They won’t have been able to breathe the fresh air for long. Three laboratory monkeys who had taken advantage of a road accident to escape from the truck transporting them to the northeastern United States were found and euthanized on Saturday, local authorities announced.
The truck carrying around 100 crab-eating macaques collided with a garbage truck on Friday followingnoon near the small town of Danville in central Pennsylvania. Several monkeys “escaped from the scene of the accident and disappeared in the vicinity”, had tweeted the local police, calling on the population not to approach the animals.
New pictures of the monkeys police and game commission are trying to round up following a crash involving a truck they were in this followingnoon in Danville, PA . ???? we are told the 100 monkeys were being taken to a lab before the crash. 4 are still loose tonight. @CBS21NEWS pic.twitter.com/VqCOr3qYJ1
— Joel D. Smith (@JoelDReports) January 22, 2022
On Saturday evening, the police announced that the 100 monkeys had been found. But local media, citing US health authorities, said three of them had to be euthanized. Local authorities have not explained why the animals were killed.
On Saturday morning, Pennsylvania police released a photo showing a monkey perched in a tree, dazzled by a flashlight. According to the WNEP television channel, the police surrounded the animal and then shots were heard.
The price of a crab-eating macaque, also called a long-tailed macaque, can reach $10,000. These very common monkeys in Southeast Asia have been widely used in research on Covid vaccines, according to the New York Times. They can live 30 years in captivity.