ALL living things, both animal and vegetable eventually die and decompose,returning valuable nutrients and minerals to the earth. My own belief is that after death you live on in the minds and conversations of those you left behind. After one maybe two generations you will quietely fade away.
I believe that animals will either be eaten if they were killed or else decomposed into the soil.
Depends on the reason the hunter is hunting. Those that hunt for meat take the animal home or to a processor so that if can be cut up and wrapped for the freezer.
Individuals that hunt without any intention of eating the meat will generally donate it a a local packing plant where it will be se to feed families in need.
The trophy parts of the animal (antlers, horns, head, cape, skin) stay with the
hunter.
Generally, states have guidelines requiring that the sex and maturity status must verified to insure that a tag is correctly filled...usually this limits hunters and requires them to bring the entire animal to the check station...so meat is not left behind.
Private hunts, that are not controlled by states....are managed by the game farm. Hunters pay a premium for trophy animals and the meat is sold or donated.
All living things, whether animal (including humans) or plant, when they die will decompose back into the Earth.
Decomposition is nature's way of taking back the minerals and nutrients that make up the body of the deceased matter. Everything that is "used" to make living things, is found in the Earth itself. Calcium which is used to make teeth and bones for example is found in rocks.
To help with decomposition, nature uses insects and other animals to speed up the process. Other animals, specifically carnivores, will eat most of the flesh if they stumble upon the carcass, digest it and then expel it as faeces, which when broken down naturally forms fertile compost for plants to grow in.
What is left of the body or if no carnivores manage to find it, the insects will lay eggs within the fleshy parts. When they hatch, the body is swarmed by the newborn insects and eaten, in order to get all the nutrients and minerals they need to grow into healthy insects and repeat the cycle again.
The bones will eventually sink into the ground or fall into a water source, where over a course of years they will once again become parts of the rock. But they will leave behind an impression on the rock, which we call a fossil.
Some believe that the spirit of the animals go to the afterlife, wherever that may be.
After a hunter traps an animal they will usually use it for food. Sometimes they sell the fur or the meat.
they die.
over about 50 million animals have been killed each year for they are skinned
Animals trapped for the fur trade, (even those whose fur was used for felt hats like beaver) were killed and skinned. Probably preferable to being skinned alive. Beavers were generally trapped using methods that resulted in them drowning.
Yes, all natural fur comes from animals, though not all animals have fur.
30 million animals r killed in fur farms per year. however lynxes are protected and 100 die per year.
Many species of animals have sleek fur. Some with the sleekest fur are water animals such as otters and seals.
The percentage of animals would be 70 % to 80% of animals are killed for there fur.
yes they did
So long as there is amarket for it.
If killed by humans, seals are used for their fur and sell fur coat in the black market. By other animals, seals are killed for food.
Man hunts animals for food, fur or sport.
They killed animals and used the fur.
The fur from the animals they killed
The Inuit used caribou fur after killing the animals. They would use fur of animals which they killed for meat.
They where made from fur they got from animals the killed.
because they use it for fur and teeth and meat.
Tigers, cows, pigs, sheep, foxes. A lot of animals are killed for their fur and/or meat ~ ~Sleenky
The meaning of slaughtering of animals is having them killed or killing them usually for meat or fur.