Both llamas and alpacas only have one baby, also called a cria. They are like horses in which that 99.9% of the time they only have one baby, but in rare cases, like horses, they may have twins, but often one or both of the twins dies and possibly the mother. But I have seen here on the internet one set of twins where the mother and the babies all lived and the babies are growing up just fine.
Yes. All animals have babies.
about 11 months after gettin it on! :)
Llamas are known for never saying anything unless they are in danger, then they make a shrill scream. They also hum to their babies.
No, Guinea pigs and Llamas are different species. While both are mammals, they are distant relatives only, and cannot interbreed.
Normally, a llama has one baby at a time. Twinning is rare, and twins rarely survive. BTW, baby llamas are called crias.
There is no exact data as to how many llamas are in the world. The population of llamas is most likely in the millions.
since when did llamas get jobs
no their babies are bat chickens which are 12 feet tall and prey on llamas
Llamas are herbivores; they don't eat meat and thus cannot be cannibals.
Waffles
El Llano en llamas has 232 pages.
At least 4000