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 Taken from goveg.com
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 Volunteer and Turkey Baby. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Chickens at the Farm Sanctuary - missing feathers from prior mistreatments. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Turkey foot - close up. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Turkey Lady declawed. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Turkey Ladies with tathered and missing feathers View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Farm Sanctuary volunteers with the turkey babies. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Clikc here to donate View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo Courtesy of WBNS, online View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo Courtesy of Noah's Wish View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo Courtesy of CTV.ca View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo courtesy of Dave Martin / AP View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo Courtesy of Medfordnews.com View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo Courtesy of Alex Brandon / Newhouse News Service View Source Article View Source Gallery |
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 Photo courtesy of www.americazoo.com View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo courtesy of IFAW View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo courtesy of www.forum.com View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Oleander photo courtesy of: http://sarasota.extension.ufl.edu View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Castor Beann plant. Image courtesy of www.texasriviera.com. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo by Kathy Milani/HSUS View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo by Robert J Galbraith/New York Times View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo courtesy of International Fund for Animal Welfare View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 www.canadiantouristboard.com View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 By Jonathan Hayward/ Canada Press View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo by Brian Skerry/HSUS View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo by John Grady/ HSUS View Source Article View Source Gallery |
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 Castor Bean seeds, photo from: http://www.antoranz.net View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Sago Palm, from: http://faculty.evansville.edu View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 An Easter lily, courtesy of philg@mit.edu View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 A pink azaleas. Photo Courtesy of Glenda Meeler View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 caged. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Courtesy of Associated Press View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 www.peoriahs.org View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo by Jud Burkett View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 www.peoriahs.org View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 ©Robert Visser / Greenpeace
2004-07-09 View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Courtesy of www.wpxi.com and www.pittsburgh.com View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Courtesy of www.wpxi.com and www.pittsburgh.com View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Courtesy of the Herald Standard View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 ©Greenpeace / Virginia Lee Hunter View Source Article View Source Gallery |
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 Photo courtesy of www.defenders.org View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo courtesy of www.acusd.org View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Men, unwittingly proving their "manliness." Photo courtesy of www.blue-moose.com In no way is sobay.net promoting gaming by listing this hunting Web addressView Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Once again proving something that apparently was never there to begin with. Photo courtesy of www.dalincharters.com In no way is sobay.net promoting gaming by listing this hunting Web addressView Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Photo courtesy of www.animalsrighttolifewebsite.com View Source Article View Source Gallery | Painted with compassion
 Lisa Franzetta(center), a representative of PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals), painted herself
like a tiger to protest against animal rights abuses in South Korea, Jan 07, 2005.(Dayoo Photo)
Photo courtesy of www.chinaview.cn
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Only animals should wear their fur
 Animal-rights activists, representatives of PETA, Christina(L) and Lisa Franzetta, got naked and then held signs reading "Only Animals Should Wear Fur" on a South Korean street, Jan 07, 2005. They were detained by police 2 hours later. (Dayoo Photo) Photo courtesy of www.chinaview.cnView Source Article View Source Gallery |
 no shame View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 fine dining?
BLEH! View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 the animal's liver will grow 12 times its normal size for this delicatessen View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 comparison of a normal duck liver to a "foie grased" liver View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 force-feeding View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 pipe-feeding View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 dead duck with mouth full of food that had been force fed View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 foie gras farm View Source Article View Source Gallery |
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 The female is the ruler of the herd. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Elephants mourn their lost ones, for example when an elephant walks past a place that a loved one died he/she will stop dead still; a silent and empty pause that can last several minutes. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Female family groups sometimes gather together into larger herds or clans, greeting one another with exuberant trumpeting and apparent affection. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Baby elephants are raised and nurtured by the whole family group from the moment they are born. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Adult elephants appear to be able to recognize as individuals all members of their family group, as well as the members of extended groupings. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Elephants aid injured companions even in the face of considerable danger. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 African elephant
photo by
Martin HARVEY View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Hemp Messenger Bag View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Recycled bicycle tube with hemp-lining View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 "Vegetarians taste better," they also sell, "Vegans taste better." View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Braided hemp belt View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Peace flag View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Cute hemp hat View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 "Imagine all the people living life in peace." View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 "I don't eat anything with a face." View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Hemp wallet View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Here we see a bear hunting for its primary food source -- the seal. When the ice is frozen for the winter, the bears can roam freely and hunt for prey. One emerging problem, however, is the slow rise of average temperatures over the past few decades. This results in increasingly longer summers and slower freezing ice. The end result: bears become trapped on land and have to wait longer to roam the ice and hunt for food. For some, the wait can prove to be fatal.
Courtesy of Nature.com View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 What might, at first blush, look like two giant white furballs are actually polar bears being flown up north after being captured and tagged by conservation workers. Polar bears are dangerous animals and thus are tranquilized so that they remain aware of their surroundings but unable to react to them for about an hour. This provides just enough time to fly the bears thirty miles north so they can be released onto the fresh sea ice. Do the bears enjoy the view from above? Probably not, as their eyes are typically covered with Vaseline to provide protection from wind and cold during the flight.
Courtesy of Nature.com View Source Article View Source Gallery |

Ewan McGregor meets a bear face-to-face. One rule given to visitors: Don't try to make eye contact with the bears. They perceive that as a sign of aggression and may respond in kind!
Courtesy of Nature.com View Source Article View Source Gallery |

The wildlife officers need to maintain a separation between the great predators and humans living in Churchill. One way to do this is to catch bears with a Culver Trap. An attractant, like seal oil, is placed inside the cylinder. When a bear climbs in and yanks the bait, the back door drops and the trap is sealed. When used, the Culver Trap eliminates the need for tranquilizing the bears with a dart gun, a method called free-ranging.
Courtesy of Nature.com View Source Article View Source Gallery |

The world's largest land predators, polar bears spend the winter hunting and eating seals -- they can eat up to three hundred pounds of meat in a single sitting. It's not surprising, then, that adult males typically range in weight from 775 to more than 1,500 pounds; females are considerably smaller, normally weighing in at 330 to 550 pounds.
Courtesy of Nature.com View Source Article View Source Gallery |

When bears get too close to the town of Churchill, they're tranquilized and deposited in Manitoba Conservation's bear holding facility, or "bear jail," which holds up to 22 bears at a time. The bears are treated for infections, vital statistics are taken and recorded, and the bears are tagged for future identification. Their stay is not permanent, however; at regular intervals, the bears are flown north, by helicopter, where they can roam the ice and hunt seals.
courtesy of Nature.com View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Polar bears in Churchill in Manitoba, Canada have to be tranquillised then airlifted north in order to access their natural habitat as the snow is returning later and later after the summer months.
©Greenpeace/Visser
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 View Source Article View Source Gallery | All adoptable
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All adoptable
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All adoptable
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 acrylic hoods with a pretty sequin pin View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 more acrylic gloves View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 acrylic gloves View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 faux suede studded belts View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 alloy exclusive View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 man made materials View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 scrunch boots, man made View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 faux suede belt View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 A bloody mess after a sheep undergoes mulesing. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 A healthy little lamb. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Sheep shearer at work. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Sheep awkwardly positioned, as they are stripped of large pieces of skin, from their back side. This common practice, is said to avoid flystrikes. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
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 Caged monkey. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Cat being poked and prodded. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Frightened monkey in a lab cage. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 A human ear growing from the back of a lab mouse. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Rows of bunnies being tested on. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 A calf about to be hung by its feet, sliced at the throat and left to bleed to death. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Animals hanging in a slaughterhouse. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Pig being skinned, as it hangs by its feet. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Pigs hanging by their feet as the blood drips out of their corpses. Many slaughterhouses boil the animals so their skin is easier to peel off. Some times the animals are still alive before entering the water. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 A debeaked chick. The painful procedure cuts through sensitive tendons. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Frustrated, caged chickens. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Vegans unite! View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Chickens hanging at a slaughterhouse. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Artist's rendition of a meat-eater's heart. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Animal testing at its worst. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Thank Moo! For not eating meat. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
 Spoofin America's number one fast food chain. View Source Article View Source Gallery |
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