This pitiful spectacle is repeated time and time again at a market in southern China where hundreds of cats - just like our own domestic pets - languish before being killed and eaten. In China ...
The barbaric cat market exposed by The Mail on Sunday has been shut down by police in China after pressure from thousands of horrified readers. The report - followed up by newspapers and magazines ...
In 2022, China's pet market reached a revenue of around 493.6 billion yuan ... Wandering down aisles lined with transparent ...
Domestic cats first stepped paw in China more than a millennia ago, a new study has found. Their route in? Quite likely, the ...
At a booth featuring such products, colorful freeze-dried fruits and vegetables, including broccoli, carrots, purple sweet ...
The white paper noted that the pet population in China’s urban area alone had reached 120 million in 2024, with the urban pet (dog and cat) market exceeding 300 billion yuan (S$55 billion).
How and when domestic cats arrived in China has been a mystery. A new analysis of cat DNA suggests traders and diplomats likely carried the pets with them along the Silk Road 1,400 years ago.
A domesticated feline at a temple in China has been dubbed the “high-five cat” because of the manner in which it greets tourists who are flocking to the site seeking good luck. The moggy ...
According to the latest China Pet Industry Annual Report, released by the Asia Pet Alliance Institute, there were 187 million ...
This painting from the bottom of a bowl is one of the earliest depictions of a cat from China, dating to 168 B.C. Markings on the cat's fur suggest it's a leopard cat, not a domestic cat.