Yes!
A baby llama is called a cria (Spanish for "baby").
A baby alpaca is called a cria. A baby llama is a Cria as well
Only if she has offspring or has a cria (baby llama) at her side.
A dad llama is called a "cria." However, "cria" specifically refers to a baby llama. The adult male llama is simply referred to as a "male llama" or "stud llama." Llamas are social animals and often have strong bonds with their offspring.
A cria.
there are called Cria, a hispanic word.A baby lama is called a cria.
CRIA - a baby llama, pronounced "CREE-ya". CRIA also stands for the Canadian Record Industry Association (cry-uhs)
A baby llama is called a cria.
The new born young of an alpaca is called a cria up until about 1 year - from one year to two years of age the correct term is tui but that term is not in common usage in western countries
Sexual reproduction. Male llama mates with female llama to get a baby llama or cria. That's the only way.
If you're using cria to refer to a baby llama or related animal, the plural is "crias".
Llamas typically give birth to a single cria (baby llama) at a time, although twins can occur infrequently. Twins are more common in llamas bred for their fur or meat rather than as pets or pack animals.