yes. its a llama not a sheep
Llamas actually have wool similar to that of a sheep, however it does not have the oil that sheep wool has. It is called fiber while on the animal. It is finer than sheep's wool and only one percent of it will shrink.
Sheep, horses, llamas and alpacas - basically any animal will cograze with a goat and eventually over time become friends.
Any kind of manure, particularly those from herbivorous animals such as cattle, horses, sheep, chickens, goats, llamas, bison, elk, deer, etc.
No. Though llamas in the same family as camels, they do not have the hump.
lets see, to endanger any species, all you need to do is start hunting it; lots of it, then, when it becomes difficult to find them, borrow helicopters and continue hunting them. Then, when you still can't find any, let a bunch of wolves or stray rottweilers loose and then you'll have endangered llamas. Wild llamas, in Peru and such, could be endangered by an introduced infection of some sort, much the way sheep in the Rocky mountains suffer from lung worm.
yes
Mating between a human and a sheep is biologically impossible due to significant differences in genetics and reproductive systems. Even if attempted, it would not result in any viable offspring, as humans and sheep are entirely different species. Additionally, such actions raise serious ethical and legal concerns regarding animal welfare.
sheep, alpacas,llamas,and in some countries even from camels. camels skin is warm from underneath so it is used for making clothes
Just like any other animals, llamas get their energy from the food they eat.
yes
There isn't any spacific country that raises llamas I ran a llama farm in the US but Peru is known for thair llamas. Hope that helps
no difference