Animal Ingredients List: A-Z
Below is a list of animal derived ingredients in an A-Z format, which can be commonly
found in food, especially processed ones. This list is useful for vegetarians and vegans
alike. Some of the ingredients listed below may not be derived from
animals anymore and could be synthesized, one should check with the
manufacturer to be sure.
Adrenaline. Hormone from
adrenal glands of hogs, cattle, and sheep. In medicine. Alternatives:
synthetics.
Alanine. (See Amino Acids.)
Albumen. In eggs, milk, muscles, blood, and
many vegetable tissues and fluids. In cosmetics, albumen is usually
derived from egg whites and used as a coagulating agent. May cause
allergic reaction. In cakes, cookies, candies, etc. Egg whites
sometimes used in "clearing" wines. Derivative: Albumin.
Albumin. (See
Albumen.)
Alcloxa. (See
Allantoin.)
Aldioxa. (See
Allantoin.)
Aliphatic
Alcohol. (See Lanolin and Vitamin A.)
Allantoin. Uric
acid from cows, most mammals. Also in many plants (especially
comfrey). In cosmetics (especially creams and lotions) and used in
treatment of wounds and ulcers. Derivatives: Alcloxa, Aldioxa.
Alternatives: extract of comfrey root, synthetics.
Alligator
Skin. (See Leather.)
Alpha-Hydroxy
Acids. Any one of several acids used as an exfoliant and in
anti-wrinkle products. Lactic acid may be animal-derived (see Lactic
Acid). Alternatives: glycolic acid, citric acid, and salicylic acid
are plant- or fruit-derived.
Ambergris. From
whale intestines. Used as a fixative in making perfumes and as a
flavoring in foods and beverages. Alternatives: synthetic or
vegetable fixatives.
Amino Acids. The
building blocks of protein in all animals and plants. In cosmetics,
vitamins, supplements, shampoos, etc. Alternatives: synthetics, plant
sources.
Aminosuccinate
Acid. (See Aspartic Acid.)
Angora. Hair
from the Angora rabbit or goat. Used in clothing. Alternatives:
synthetic fibers.
Animal Fats and
Oils. In foods, cosmetics, etc. Highly allergenic.
Alternatives: olive oil, wheat germ oil, coconut oil, flaxseed oil,
almond oil, safflower oil, etc.
Animal Hair. In
some blankets, mattresses, brushes, furniture, etc. Alternatives:
vegetable and synthetic fibers.
Arachidonic Acid. A
liquid unsaturated fatty acid that is found in liver, brain, glands,
and fat of animals and humans. Generally isolated from animal liver.
Used in companion animal food for nutrition and in skin creams and
lotions to soothe eczema and rashes. Alternatives: synthetics, aloe
vera, tea tree oil, calendula ointment.
Arachidyl
Proprionate. A wax that can be from animal fat. Alternatives:
peanut or vegetable oil.
Aspartic Acid.
Aminosuccinate Acid. Can be animal or plant source (e.g.,
molasses). Sometimes synthesized for commercial purposes.
Bee
Pollen. Microsporic grains in seed plants gathered by bees
then collected from the legs of bees. Causes allergic reactions in
some people. In nutritional supplements, shampoos, toothpastes,
deodorants. Alternatives: synthetics, plant amino acids, pollen
collected from plants.
Bee
Products. Produced by bees for their own use. Bees are
selectively bred. Culled bees are killed. A cheap sugar is
substituted for their stolen honey. Millions die as a result. Their
legs are often torn off by pollen-collection trapdoors.
Beeswax.
Honeycomb. Wax obtained from melting honeycomb with boiling
water, straining it, and cooling it. From virgin bees. Very cheap and
widely used but harmful to the skin. In lipsticks and many other
cosmetics (especially face creams, lotions, mascara, eye creams and
shadows, face makeups, nail whiteners, lip balms, etc.). Derivatives:
Cera Flava. Alternatives: paraffin, vegetable oils and fats. Ceresin,
aka ceresine, aka earth wax. (Made from the mineral ozokerite.
Replaces beeswax in cosmetics. Also used to wax paper, to make
polishing cloths, in dentistry for taking wax impressions, and in
candle-making.) Also, carnauba wax (from the Brazilian palm tree;
used in many cosmetics, including lipstick; rarely causes allergic
reactions). Candelilla wax (from candelilla plants; used in many
cosmetics, including lipstick; also in the manufacture of rubber and
phonograph records, in waterproofing and writing inks; no known
toxicity). Japan wax (Vegetable wax. Japan tallow. Fat from the fruit
of a tree grown in Japan and China.).
Benzoic Acid. In
almost all vertebrates and in berries. Used as a preservative in
mouthwashes, deodorants, creams, aftershave lotions, etc.
Alternatives: cranberries, gum benzoin (tincture) from the aromatic
balsamic resin from trees grown in China, Sumatra, Thailand, and
Cambodia.
Beta Carotene. (See
Carotene.)
Biotin. Vitamin H.
Vitamin B Factor. In every living cell and in larger amounts
in milk and yeast. Used as a texturizer in cosmetics, shampoos, and
creams. Alternatives: plant sources.
Blood. From
any slaughtered animal. Used as adhesive in plywood, also found in
cheese-making, foam rubber, intravenous feedings, and medicines.
Possibly in foods such as lecithin. Alternatives: synthetics, plant
sources.
Boar Bristles.
Hair from wild or captive hogs. In "natural"
toothbrushes and bath and shaving brushes. Alternatives: vegetable
fibers, nylon, the peelu branch or peelu gum (Asian, available in the
U.S.; its juice replaces toothpaste).
Bone Char. Animal
bone ash. Used in bone china and often to make sugar white. Serves as
the charcoal used in aquarium filters. Alternatives: synthetic
tribasic calcium phosphate.
Bone Meal. Crushed
or ground animal bones. In some fertilizers. In some vitamins and
supplements as a source of calcium. In some tooth paste.
Alternatives: plant mulch, vegetable compost, dolomite, clay,
vegetarian vitamins.
Bonito. Dried
flakes from fish. Frequently used in Japanese cooking.
Calciferol. (See
Vitamin D.)
Calfskin. (See
Leather.)
Caprylamine Oxide.
(See Caprylic Acid.)
Capryl
Betaine. (See Caprylic Acid.)
Caprylic Acid. A
liquid fatty acid from cow's or goat's milk. Also from palm and
coconut oil, other plant oils. In perfumes, soaps. Derivatives:
Caprylic Triglyceride, Caprylamine Oxide, Capryl Betaine.
Alternatives: plant sources.
Caprylic
Triglyceride. (See Caprylic Acid.)
Carbamide. (See
Urea.)
Carmine. Cochineal.
Carminic Acid. Red pigment from the crushed female cochineal
insect. Reportedly, 70,000 beetles must be killed to produce one
pound of this red dye. Used in cosmetics, shampoos, red apple sauce,
and other foods (including red lollipops and food coloring). May
cause allergic reaction. Alternatives: beet juice (used in powders,
rouges, shampoos; no known toxicity); alkanet root (from the root of
this herb-like tree; used as a red dye for inks, wines, lip balms,
etc.; no known toxicity. Can also be combined to make a copper or
blue coloring). (See Colors.)
Carminic Acid. (See
Carmine.)
Casein. Caseinate.
Sodium Caseinate. Milk protein. In "non-dairy"
creamers, soy cheese, many cosmetics, hair preparations, beauty
masks. Alternatives: soy protein, soy milk, and other vegetable
milks.
Caseinate. (See
Casein.)
Cashmere. Wool
from the Kashmir goat. Used in clothing. Alternatives: synthetic
fibers.
Castor. Castoreum.
Creamy substance with strong odor from muskrat and beaver
genitals. Used as a fixative in perfume and incense. Sometimes
labeled as "natural flavorings." Alternatives: synthetics,
plant castor oil.
Castoreum. (See
Castor.)
Catgut. Tough
string from the intestines of sheep, horses, etc. Used for surgical
sutures. Also for stringing tennis rackets and musical instruments,
etc. Alternatives: nylon and other synthetic fibers.
Cera Flava. (See
Beeswax.)
Cerebrosides. Fatty
acids and sugars found in the covering of nerves. May include tissue
from brain.
Cetyl Alcohol. Wax
found in spermaceti from sperm whales or dolphins. Alternatives:
Vegetable cetyl alcohol (e.g., coconut), synthetic spermaceti.
Cetyl Palmitate.
(See Spermaceti.)
Chitosan. A
fiber derived from crustacean shells. Used as a lipid binder in diet
products, in hair, oral and skin care products, antiperspirants, and
deodorants. Alternatives: raspberries, yams, legumes, dried apricots,
and many other fruits and vegetables.
Cholesterin. (See
Lanolin.)
Cholesterol. A
steroid alcohol in all animal fats and oils, nervous tissue, egg
yolk, and blood. Can be derived from lanolin. In cosmetics, eye
creams, shampoos, etc. Alternatives: solid complex alcohols (sterols)
from plant sources.
Choline
Bitartrate. (See Lecithin.)
Civet. Unctuous
secretion painfully scraped from a gland very near the genital organs
of civet cats. Used as a fixative in perfumes. Alternatives: (See
alternatives to Musk.).
Cochineal. (See
Carmine.)
Cod Liver Oil.
(See Marine Oil.)
Collagen. Fibrous
protein in vertebrates. Usually derived from animal tissue. Can't
affect the skin's own collagen. An allergen. Alternatives: soy
protein, almond oil, amla oil (see alternative to Keratin), etc.
Colors.
Dyes. Pigments from animal, plant, and synthetic sources used
to color foods, cosmetics, and other products. Cochineal is from
insects. Widely used FD&C and D&C colors are coaltar
(bituminous coal) derivatives that are continously tested on animals
due to their carcinogenic properties. Alternatives: grapes, beets,
turmeric, saffron, carrots, chlorophyll, annatto, alkanet.
Corticosteroid.
(See Cortisone.)
Cortisone.
Corticosteroid. Hormone from adrenal glands. Widely used in
medicine. Alternatives: synthetics.
Cysteine, L-Form.
An amino acid from hair which can come from animals, like
from duck feather. Used in hair-care products and creams, in some
bakery products, and in wound-healing formulations. Alternatives:
plant sources.
Cystine. An
amino acid found in urine and horsehair. Used as a nutritional
supplement and in emollients. Alternatives: plant sources.
Dexpanthenol. (See
Panthenol.)
Diglycerides. (See
Monoglycerides and Glycerin.)
Dimethyl
Stearamine. (See Stearic Acid.)
Down. Goose
or duck insulating feathers. From slaughtered or cruelly exploited
geese. Used as an insulator in quilts, parkas, sleeping bags,
pillows, etc. Alternatives: polyester and synthetic substitutes,
kapok (silky fibers from the seeds of some tropical trees) and
milkweed seed pod fibers.
Duodenum
Substances. From the digestive tracts of cows and pigs. Added
to some vitamin tablets. In some medicines. Alternatives: vegetarian
vitamins, synthetics.
Dyes. (See
Colors.)
Egg Protein. In
shampoos, skin preparations, etc. Alternatives: plant proteins.
Elastin. Protein
found in the neck ligaments and aortas of cows. Similar to collagen.
Can't affect the skin's own elasticity. Alternatives: synthetics,
protein from plant tissues.
Emu Oil. From
flightless ratite birds native to Australia and now factory farmed.
Used in cosmetics and creams. Alternatives: vegetable and plant oils.
Ergocalciferol.
(See Vitamin D.)
Ergosterol. (See
Vitamin D.)
Estradiol. (See
Estrogen.)
Estrogen.
Estradiol. Female hormones from pregnant mares? urine.
Considered a drug. Can have harmful systemic effects if used by
children. Used for reproductive problems and in birth control pills
and Premarin, a menopausal drug. In creams, perfumes, and lotions.
Has a negligible effect in the creams as a skin restorative; simple
vegetable-source emollients are considered better. Alternatives: oral
contraceptives and menopausal drugs based on synthetic steroids or
phytoestrogens (from plants, especially palm-kernel oil). Menopausal
symptoms can also be treated with diet and herbs.
Fats. (See
Animal Fats.)
Fatty Acids. Can
be one or any mixture of liquid and solid acids such as caprylic,
lauric, myristic, oleic, palmitic, and stearic. Used in bubble baths,
lipsticks, soap, detergents, cosmetics, food. Alternatives:
vegetable-derived acids, soy lecithin, safflower oil, bitter almond
oil, sunflower oil, etc.
FD&C Colors.
(See Colors.)
Feathers. From
exploited and slaughtered birds. Used whole as ornaments or ground up
in shampoos. (See Down and Keratin.)
Fish Liver Oil.
Used in vitamins and supplements. In milk fortified with
vitamin D. Alternatives: yeast extract ergosterol and exposure of
skin to sunshine.
Fish Oil. (See
Marine Oil.) Fish oil can also be from marine mammals. Used in
soap-making.
Fish Scales. Used
in shimmery makeups. Alternatives: mica, rayon, synthetic pearl.
Fur. Obtained
from animals (usually mink, foxes, or rabbits) cruelly trapped in
steel-jaw leghold traps or raised in intensive confinement on fur
"farms." Alternatives: synthetics. (See Sable Brushes.)
Gel. (See
Gelatin.)
Gelatin. Gel.
Protein obtained by boiling skin, tendons, ligaments, and/or
bones with water. From cows and pigs. Used in shampoos, face masks,
and other cosmetics. Used as a thickener for fruit gelatins and
puddings (e.g., "Jello"). In candies, marshmallows, cakes,
ice cream, yogurts. On photographic film and in vitamins as a coating
and as capsules. Sometimes used to assist in "clearing"
wines. Alternatives: carrageen (carrageenan, Irish moss), seaweeds
(algin, agar-agar, kelp—used in jellies, plastics, medicine),
pectin from fruits, dextrins, locust bean gum, cotton gum, silica
gel. Marshmallows were originally made from the root of the marsh
mallow plant. Vegetarian capsules are now available from several
companies. Digital cameras don't use film.
Glucose
Tyrosinase. (See Tyrosine.)
Glycerides. (See
Glycerin.)
Glycerin.
Glycerol. A byproduct of soap manufacture (normally uses
animal fat). In cosmetics, foods, mouthwashes, chewing gum,
toothpastes, soaps, ointments, medicines, lubricants, transmission
and brake fluid, and plastics. Derivatives: Glycerides, Glyceryls,
Glycreth-26, Polyglycerol. Alternatives: vegetable glycerin—a
byproduct of vegetable oil soap. Derivatives of seaweed, petroleum.
Glycerol. (See
Glycerin.)
Glyceryls. (See
Glycerin.)
Glycreth-26. (See
Glycerin.)
Guanine. Pearl
Essence. Obtained from scales of fish. Constituent of
ribonucleic acid and deoxyribonucleic acid and found in all animal
and plant tissues. In shampoo, nail polish, other cosmetics.
Alternatives: leguminous plants, synthetic pearl, or aluminum and
bronze particles.
Hide Glue. Same
as gelatin but of a cruder impure form. Alternatives: dextrins and
synthetic petrochemical-based adhesives. (See Gelatin.)
Honey. Food
for bees, made by bees. Can cause allergic reactions. Used as a
coloring and an emollient in cosmetics and as a flavoring in foods.
Should never be fed to infants. Alternatives: in foods—maple syrup,
date sugar, syrups made from grains such as barley malt, turbinado
sugar, molasses; in cosmetics—vegetable colors and oils.
Honeycomb. (See
Beeswax.)
Horsehair. (See
Animal Hair.)
Hyaluronic Acid. A
protein found in umbilical cords and the fluids around the joints.
Used in cosmetics. Alternatives: plant oils.
Hydrocortisone.
(See Cortisone.)
Hydrolyzed Animal
Protein. In cosmetics, especially shampoo and hair
treatments. Alternatives: soy protein, other vegetable proteins, amla
oil (see alternatives to Keratin).
Imidazolidinyl
Urea. (See Urea.)
Insulin. From
hog pancreas. Used by millions of diabetics daily. Alternatives:
synthetics, vegetarian diet and nutritional supplements, human
insulin grown in a lab.
Isinglass. A
form of gelatin prepared from the internal membranes of fish
bladders. Sometimes used in "clearing" or filtering of
wines and in foods. Alternatives: bentonite clay, "Japanese
isinglass," agar-agar (see alternatives to Gelatin), mica, a
mineral used in cosmetics.
Isopropyl Lanolate.
(See Lanolin.)
Isopropyl
Myristate. (See Myristic Acid.)
Isopropyl
Palmitate. Complex mixtures of isomers of stearic acid and
palmitic acid. (See Stearic Acid.)
Keratin. Protein
from the ground-up horns, hooves, feathers, quills, and hair of
various animals. In hair rinses, shampoos, permanent wave solutions.
Alternatives: almond oil, soy protein, amla oil (from the fruit of an
Indian tree), human hair from salons. Rosemary and nettle give body
and strand strength to hair.
Lactic Acid. Found
in blood and muscle tissue. Also in sour milk, beer, sauerkraut,
pickles, and other food products made by bacterial fermentation. Used
in skin fresheners, as a preservative, in the formation of
plasticizers, etc. Alternative: plant milk sugars, synthetics.
Lactose. Milk
sugar from milk of mammals. In eye lotions, foods, tablets,
cosmetics, baked goods, medicines. Alternatives: plant milk sugars.
Laneth. (See
Lanolin.)
Lanogene. (See
Lanolin.)
Lanolin. Lanolin
Acids. Wool Fat. Wool Wax. A product of the oil glands of
sheep, extracted from their wool. Used as an emollient in many skin
care products and cosmetics and in medicines. Also found in chewing
gum and products with vitamin D3. An allergen with no proven
effectiveness. (See Wool for cruelty to sheep.) Derivatives:
Aliphatic Alcohols, Cholesterin, Isopropyl Lanolate, Laneth,
Lanogene, Lanolin Alcohols, Lanosterols, Sterols, Triterpene
Alcohols. Alternatives: plant and vegetable oils.
Lanolin
Alcohol. (See Lanolin.)
Lanosterols. (See
Lanolin.)
Lard. Fat
from hog abdomens. In shaving creams, soaps, cosmetics. In baked
goods, French fries, refried beans, and many other foods.
Alternatives: pure vegetable fats or oils.
L-Cysteine
Hydrochloride. A flour additive often extracted from duck
feathers. Found in commercial cereals and baking mixes.
Leather. Suede.
Calfskin. Sheepskin. Alligator Skin. Other Types of Skin. Subsidizes
the meat industry. Used to make wallets, handbags, furniture and car
upholstery, shoes, etc. Alternatives: cotton, canvas, nylon, vinyl,
ultrasuede, pleather, other synthetics.
Lecithin. Choline
Bitartrate. Waxy substance in nervous tissue of all living
organisms. But frequently obtained for commercial purposes from eggs
and soybeans. Also from nerve tissue, blood, milk, corn. Choline
bitartrate, the basic constituent of lecithin, is in many animal and
plant tissues and prepared synthetically. Lecithin can be in eye
creams, lipsticks, liquid powders, hand creams, lotions, soaps,
shampoos, other cosmetics, and some medicines. Alternatives: soybean
lecithin, synthetics.
Linoleic Acid. An
essential fatty acid. Used in cosmetics, vitamins. Alternatives: (See
alternatives to Fatty Acids.)
Lipase. Enzyme
from the stomachs and tongue glands of calves, kids, and lambs. Used
in digestive aids as it helps the body break down fats. Also commonly
found in cheese and dairy products. Alternatives: vegetable enzymes,
castor beans.
Lipids. (See
Lipoids.)
Lipoids.
Lipids. Fat and fat-like substances that are found in animals
and plants. Alternatives: vegetable oils.
Marine Oil. From
fish or marine mammals (including porpoises). Used in soap-making.
Used as a shortening (especially in some margarines), as a lubricant,
and in paint. Alternatives: vegetable oils.
Methionine.
Essential amino acid found in various proteins (usually from
egg albumen and casein). Used as a texturizer and for freshness in
potato chips. Alternatives: synthetics.
Milk Protein.
Hydrolyzed milk protein. From the milk of cows. In cosmetics,
shampoos, moisturizers, conditioners, etc. Alternatives: soy protein,
other plant proteins.
Mink Oil. From
minks. In cosmetics, creams, etc. Alternatives: vegetable oils and
emollients such as avocado oil, almond oil, and jojoba oil.
Monoglycerides.
Glycerides. (See Glycerin.) From animal fat. In margarines,
cake mixes, candies, foods, etc. In cosmetics. Alternative: vegetable
glycerides.
Musk (Oil). Dried
secretion painfully obtained from musk deer, beaver, muskrat, civet
cat, and otter genitals. Wild cats are kept captive in cages in
horrible conditions and are whipped around the genitals to produce
the scent; beavers are trapped; deer are shot. In perfumes and in
food flavorings. Alternatives: labdanum oil (which comes from various
rockrose shrubs) and other plants with a musky scent. Labdanum oil
has no known
Myristal Ether
Sulfate. (See Myristic Acid.)
Myristic
Acid. Organic acid in most animal and vegetable fats. In
butter acids. Used in shampoos, creams, cosmetics. In food
flavorings. Derivatives: Isopropyl Myristate, Myristal Ether Sulfate,
Myristyls, Oleyl Myristate. Alternatives: nut butters, oil of lovage,
coconut oil, extract from seed kernels of nutmeg, etc.
Myristyls. (See
Myristic Acid.)
"Natural
Sources." Can mean animal or vegetable sources. Most
often in the health food industry, especially in the cosmetics area,
it means animal sources, such as animal elastin, glands, fat,
protein, and oil. Alternatives: plant sources.
Nucleic Acids. In
the nucleus of all living cells. Used in cosmetics, shampoos,
conditioners, etc. Also in vitamins, supplements. Alternatives: plant
sources.
Ocenol. (See
Oleyl Alcohol.)
Octyl Dodecanol.
Mixture of solid waxy alcohols. Primarily from stearyl
alcohol. (See Stearyl Alcohol.)
Oleic Acid.
Obtained from various animal and vegetable fats and oils.
Usually obtained commercially from inedible tallow. (See Tallow.) In
foods, soft soap, bar soap, permanent wave solutions, creams, nail
polish, lipsticks, many other skin preparations. Derivatives: Oleyl
Oleate, Oleyl Stearate. Alternatives: coconut oil. (See alternatives
to Animal Fats and Oils.)
Oils. (See
alternatives to Animal Fats and Oils.)
Oleths. (See
Oleyl Alcohol.)
Oleyl Alcohol.
Ocenol. Found in fish oils. Used in the manufacture of
detergents, as a plasticizer for softening fabrics, and as a carrier
for medications. Derivatives: Oleths, Oleyl Arachidate, Oleyl
Imidazoline.
Oleyl Arachidate.
(See Oleyl Alcohol.)
Oleyl Imidazoline.
(See Oleyl Alcohol.)
Oleyl
Myristate. (See Myristic Acid.)
Oleyl Oleate. (See
Oleic Acid.)
Oleyl
Stearate. (See Oleic Acid.)
Palmitamide. (See
Palmitic Acid.)
Palmitamine. (See
Palmitic Acid.)
Palmitate. (See
Palmitic Acid.)
Palmitic Acid.
From fats, oils (see Fatty Acids). Mixed with stearic acid.
Found in many animal fats and plant oils. In shampoos, shaving soaps,
creams. Derivatives: Palmitate, Palmitamine, Palmitamide.
Alternatives: palm oil, vegetable sources.
Panthenol.
Dexpanthenol. Vitamin B-Complex Factor. Provitamin B-5. Can
come from animal or plant sources or synthetics. In shampoos,
supplements, emollients, etc. In foods. Derivative: Panthenyl.
Alternatives: synthetics, plants.
Panthenyl. (See
Panthenol.)
Pepsin. In
hogs' stomachs. A clotting agent. In some cheeses and vitamins. Same
uses and alternatives as Rennet.
Placenta. Placenta
Polypeptides Protein. Afterbirth. Contains waste matter
eliminated by the fetus. Derived from the uterus of slaughtered
animals. Animal placenta is widely used in skin creams, shampoos,
masks, etc.Alternatives: kelp. (See alternatives to Animal Fats and
Oils.)
Polyglycerol. (See
Glycerin.)
Polysorbates.
Derivatives of fatty acids. In cosmetics, foods.
Pristane. Obtained
from the liver oil of sharks and from whale ambergris. (See Squalene,
Ambergris.) Used as a lubricant and anti-corrosive agent. In
cosmetics. Alternatives: plant oils, synthetics.
Progesterone. A
steroid hormone used in anti-wrinkle face creams. Can have adverse
systemic effects. Alternatives: synthetics.
Propolis. Tree
sap gathered by bees and used as a sealant in beehives. In
toothpaste, shampoo, deodorant, supplements, etc. Alternatives: tree
sap, synthetics.
Provitamin A. (See
Carotene.)
Provitamin
B-5. (See Panthenol.)
Provitamin
D-2. (See Vitamin D.)
Rennet.
Rennin. Enzyme from calves' stomachs. Used in cheese-making,
rennet custard (junket), and in many coagulated dairy products.
Alternatives: microbial coagulating agents, bacteria culture, lemon
juice, or vegetable rennet.
Rennin. (See
Rennet.)
Resinous Glaze.
(See Shellac.)
Ribonucleic
Acid. (See RNA.)
RNA. Ribonucleic
Acid. RNA is in all living cells. Used in many protein
shampoos and cosmetics. Alternatives: plant cells.
Royal
Jelly. Secretion from the throat glands of the honeybee
workers that is fed to the larvae in a colony and to all queen
larvae. No proven value in cosmetics preparations. Alternatives: aloe
vera, comfrey, other plant derivatives.
Sable Brushes. From
the fur of sables (weasel-like mammals). Used to make eye makeup,
lipstick, and artists' brushes. Alternatives: synthetic fibers.
Sea Turtle Oil.
(See Turtle Oil.)
Shark Liver
Oil. Used in lubricating creams and lotions. Derivatives:
Squalane, Squalene. Alternatives: vegetable oils.
Sheepskin. (See
Leather.)
Shellac. Resinous
Glaze. Resinous excretion of certain insects. Used as a candy
glaze, in hair lacquer, and on jewelry. Alternatives: plant waxes.
Silk. Silk Powder.
Silk is the shiny fiber made by silkworms to form their
cocoons. Worms are boiled in their cocoons to get the silk. Used in
cloth. In silk-screening (other fine cloth can be and is used
instead). Taffeta can be made from silk or nylon. Silk powder is
obtained from the secretion of the silkworm. It is used as a coloring
agent in face powders, soaps, etc. Can cause severe allergic skin
reactions and systemic reactions (if inhaled or ingested).
Alternatives: milkweed seed-pod fibers, nylon, silk-cotton tree and
ceiba tree filaments (kapok), rayon, and synthetic silks.
Snails. In
some cosmetics (crushed).
Sodium Caseinate.
(See Casein.)
Sodium Steroyl
Lactylate. (See Lactic Acid.)
Sodium Tallowate.
(See Tallow.)
Spermaceti. Cetyl
Palmitate. Sperm Oil. Waxy oil derived from the sperm whale's
head or from dolphins. In many margarines. In skin creams, ointments,
shampoos, candles, etc. Used in the leather industry. May become
rancid and cause irritations. Alternatives: synthetic spermaceti,
jojoba oil, and other vegetable emollients.
Sponge (Luna and
Sea). A plant-like animal. Lives in the sea. Becoming scarce.
Alternatives: synthetic sponges, loofahs (plants used as sponges).
Squalane. (See
Shark Liver Oil.)
Squalene. Oil
from shark livers, etc. In cosmetics, moisturizers, hair dyes,
surface-active agents. Alternatives: vegetable emollients such as
olive oil, wheat germ oil, rice bran oil, etc.
Stearamide. (See
Stearic Acid.)
Stearamine. (See
Stearic Acid.)
Stearamine
Oxide. (See Stearyl Alcohol.)
Stearates. (See
Stearic Acid.)
Stearic Acid. Fat
from cows and sheep and from dogs and cats euthanized in animal
shelters, etc. Most often refers to a fatty substance taken from the
stomachs of pigs. Can be harsh, irritating. Used in cosmetics, soaps,
lubricants, candles, hairspray, conditioners, deodorants, creams,
chewing gum, food flavoring. Derivatives: Stearamide, Stearamine,
Stearates, Stearic Hydrazide, Stearone, Stearoxytrimethylsilane,
Stearoyl Lactylic Acid, Stearyl Betaine, Stearyl Imidazoline.
Alternatives: Stearic acid can be found in many vegetable fats,
coconut.
Stearic
Hydrazide. (See Stearic Acid.)
Stearone. (See
Stearic Acid.)
Stearoxytrimethylsilane. (See
Stearic Acid.)
Stearoyl Lactylic
Acid. (See Stearic Acid.)
Stearyl
Acetate. (See Stearyl Alcohol.)
Stearyl Alcohol.
Sterols. A mixture of solid alcohols. Can be prepared from
sperm whale oil. In medicines, creams, rinses, shampoos, etc.
Derivatives: Stearamine Oxide, Stearyl Acetate, Stearyl Caprylate,
Stearyl Citrate, Stearyldimethyl Amine, Stearyl Glycyrrhetinate,
Stearyl Heptanoate, Stearyl Octanoate, Stearyl Stearate.
Alternatives: plant sources, vegetable stearic acid.
Stearyl Betaine.
(See Stearic Acid.)
Stearyl Caprylate.
(See Stearyl Alcohol.)
Stearyl Citrate.
(See Stearyl Alcohol.)
Stearyldimethyl
Amine. (See Stearyl Alcohol.)
Stearyl
Glycyrrhetinate. (See Stearyl Alcohol.)
Stearyl Heptanoate.
(See Stearyl Alcohol.)
Stearyl
Imidazoline. (See Stearic Acid.)
Stearyl
Octanoate. (See Stearyl Alcohol.)
Stearyl
Stearate. (See Stearyl Alcohol.)
Steroids. Sterols.
From various animal glands or from plant tissues. Steroids
include sterols. Sterols are alcohol from animals or plants (e.g.,
cholesterol). Used in hormone preparation. In creams, lotions, hair
conditioners, fragrances, etc. Alternatives: plant tissues,
synthetics.
Sterols. (See
Stearyl Alcohol and Steroids.)
Suede. (See
Leather.)
Tallow. Tallow
Fatty Alcohol. Stearic Acid. Rendered beef fat. May cause
eczema and blackheads. In wax paper, crayons, margarines, paints,
rubber, lubricants, etc. In candles, soaps, lipsticks, shaving
creams, other cosmetics. Chemicals (e.g., PCB) can be in animal
tallow. Derivatives: Sodium Tallowate, Tallow Acid, Tallow Amide,
Tallow Amine, Talloweth-6, Tallow Glycerides, Tallow Imidazoline.
Alternatives: vegetable tallow, Japan tallow, paraffin and/or ceresin
(see alternatives to Beeswax for all three). Paraffin is usually from
petroleum, wood, coal, or shale oil.
Tallow Acid. (See
Tallow.)
Tallow Amide. (See
Tallow.)
Tallow Amine. (See
Tallow.)
Talloweth-6. (See
Tallow.)
Tallow
Glycerides. (See Tallow.)
Tallow
Imidazoline. (See Tallow.)
Triterpene
Alcohols. (See Lanolin.)
Turtle Oil. Sea
Turtle Oil. From the muscles and genitals of giant sea
turtles. In soap, skin creams, nail creams, other cosmetics.
Alternatives: vegetable emollients (see alternatives to Animal Fats
and Oils).
Tyrosine. Amino
acid hydrolyzed from casein. Used in cosmetics and creams.
Derivative: Glucose Tyrosinase.
Urea.
Carbamide. Excreted from urine and other bodily fluids. In
deodorants, ammoniated dentifrices, mouthwashes, hair colorings, hand
creams, lotions, shampoos, etc. Used to "brown" baked
goods, such as pretzels. Derivatives: Imidazolidinyl Urea, Uric Acid.
Alternatives: synthetics.
Uric Acid. (See
Urea.)
Vitamin A. Can
come from fish liver oil (e.g., shark liver oil), egg yolk, butter,
lemongrass, wheat germ oil, carotene in carrots, and synthetics. It
is an aliphatic alcohol. In cosmetics, creams, perfumes, hair dyes,
etc. In vitamins, supplements. Alternatives: carrots, other
vegetables, synthetics.
Vitamin B-Complex
Factor. (See Panthenol.)
Vitamin B Factor.
(See Biotin.)
Vitamin B-12.
Usually animal source. Some vegetarian B-12 vitamins are in a
stomach base. Alternatives: some vegetarian B-12-fortified yeasts and
analogs available. Plant algae discovered containing B-12, now in
supplement form (spirulina).Some
nutritionist caution that fortified foods or supplements are
essential.
Vitamin D.
Ergocalciferol. Vitamin D-2. Ergosterol. Provitamin D-2. Calciferol.
Vitamin D-3. Vitamin D can come from fish liver oil, milk,
egg yolk, etc. Vitamin D-2 can come from animal fats or plant
sterols. Vitamin D-3 is always from an animal source. All the D
vitamins can be in creams, lotions, other cosmetics, vitamin tablets,
etc. Alternatives: plant and mineral sources, synthetics, completely
vegetarian vitamins, exposure of skin to sunshine. Many other
vitamins can come from animal sources. Examples: choline, biotin,
inositol, riboflavin, etc.
Vitamin H. (See
Biotin.)
Wax. Glossy,
hard substance that is soft when hot. From animals and plants. In
lipsticks, depilatories, hair straighteners. Alternatives: vegetable
waxes.
Whey. A
serum from milk. Usually in cakes, cookies, candies, and breads. In
cheese-making. Alternatives: soybean whey.
Wool. From
sheep. Used in clothing. Ram lambs and old "wool" sheep are
slaughtered for their meat. Sheep are transported without food or
water, in extreme heat and cold. Legs are broken, eyes injured, etc.
Sheep are bred to be unnaturally woolly, also unnaturally wrinkly,
which causes them to get insect infestations around the tail areas.
The farmer's solution to this is the painful cutting away of the
flesh around the tail (called "mulesing"). "Inferior"
sheep are killed. When shearing the sheep, they are pinned down
violently and sheared roughly. Their skin is cut up. Every year,
hundreds of thousands of shorn sheep die from exposure to cold.
Natural predators of sheep (wolves, coyotes, eagles, etc.) are
poisoned, trapped, and shot. In the U.S., overgrazing of cattle and
sheep is turning more than 150 million acres of land to desert.
"Natural" wool production uses enormous amounts of
resources and energy (to breed, raise, feed, shear, transport,
slaughter, etc., the sheep). Derivatives: Lanolin, Wool Wax, Wool
Fat. Alternatives: cotton, cotton flannel, synthetic fibers, ramie,
etc.
Wool Fat. (See
Lanolin.)
Wool Wax. (See
Lanolin.)
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