fat in a camel doesn't provide water
a hump (or two if they are bactrian camels) stores fat, which metabolises for energy. It does not hold water!
Fat and water storage.
No, camels do not have water in their hump. It contains fat, not water.
No. These are fat reserves only.
Camels evolved their unique hump adaptation to store fat reserves, which provide them with energy and hydration during long periods of time without food or water in their desert environment.
Camels do not store water in their hump. Instead, they store fat. However, they can break down the fat to release water, which their bodies can use.
No. Camels do not store water in their hump. The hump is used to store fat.
Camels evolved their unique hump to store fat reserves for energy during long periods without food or water in their desert environment.
The fat in a camel's hump provides food during periods when food is scarce.
If you are meening how Dow they store water, I think they keep it in they're hump(s)
Camels do not store water. The idea that camels store water in their humps was a zoological hoax. Camels actually convert the water into fat, which is stored in their humps and metabolised if they need water.
because if they had no fat in camels humps they would not have humps and then they would be horses.