Camels.
No. Despite the lore surrounding camels and their humps, a camel's hump has nothing to do with their excellent retention of water.
Camels are known to store water in their humps.
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.
A camel is a four-legged animal that lives in the desert. It stores a fatty tissue in its humps. NOT water, as it is commonly thought.
it stores water in its humps a hump can carry water to last three weeks
Camels can survive on water. The humps on it back stores a very large quantity of water for them to have when needed.
Camels store water in their humps so a camel with a shrunken hump needs water.
a camel :)
Nope. Humps are fat, not water,
No. they have humps to store water.
no
The Camel stores the water in his humps so he can go a long time without water.