For thousands of years, humans have used camels and alpacas for transportation and wool production. These two species are mainly distributed in Peru and Bolivia and belong to the camelid family. Alpaca and llama are two of the four types of cellulose - the other two llama and camels are their wild cousins. Interestingly, all four species can mate and produce fertile offspring. It is confusing often, but important points differ between Alpaca and Lama. The biggest physical difference between Alpaca and Lama is size, hair, and face. In addition, their personality is different and affects how people use them over the years.
The most important difference between the two animals is their size. Alpaca is small, shoulder height is about 90 cm (35 inches), weight is 55 to 65 kg (121 to 143 pounds). The camel is the largest emulsion on the shoulder, about 120 cm (47 in) and about 113 kg (250 lb). So Lama is much bigger than their cousin. Their face is different: Alpaca has a short, short, blunt face, but the camel has a long face and a banana-sized ear.
Another big difference is hair. Alpaca has fluffy hair for wool production. Hair color varies from white and pale yellow to brown and black. Lama's hair is rough and its wool is considered to be inferior, but llama breeders are working hard to produce a more beautiful and softer hair llama variety.
Because they can carry much weight, humans usually use llama as packaging animals. On average, each camel can withstand a load of 45 to 60 kilograms (99 to 132 pounds) per day and up to 30 kilometers (18.6 mils) per day. However, as llama is overloaded or abused, it gets reputed because it spits out, kicks, lies down and refuses to move. But usually they are gentle creatures. Alpaca, on the other hand, is more timid and likes to stay with herds. Camels can be used as protective animals for animals such as alpacas and sheep.
Alpaca is often confused with camels. It is closely related, but Rama and Alpaca are different animals. First of all, llama is much bigger than alpaca, about 100 to 200 pounds of alpaca, about twice as heavy as alpaca, average weight is about 250 to 450 pounds. Camels are mainly used for packing or protecting flocks and alpacas, and alpacas are mainly used for soft and luxurious wool. All members of the camel family use exhalation as a means of negative communication. As they possess the ownership of the food they may suffer from other alpaca spitting that they believe they are violating their "food". In addition, they often vomit each other during a fight among herds (usually involving two or more men)
For thousands of years, humans have used camels and alpacas for transportation and wool production. These two species are mainly distributed in Peru and Bolivia and belong to the camelid family. Alpaca and llama are two of the four types of cellulose - the other two llama and camels are their wild cousins. Interestingly, all four species can mate and produce fertile offspring. It is confusing often, but important points differ between Alpaca and Lama. The biggest physical difference between Alpaca and Lama is size, hair, and face. In addition, their personality is different and affects how people use them over the years.
The difference between Lama and Alpaca is the size of the llama, the length of the head, the degree of curvature of the ear. Alpaca fiber is usually more expensive, but it is not always more valuable. Alpaca tends to have a more consistent color throughout the body. The most obvious visual difference between camels and camels is that camels have humps or humps and do not camels. Camels are not ruminants, false ruminants or improved ruminants. They have a complex stomach with several compartments that allow them to eat low quality, high fiber foods. In the stomach compartment, ferment the hard food, then reflow and chew again. Ruminant animals have four compartments (cattle, sheep, goats), but Rama has only three stomach compartments: rumen, stomach, abdomen