report problems. The Secretary must set up an information service at the National Agricultural Library to help with training and better methods. If a funding agency finds serious noncompliance after notice and a chance to fix it, it must suspend or end funding; affected facilities may appeal under sections 701–706 of title 5. Veterinarian health certificates are required for most dogs and cats sent for commercial transport if inspected within 10 days, and carriers must be protected against unpaid charges for animals unclaimed after 48 hours. States may add stricter rules.
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Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 2143
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73