like most four legged beasts they have been kown to bite in upset or irratated.
fawn
vicuna
"Vicuna" refers to a large South American animal, a camelid, understood to be related to the llama and perhaps also the alpaca. Its natural habitat is the alpine regions of the Andes mountains. "Vicuna" may also refer to the very fine (and valuable) wool which comes from the animal of the same name.
Vicuna
The vicuna is a wild animal which is very rare. It usually lives in high elevations of 12,000 to 18,000 feet in the Andes Mountains. It is a relative of the llama and the alpaca. It is known to have the finest wool there is.
Yes, vicuna are mammals.
You can own a paco-vicuna, a crossbreed between an alpaca and a vicuna, but the article below explains vicuna ownership by the native peoples of Peru.
No. The brown bear is listed as Least Concern by the IUCN.
A vicuna eats grass making it a herbivore.
The vicuna is a member of the camelid family. The enemies of the vicuna are people. People have been poaching them, mining in their habitat, and polluting their streams and environment.
Vicunas are considered herbivores. Specifically they are grazers, which means that they primarily eat grass. In the vicuna habitat, grass is common, so it is easy for the vicuna to get its food.
Guanacorrhea doesn't belong. Vicuna and alpaca are animals.
A vicuna is a South American hoofed mammal, Latin name Vicugna vicugna, closely related to the alpaca and llama.
Vicuna is a small llamalike animal having fine wool , found in the Andes Moutains.
Vicuna is technically a fiber made from the wool of an animal called the vicuna. It's natural color is a sort of goldish brown. And many garments made from vicuna are this same color. It has a texture somewhat like cashmere, but it is much more expensive. Vicuna when referenced as a color is sort of gold-brown. It's a very rich looking color. Picture a very rich man's overcoat from the 1930s.
Vicuna
South America.