The alpaca, the llama, the Angora goat (known as mohair), the camel, Cashmere goat, sheep, rabbit, vicuñas and dog (called chiengora wool).* These animals, with the exception of the rabbit and the dog, fall under the Order Artiodactyla.
Goat and sheep
Family Caprinae
Camel, alpaca, vicuna and llama
Family Camelidae
Rabbit
Order Lagomorpha
Family Leporidae
Dog
Order Carnivora
Family Canidae
Location:
Cashmere goat
Himalayans
Angora goat
United States, Turkey and South Africa
Alpaca
South America
Llama
South America
Sheep
China, Australia, New Zealand, United States, UK
Rabbit
Europe, Chile, China, United States
Vicuna
South America
Camel
Turkey, China, Mongolia, Iran, Afghanistan, Russia, Tibet, Australia
Dog
Scandinavia, North America
* List is not inclusive
Sheep produce wool.
Llamas and alpacas produce fibre.
Angora goats produce mohair
Cashmere goats produce cashmere.
Another Answer
Actually, these animals produce fleece, which is then sorted, cleaned, carded, and spun into wool fibres.
AND
Wool is the textile fiber obtained from sheep and certain other animals, including cashmere from goats, mohair from goats, angora from rabbits.
There are many different kinds of wool-yielding animals. Some examples include sheep, llamas, and alpacas. Sheep are found all over the world, while llamas and alpacas are found primarily in South America.
Wool-yielding animals are animals that are typically used for fibre--or rather, textile--production due to the thick hair that grows on their bodies. Such animals include sheep, goats, llamas, alpacas, camels, muskox, Angora rabbits, and others.
goat , llama ,angora goat ,alpaca ,camel ,yak.
Sheep, llamas and alpacas, primarily.
Which animals give us wool
Fleece-bearing animals are the source of wool fibres.
All wool originates from fleece-bearing animals.
All wool originates from fleece-bearing animals.
Fleece-bearing animals are the natural resources from which wool is produced.
Fleece-bearing animals are shorn for their fleece at least annually.
People in Peru harvest fleece from fleece-bearing animals.
All countries where fleece-bearing animals live give us wool. This would be true on every continent except Antarctica.
All countries where fleece-bearing animals live give us wool. This would be true on every continent except Antarctica.
Mongolian wool is spun from fleece-bearing animals that live in the geography loosely called Mongolia. Mostly, the fleece is grown on sheep.
Goats, llamas, alpacas, rabbits -- most fleece-bearing animals have produced fibres that have been spun into wool.
Fleece-bearing animals are raised on every continent except Antarctica. You can read more about them and the process of turning their fleece into wool, below.
in kashmir yak is reared . in south america alpaca llamaand vicuma is reared