Animals in culture

Artistic vision: Still Life with Lobster and Oysters by Alexander Coosemans, c. 1660
Commercial reality: sides of beef in a slaughterhouse

Animals including fish, crustaceans, insects, molluscs, mammals and birds play many roles in culture, as do other living things.

Economically, animals provide much of the meat eaten by the human population, whether farmed or hunted, and until the arrival of mechanised transport, terrestrial mammals provided a large part of the power used for work and transport. Animals serve as models in biological research, such as in genetics, and in drug testing.

Many species are kept as pets, the most popular being mammals, especially dogs and cats. These are often anthropomorphised.

Animals such as horses and deer are among the earliest subjects of art, being found in the Upper Paleolithic cave paintings such as at Lascaux. Major artists such as Albrecht Dürer, George Stubbs and Edwin Landseer are known for their portraits of animals. Animals further play a wide variety of roles in literature, film, mythology, and religion.

Economic uses

As food

Main articles: Fishing and Livestock
Traditional fishing trawler filled with sardines, India

The human population exploits a large number of animal species for food, both by livestock farming and, mainly at sea, by hunting wild species.[1][2]

Marine fish of many species, such as herring, cod, tuna, mackerel and anchovy, are caught commercially, forming an important part of the diet, including protein and fatty acids, of much of the world's population. A smaller number of species are farmed commercially, including salmon and carp.[1][3][4]

Invertebrates including cephalopods like squid and octopus; crustaceans such as prawns, crabs, and lobsters; and bivalve or gastropod molluscs such as clams, oysters, cockles, and whelks are all hunted or farmed for food.[5]

Mammals form a large part of the livestock raised for meat across the world. They include (2011) around 1.4 billion cattle, 1.2 billion sheep, 1 billion domestic pigs,[2][6] and (1985) over 700 million rabbits.[7]

For clothing and textiles

A sheep being shorn of its fleece with traditional blade shears

Textiles from the most utilitarian to the most luxurious are made from animal fibres such as wool, camel hair, angora, cashmere, and mohair. Hunter-gatherers have used animal sinews as lashings and bindings. Leather from cattle, pigs and other species is widely used to make shoes, handbags, belts and many other items. Animals have been hunted and farmed for their fur, to make items such as coats and hats, again ranging from simply warm and practical to the most elegant and expensive.[8][9]

Cochineal scale insects being collected from a prickly pear, 1777

Dyestuffs including carmine (cochineal),[10][11] shellac,[12][13] and kermes[14][15][16][17][18] have been made from the bodies of insects.

For work and transport

Horses pulling wagons in Tibet
Main articles: Working animal and Pack animal

Working domestic animals including cattle, horses, yaks, camels, and elephants have been used for work and transport from the origins of agriculture, their numbers declining with the arrival of mechanised transport and agricultural machinery. In 2004 they still provided some 80% of the power for the mainly small farms in the third world, and some 20% of the world's transport, again mainly in rural areas. In mountainous regions unsuitable for wheeled vehicles, pack animals continue to transport goods.[19]

In science

Laboratory mice being prepared for a radiation test at Los Alamos in 1957
Main articles: Laboratory animal and Animal model

Animals such as the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, the zebrafish, the chicken and the house mouse, serve a major role in science as experimental models,[20] both in fundamental biological research, such as in genetics,[21] and in the development of new medicines, which must be tested exhaustively to demonstrate their safety.[22][23] Millions of mammals, especially mice and rats, are used in experiments each year.[24]

A knockout mouse is a genetically modified mouse with an inactivated gene, replaced or disrupted with an artificial piece of DNA. They enable the study of sequenced genes whose functions are unknown.[25][26]

In medicine

The tunicate Ecteinascidia turbinata yields the anti-cancer drug Yondelis.
Further information: Vaccine

Vaccines have been made using animals since their discovery by Edward Jenner in the 18th century. He noted that inoculation with live cowpox afforded protection against the more dangerous smallpox. In the 19th century, Louis Pasteur developed an attenuated (weakened) vaccine for rabies. In the 20th century, vaccines for the viral diseases mumps and polio were developed using animal cells grown in vitro.[27]

An increasing variety of drugs are based on toxins and other molecules of animal origin. The cancer drug Yondelis was isolated from the tunicate Ecteinascidia turbinata. One of dozens of toxins made by the deadly cone snail Conus geographus is used as Prialt in pain relief.[28]

In hunting

A poison dart frog, Phyllobates terribilis, secretes toxins powerful enough to be used to tip blowpipe darts.

Animals, and products made from them, are used to assist in hunting. People have used hunting dogs to help chase down animals such as deer, wolves, and foxes;[29] birds of prey from eagles to small falcons are used in falconry, hunting birds or mammals;[30] and tethered cormorants have been used to catch fish.[31]

Dendrobatid poison dart frogs, especially those in the genus Phyllobates, secrete toxins such as Pumiliotoxin 251D and Allopumiliotoxin 267A powerful enough to be used to poison the tips of blowpipe darts.[32][33]

Cultural uses

As pets

Main article: Pet

A wide variety of animals are kept as pets, from invertebrates such as tarantulas and octopuses, insects including praying mantises,[34] reptiles such as snakes and chameleons,[35] and birds including canaries, parakeets and parrots[36] all finding a place. Anthropomorphism is the innate tendency to attribute human traits, emotions, and intentions to animals, and it is an important aspect of the way that people relate to animals such as pets.[37][38][39]

However, mammals are the most popular pets in the Western world, with the most kept species being dogs, cats, and rabbits. For example, in America in 2012 there were some 78 million dogs, 86 million cats, and 3.5 million rabbits.[40][41][42] There is a tension between the role of animals as companions to humans, and their existence as individuals with rights of their own.[43]

For sport

A wide variety of both terrestrial and aquatic animals are hunted for sport.[44]

The aquatic animals most often hunted for sport are fish, including many species from large marine predators such as sharks and tuna, to freshwater fish such as trout and carp.[45][46]

Birds such as partridges, pheasants and ducks, and mammals such as deer and wild boar, are among the terrestrial game animals most often hunted for sport and for food.[47][48][49]

In art

Animals, often mammals but including fish and insects among other groups, have been the subjects of art from the earliest times, both historical, as in Ancient Egypt, and prehistoric, as in the cave paintings at Lascaux and other sites in the Dordogne, France and elsewhere. Major animal paintings include Albrecht Dürer's 1515 The Rhinoceros, and George Stubbs's c. 1762 horse portrait Whistlejacket.[50]

In literature and film

Scarab with separate wings, Ancient Egypt
Further information: Arthropods in film and Birds in film

Animals as varied as bees, beetles, mice, foxes, crocodiles and elephants play a wide variety of roles in literature and film.[51]

A genre of films has been based on oversized insects, including the pioneering 1954 Them!, featuring giant ants mutated by radiation, and the 1957 The Deadly Mantis.[52][53][54]

Birds have occasionally featured in film, as in Alfred Hitchcock's 1963 The Birds, loosely based on Daphne du Maurier's story of the same name, which tells the tale of sudden attacks on people by violent flocks of birds.[55] Ken Loach's admired[56] 1969 Kes, based on Barry Hines's 1968 novel A Kestrel for a Knave, tells a story of a boy coming of age by training a kestrel.[56]

In mythology and religion

In Hinduism, as in many other traditions, cattle are venerated.
Further information: Insects in mythology

Animals including many insects[57] and mammals[58] feature in mythology and religion.

Among the insects, in both Japan and Europe, as far back as ancient Greece and Rome, a butterfly was seen as the personification of a person's soul, both while they were alive and after their death.[57][59][60] The scarab beetle was sacred in ancient Egypt,[61] while the praying mantis was considered a god in southern African Khoi and San tradition for its praying posture.[62]

Among the mammals, cattle,[63] deer,[58] horses,[64] lions[65] and wolves (and werewolves),[66] are the subjects of myths and worship.

Of the twelve signs of the Western zodiac, six, namely Aries (ram), Taurus (bull), Cancer (crab), Leo (lion), Scorpio (scorpion), and Pisces (fish) are animals, while two others, Sagittarius (horse/man) and Capricorn (fish/goat) are hybrid animals; the name zodiac indeed means a circle of animals. All twelve signs of the Chinese zodiac are animals.[67][68][69]

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