The ancestors of camels evolved in North America fifty million years
ago. The oldest relatives were only twelve inches tall and lacked humps.
About three million years ago, one branch migrated across a land bridge
to Asia, becoming today's camels. Later, others moved to South America
to become the lamoids, which include the vicuГ±a, guanaco, llama, and
alpaca. The North American camelids became extinct after the last ice
age, perhaps due to climate change but more likely from overhunting by
humans who were occupying the continent at that time. Dromedary camels
were domesticated four thousand years ago in Arabia, while the Bactrians
were independently domesticated five hundred years later in Central
Asia. While primarily used for transport, they are also valued for milk,
meat, hair, leather, and dung, which is dried and used for fuel.
Although some wild Bactrian camels may still exist in remote regions
such as China's western Xinjiang Province, most camels are domesticated
or feral. Worldwide, camels are estimated at twenty million, 75 percent
in North Africa (from Morocco to Somalia) and 25 percent in Asia (from
Arabia to Mongolia), with twenty thousand in Europe and Australia.
Physical Characteristics of Camels
Camels, among the largest terrestrial animals at more than seven feet
tall and ten feet long, are well adapted to arid regions of the world.
Their long legs keep their bodies away from the hot surface of the
ground. In addition, they have a thin profile when viewed from the
front; this permits them to minimize absorbing solar radiation by facing
the sun, which they do in the hottest periods of the year. Furthermore,
they allow their body temperatures to rise up to 108 degrees
Fahrenheit. They conserve water by having very efficient evaporative
cooling and by producing very concentrated urine and dry, pelleted
feces. They can also endure a substantial loss in body water,upto 40
percent of their body weight, with little harm or loss of appetite; they
preserve the water in the blood at the expense of that in their tissues
and alimentary tract. Furthermore, when rehydrating, they can consume
up to fifty gallons of water without damaging their tissues or red blood
cells; the latter can expand 2.4-fold without bursting. Contrary to
popular myth, their humps do not provide water storage, consisting
instead mostly of fat that can be used as a metabolic fuel. When camels
are starved, theirhumpswill regress or become limp. Camels are
herbivores and eat a variety of plant material, grass, brush, and trees,
subsisting well on browse with low nutritional value. As a result,
their food preferences are complementary to those of other domesticated
and wild animals. They can obtain much of their water needs from
plants.With sufficient food and at moderate temperatures, they have been
known to go months without drinking. They ruminate, permitting rapid
ingestion of food and subsequent regurgitation and rechewing. Unlike
cattle and sheep, they have three rather than four stomach compartments,
although the first one, the rumen, is similarly used for microbial
fermentation of plant material that would otherwise be indigestible.
Camels can carry loads of three hundred pounds and cover up to one
hundred miles a day (although twenty-five to fifty is typical). They are
loaded or mounted when they are in a kneeling position. They have a
pacing gait, where both feet on each side move together, and their
broad, padded feet keep them from sinking in sand. To deal with
sandstorms, they have a third eyelid that comes up from below the eye,
long eyelashes, and nostrils that they can close. Camels have very good
eyesight; their eyes are protected from bright sunshine by a bony
protrusion. They also have a keen sense of smell; reputedly, they can
smell water a mile away. Like their South American cousins, camels mate
in a crouched position. Their pregnancies last thirteen months,
resulting generally in single offspring. Females have relatively small
mammary glands between their rear legs. They become sexually mature at
three to four years, continue to grow until they are fifteen or older,
and can live to be forty years old, although most are killed for meat
before then.
Comparison of Dromedary and Bactrian Camels
The
most obvious difference between the two types of camels is that
dromedaries have one hump and Bactrians have two. During embryonic
development, both have two humps, but one regresses before birth in
dromedaries, although the vestige of that second hump is sometimes
visible in front of themore prominent one. Bactrians are also shorter
and hairier; these adaptations permit them to survive at the higher and
colder elevations of the deserts of Central Asia. They survive at
temperatures below freezing in winter and in the summer above 120
degrees Fahrenheit. They shed their hair in the spring and regrow it in
the fall. Bactrians also have tougher foot-pads to deal with a more
rocky terrain. Bactrians are slower animals; some dromedaries are bred
as racing animals. These two types of camels are fully interfertile and,
accordingly, belong to the same species. Dromedaries are much more
numerous than Bactrian camels.
Future of Camels
Camels are
closely linked to the largely nomadic existence of their owners, whose
lifestyle is succumbing to the demands of modern nation-states for more
sedentary populations and respect for national borders, as well as the
increasingly pervasive use of motor vehicles. These factors put the
survival of camels at risk. However, they remain the best-adapted large
animal in the most arid desert regions of the world and are not
currently endangered as domestic or feral animals, although the
remaining wild camels in Central Asia are under threat due to the fact
that their natural habitat is China's nuclear test range. Camels could
have increasing value for adventure vacations in the remote deserts of
the world.
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