Camels, Llamas, Alpacas, Vicunas, Guanacos, and a couple other animals are all related. They are all camelids, like horses and donkeys are both equines.
Alpacas are the least picky camelid so they can eat mostly any grass.
Because they are related to each other.
Llamas, alpacas, vicunas and guanacos are all similar species of humpless camelid. None are hybridized.
Llamas are a species. The other similar camelid species are vicunas, guanacos and alpacas. Llamas and Guanacos are genus Llama Vicunas and alpacas have been placed in the genus Vicugna
Alpacas are from South America
Guanacos, Alpacas, surprisingly camels there classified in camelid family, hmm that's all I can think of right now.
Alpacas were never known to be wild animals. They are a domesticated form of a South American camelid. While herds of them are kept all over South America, the most commonly referred to alpacas are the ones in Peru. Now, alpacas have been exported to many countries around the world.
Camelids are members of the biological family Camelidae, the only living family in the suborder Tylopoda. Camels, dromedaries, llamas, alpacas, vicuñas, and guanacos are in this group.
It doesn't, not normally. The normal erythrocyte of any camelid (camels, llamas, alpacas) is oval-shaped with no nucleus. Birds have nucleated, oval-shaped RBCs. Perhaps that is what you are thinking of.
Guanaco, the vicuna, and the alpaca are their closest relatives.
Camels (Dromedary and Bactran), alpacas, guanacos and vicuñas. All are a part of the Camelid family. The first are the Old World camelids and the last three, including the llama itself, are New World camelids.
No, Alpacas have spines.