English, asked by raushanjhahbr, 9 months ago

लिस्ट सोम यूजफुल प्रोडक्ट्स ऑब्टेंड फ्रॉम एनिमल्स​

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Answered by anushaBBPS
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Answer:Food

Ambrosia also known as “bee bread” (which is made from both plant pollen and the insect’s secretions)

Blood, especially in the form of blood sausage

Bone, including bone char, bone meal, etc.

Broths and stocks are often created with animal fat, bone, and connective tissue

Carmine also known as cochineal (food dye)

Caviar

Casein (found in milk and cheese)

Civet oil (food flavoring additive)

Dairy products (e.g., milk, cheese, yogurt, etc.)

Eggs and Egg products (e.g., mayonnaise, eggnog, custard, etc.)

Escargot Pearls

(e.g., lard, lardon, schmaltz, suet, tallow, etc)

Gelatin

Hard Roe (as food is used as a raw or cooked ingredient in various dishes)

Honey (including comb honey products)

Honeydew (secretion)

Isinglass (used in clarification of beer and wine)

Insects (some edible insects are consumed whole or made into a powder, like cricket flour. The flours are then used to make products like insect fitness bars or burger patties.)

L-cysteine from human hair and pig bristles (used in the production of biscuits and bread)

Kopi luwak & Black Ivory Coffee

Meat (which includes fish, shellfish, sauces made from them, and poultry in addition to livestock, game, and "exotic dishes" made from amphibians or reptiles)

Offal

Rennet (commonly used in the production of cheese)

Shellac

Skins (remaining skin scraps as a byproduct of meat production or fat rendering are made profitable by being fried/roasted and sold as snacks, like; gribenes, rinds, scratchings, rambak )

Soft Roe also known as “White Roe” (is commonly fried, used as an ingredient in a larger dish, or used as a condiment in some European and Asian countries)

Swiftlet's nest (made of saliva)

Whey (found in cheese and added to many other products)

Non-food animal products

Animal fiber

Ambergris

Beeswax

Blood and some blood substitutes (blood used for transfusions is always human in origin, though some blood substitutes are made from animal sources. Many diagnostic laboratory tests use animal or human sourced reagents)

Casein (used in plastics, clothing, cosmetics, adhesives and paint)

Castoreum (secretion of the beaver used in perfumes and possibly in food flavoring)

Coral rock

Donkey milk

Egg Oil (used in skin care products as a preservative and as skin conditioning agent)

Emu oil (serves as a ”natural” emollient in cosmetic preparations, especially in products that claim it has the ability enhance and maintain beauty.)

Ejaculate (used in artificial insemination)

Feathers

Fur

Gallstones (from livestock for Traditional Chinese Medicine)

Guano

Horse Oil (used in East Asian skincare masks and creams for similar purposes as emu oil.)

Horn, including antlers etc.

Ivory

Explanation:

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