both belong to camelid family :)
yes they are used as pack animals and are also called 'small camels without humps' by some.
yes, llamas, being part of the Camelid family, live in the Andes Mountains of South America.
There are very few similarities between camels and kangaroos, beyond the fact that both are fur-covered mammals. They are also both grazing animals which feed primarily on grasses and vegetation. that is where the similarity ends. Camels are placental mammals, and not native to Australia (although there are plenty of feral camels in Australia), while kangaroos are marsupials which are native to Australia. Many people think that the kangaroo can go for long periods without water, like the camel. This is not true. The kangaroo must have regular access to water.
Neither. Camels belong to family Camelidae along with dromedaries, llamas and alpacas. Donkeys belong to family Equidae along with horses and zebras. Cows belong to family Bovidae along with bison, antelope, sheep, goats and muskoxen.
Both Camels and deserts may be found in China.
Because they don't need to store water on their backsLlamas live in the mountains and Camels live in the desert.Llamas & Camels are related, but they don't have humps on their back because Llamas and Camels used to be one species, but Llamas went to the mountains and Camels went to the desert.
LLamas
Camels, Llamas, Alpacas, Vicunas, Guanacos, and a couple other animals are all related. They are all camelids, like horses and donkeys are both equines.
camels are definetley better than llamas because llamas have wird teeth and all they do all day is sleep,eat, and spit. Camels have walked miles in deserts, so they deserve credit there. Although llamas may have some advantages over its camel cousin, in the long run, I would say that camels are definetley better than llamas.
Two; camels and llamas
Llamas and camels spit.
Llamas, Alpacas, and Vicuna are three animals related to Camels.
Llamas are cousins of camels. Alpacas gunacos and vicunas are also cousins.
Of course they do not live in Brazil. They live in dry places.
No. Though llamas in the same family as camels, they do not have the hump.
LLamas and vicunas are separate animals. They live in South America. Both of them have been domesticated for thousands of years by the local tribes. They are related to camels, but are not descended from them or from goats.
Llamas are mostly closely related to alpacas, vicunas, and guanacos.