They can walk great distances in the desert places that humans usually cannot.
They hold gallons upon gallons of water in their humps (they can drink 36 gallons in 6 minutes)
and can actually sense bad water from good water, and won't drink it if it is bad. (Good way to know if your water isn't poisoned.)
The hair of a camel protects the camels skin from the harsh, scorching desert sun and keeps the camel warm during the icy desert nights.
Camels also have a bare, hairless underbelly to help cool them down while lying on the sand.
Camels also have hair over their ears and nostrils to prevent sand from entering and blocking them.
Their eyelashes are also very thick and long, preventing sand going in their eyes.
The long tail of a camel flicks away the flies.
Camels have thin hair on their bellies to help keep them cool.
To help keep the sand out
Camels have thin hair on their tummy to help keep them cool and also to protect the skin from sand particles of deserts.
yes. may contain some camel poo too
Pregnant camels
a camels hair is softer than a horses hair
Yes.Note, if an animal has fur (hair) it's a mammal.YesYes, camels are mammals.
Hair from the ears of cattle, not camel hair.
Camels have ear hair to protect them from dust getting in their ears
It is made of cow pat
"hair becasue they are mammals" This is actually a horrible explanation. Humans are mammals because we have hair. Dogs are mammals because they have fur. Camels are mammals, and the numerous sources I've viewed indicate that camels have hair, rather than fur. Again, to say, "hair [because] they are mammals," is rather ignorant to the definition of "mammal." All mammals have hair or fur.
they help