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  2. Azalea (chimpanzee) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azalea_(chimpanzee)

    Azalea smokes about one pack of cigarettes a day, [1] though she reportedly does not inhale when smoking. [2] She is able to light her own cigarettes using a lighter and has also learned to light a cigarette by touching it to the end of a lit cigarette. [1] Azalea's trainers support her smoking, providing her with both supplies and encouragement.

  3. Monkey Drug Trials - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_Drug_Trials

    The Monkey Drug Trials experiment was influenced by preceding research discussing related topics. [2] Six notable research publications may be highlighted: “Factors regulating oral consumption of an opioid (etonitazene) by morphine-addicted rats”; [3] “Experimental morphine addiction: Method for automatic intravenous injections in unrestrained rats.”; [4] ”Morphine self ...

  4. Recreational drug use in animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recreational_drug_use_in...

    Vervet monkey consuming a human beverage (in this case non-alcoholic). Some vervet monkeys in the Caribbean, particularly teenaged individuals, exhibit a preference for alcoholic beverages over non-alcoholic ones, a taste which likely developed due to the availability of fermented sugar cane juice from local plantations. [2]

  5. Monkey torture videos prompt drive to include animals in ...

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    Sarah Kite, co-founder of Action for Primates, said examples that film-makers carry out included: clamping an infant monkey’s body with pliers; using lit cigarettes to burn a baby monkey tied to ...

  6. The weird history of a cigarette-smoking, hog-riding monkey ...

    www.aol.com/weird-history-cigarette-smoking-hog...

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  7. Animals and tobacco smoke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animals_and_tobacco_smoke

    The first recorded attempts to artificially induce animal tumors through the application of tobacco products occurred in 1911. [1] A 2004 series of monographs released by the International Agency for Research on Cancer, a part of the World Health Organisation, summarized research from the 1960s onwards about the carcinogenicity of tobacco on various laboratory animals.

  8. 'You're physically dying': 22-year-old spends 62% of her ...

    www.aol.com/finance/youre-physically-dying-22...

    Aracely is addicted to electronic cigarettes. In fact, she admitted to spending 62% of her monthly budget on the devices and other minor expenses. Not only has this addiction been expensive, it ...

  9. Amy Farrah Fowler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amy_Farrah_Fowler

    She has a PhD in neurobiology (Bialik herself has a PhD in neuroscience), with a research focus on addiction in primates and invertebrates, occasionally mentioning such experiments as getting a capuchin monkey addicted to cigarettes or getting a starfish addicted to cocaine. Amy goes on to win the Nobel Prize in Physics alongside her husband.