FUR
Coats and toys sold in the U.S. and labeled as rabbit fur may be made with domestic dog and cat fur instead.
The energy needed to produce a fur coat from ranch-raised animal skins is approximately 20 times that needed for a fake fur coat.
Mink farms pollute our waterways with more than 60,000 tons of manure and 1,000 tons of phosphorus every year.
At least 70 million rabbits are slaughtered every year for their fur-it's used in clothing, as lures in flyfishing, and for trim on craft items and cat toys.
Items labeled "Persian lamb" are produced by slaughtering a mother sheep just before she gives birth, then cutting out her fetus and skinning it.
The Conibear 220 steel trap, popular with hunters, exerts 90 pounds of pressure per square inch?it takes between three and eight minutes for an animal victim to suffocate to death.
It takes nearly 10 minutes for a beaver to drown when captured in an underwater trap.
Tens of thousands of hamsters are strangled to death every year in Hungary for their furit takes 100 hamsters to make one fur coat.
More than one out of every three baby harp seals born in Canada each year are clubbed to death for their fur.
WOOL
Within weeks of birth, lambs' ears are hole-punched, their tails are chopped off, and the males are castrated without painkillers.
Every year, 6.5 million sheep are exported from Australia to the Middle East and North Africa, and up to 10 percent die during the 11-week journey.
New Zealand farmers pay a "fart tax" because of the methane emissions that come from their millions of sheep. Methane gas is a threat to the Earth's ozone layer.
In order to "protect" their sheep herds, ranchers slaughter millions of kangaroos and coyotes every year.
A "shearling" garment is made from a sheep or lamb shorn shortly before slaughter; the skin is tanned with the wool still on it.
Typically, 50 to 80 percent of cashmere goats with "defects" in their coats are killed before 2 years of age.
Because male angora rabbits have only 75 to 80 percent of the wool yield of females, they are usually killed at birth.
LEATHER
Every year, the global leather industry slaughters more than a billion animals for their skins and hides.
The cattle raised and killed for beef and leather consume enough food to exceed the caloric needs of the entire human population on Earth.
It takes four whole cows for every car interior.
Every year, 35,000 cows lose their skins for footballs.
Collagen used for injections into humans is usually derived from cowhides.
Although alligators may naturally live up to 60 years, on farms they are usually butchered before the age of 2.
It takes the skins of two or three alligators' bellies to make one handbag.
Kangaroos are slaughtered by the millions every year to make soccer shoes.
Hundreds of thousands of dog and cat skins are traded in Europe and are used to make products like baby shoes that may be sold in the U.S.