Over 90% of laboratory testing on animals is done on specially bred mice. The next most common would be specially bred rats. The minor species include pigs, sheep, horses, cattle, dogs, cats, primates, fish, birds, frogs and just about every type of animal you can think of.
make up can be tested on animals Makeup, medicine, chemicals, and just all kinds of horrific and disgusting things.
cosmetic products household products cleaning products etc
No they don'there is a statement about how they source their materials for their products: http://www.richemont.com/corporate-social-responsibility/case-studies.html#CaseStudy11
Tresemme is not tested on animals animals it says on the back of the bottle u by not tested on animals
no its not tested on animals
There are dozens of different laboratory jobs out there, to name a few of the more general ones there would be clinical laboratories, medical laboratories, chemistry laboratories, forensic laboratories, general laboratories and biology laboratories.
Animal testing hurts animals. In 2004 over 1 million animals were tested on. That's just with dogs, cats, primates, guinea pigs, and hamsters. That's not counting the millions of rats and mice they tested on. Law protects all lab animals from cruelty during testing. However, these controls have not stopped scientists from abusing animals though. When dogs or cats get tested on for diseases the scientists stick deep needles into there stomachs. They leave huge gashes on there bodies and leave them there to suffer. Every year millions of animals suffer and die from animal testing. In laboratories animals are deliberately poisoned, burned, physically injured, and inflicted with deadly diseases. Most animals die from these tests.
yes is it really tested on animals
UL Underwriters Laboratories
Dogs, cats, mice, rats, lizzards, cows, goats, sheep, horses, frogs, monkeys and many more.
No, Animals should not be tested, because animals are killed during the experiments and suffering during studies and they die in vain when they are tested.
A product with the UL logo has been safety tested by Underwriters Laboratories, a highly respected tester and safety certifier.