Yes, knee replacement equipment and techniques were developed and tested in animals prior to being used in human medicine. The best part, though, is the technology and skill has returned to the veterinary field and knee replacements can be done for pets as well.
Clever titles for animal rights news articles can be tricky to come up with. One could be 'Taking Control of Dog Fighting in America' would be a catchy title.
A sense of security for the sellers of chemical materials that come into contact with humans.
This will depend on what you are looking for:1. A good web search for sites against animal testing would be for PETA, HSUS, ALF, etc. These are all special interest groups that are very anti-animal testing.2. A good web search for sites for animal testing would be the American Society of Lab Animal Practitioners (ASLAP, an organization for veterinarians that have specialized in treating and caring for lab animals).3. Good sites debating animal testing are hard to come by - I am not aware of any particular group that is putting up the information in an unbiased fashion.
Beta testing won't come back. Skullies were also rare items that were WAY in the beginning of Animal Jam. Which means, since those beta items aren't coming back, testing won't come back. Skullies were one of the only tail items, too.
It is just animal experimentation from what I know. and have you googled it i just did and that is all i can come up with
The military, and the Navy specifically have a No Tolerance policy. If you come up positive, you will be punished. And it used to be three strikes and you are out, I believe it still is.
Pretty much anywhere that needs products or compounds tested. Universities have animal testing for a variety of purposes, to evaluate the effect of nutritional and behaviorial protocols, along with potential drug testing. Also universities have animal-testing to develop genetic modification protocols. Corporations also conduct animal testing. Drug companies have to prove that their drugs are safe on animals before the FDA will allow them to test the drugs on humans. Cosmetics companies also have labs to test the amount of irritation and toxicity of their products. Pet food companies also conduct testing to determine the best formulas for animal food products. While cosmetics companies have come under fire for the amount of suffering inflicted on animals for the testing of products which seem to have minimal health risks or benefits to people, remember that the majority of animal testing puts animals in no more pain and suffering than if they were raised for food. Laboratory animals are typically euthanized at the end of their productive lifespans, usually by carbon dioxide gas or injection, much as you would put down a pet.
There isn't any. To do animal testing, you need quite a lot of animals to get reliable results. What happens to ONE animal, once, might just be random. And if something should be discovered later on, someone might need to go back and repeat the tests. Endangered animals are animals that are rare. Either hard to find, or not many left, or both. Ignoring everything else, it'd simply be hugely impractical to use endangered animals for animal testing.
When red blood cells die, other red blood cells come in and multiply.
Yes, it can.
Vinegar doesn't come from an animal, lol.Vinegar is sour wine, it does not come from an animal silly goose.
positive.