Definition
The animalic family represents the most historically contested area of perfumery ethics: the transition from natural animal-derived materials to synthetics was driven partly by animal welfare legislation (CITES), partly by consumer preference shifts, and partly by supply unpredictability and cost.
The olfactive register of animalic materials (sweat, skin, fecal warmth) makes them polarizing: enthusiasts describe them as "skin-like" and deeply sensual; casual wearers often find them off-putting without calibration.
Materials and modern use
Classical animalic materials included civet (from the civet cat), castoreum (from the beaver), ambergris (from sperm whale), and musk from the musk deer. All are now largely replaced by synthetic alternatives due to ethical concerns and CITES protection of source species (CITES, accessed 2026-05-27).
Modern animalic facets in niche perfumery are typically achieved through macrocyclic musks (Habanolide, Exaltolide, Ambrettolide), nitromusks (restricted under IFRA), and specific molecules such as Civetone (synthetic) or Indole. The animalic family today rarely exists as a standalone category; it functions more commonly as a facet within chypre, oriental, and leather families, adding the fleshy, "dark" dimension to compositions. Houses such as Serge Lutens and État Libre d'Orange have explored animalic registers deliberately (Fragrantica, accessed 2026-05-27).