No. The former cuts and polishes gems, and the latter is... a camel.
Very few. Dromedaries, relative to the camel, are working pack animals. They are large, smelly, and somewhat aggressive. You might keep dromedaries instead of horses or mules for arid or desert climates.
Yes, dromedaries are a variety of camel.
Yes, dromedaries are a variety of camel.
some zoos have it named the Dromedaries
Well, when I was young I had this question from Wordly Wise 3000: Book 3 and what I wrote down was this: Dromedaries don't bother to seek shade because their fur can protect it's self from sweating. And dromedaries can hold up to six hundred pounds, so they don't have to rest with all that food and water inside of their humps. I really don't know if dromedaries sweat, though. If they did cool. But if they don't, THE HECK CARES?!?!?!?!?!
Camels with one hump are called dromedaries, while camels with two humps are called Bactrian camels. Dromedaries are found in Africa and the Middle East, while Bactrian camels are found in Central Asia. The humps store fat, but dromedaries have a single hump for energy storage, while Bactrian camels have two humps for extra fat storage.
some dromedaries and mainly bactrian camels (2 humps)
They conserve energy by storing fat in their humps.
Camels with one hump are called dromedaries, while camels with two humps are called Bactrian camels. Dromedaries are found in Africa and the Middle East, while Bactrian camels are found in Central Asia. The humps serve as a storage for fat, with dromedaries having a single hump for energy storage and Bactrian camels having two humps for extra energy storage.
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Both Dromedary and Bactrian are species of camel. Dromedaries have one hump and are found in Northern Africa and one area of Australia. Bactrians are two humped camels native to central Asia. Unlike Dromedaries, Bactrian camels are critically endangered. Both species of camel have been domesticated although domesticated Dromedaries are much more common except in Asia where Bactrian camels have been a domesticated pack animal for thousands of years.
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.