yes it does it keeps it warm and if a animal bites it it dont go right in to the skin it goes to the fur.
Yes, all natural fur comes from animals, though not all animals have fur.
Many species of animals have sleek fur. Some with the sleekest fur are water animals such as otters and seals.
Some examples of animals with fur but no legs include seals, sea otters, and walruses. These animals have adapted to their aquatic environment and use their flippers or other body parts to move around.
animals use their color of fur or feathers to blend in with their surounding. For example an iguana changes brown when it clings to a tree.
Various animals were hunted for their fur during the fur trade, including beavers, otters, martens, minks, foxes, and sables. These animals were sought after for their luxurious fur coats and were heavily traded and exploited during the fur trade era.
The Inuit used caribou fur after killing the animals. They would use fur of animals which they killed for meat.
Food, fur, and friendship
The fur from the animals they killed
The ones with fur
I think it is bad because they might be extinct from humans because humans use coloured fur from animals to make carpets :)
If they wore fur it would be from animals. Their decorative dress is mostly bird feathers though, which also come from animals (birds).
Because animal fur keeps you warm in cold weather that's why animals don't get cold in the winter .They have their fur to help them.
no. they never have and never will
for their fur and maybe their smart or loyal
The nomads (one of the tribes) will hunt animals many ways. They will use spears, and spearthrowers, they made from animals bones. Sometimes they will take the fur of the animals they want to hunt, and disguise as them. Then they will pound on the animals and use them. The nomads will use them for many reason. Fur, for clothes and shelter. Bones, for weapons and needles. The flesh, for meat or food.
No, these animals have scales not fur.
they grew the fur duh1