Everything about Camel Family totally explained
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.
Camelids are
even-toed ungulates: they're classified in the
Artiodactyla order. Other suborders of Artiodactyla include pigs, peccaries and hippos (suborder
Suina) and the extraordinarily successful and diverse suborder
Ruminantia (which includes cattle, goats, antelope and many others).
Characteristics
Camelids are large animals with slender necks and long legs, and are strictly
herbivorous. They differ from
ruminants in several ways. They have a three-chambered rather than a four-chambered
digestive tract; an upper lip that's split in two with each part separately mobile; an isolated incisor in the upper jaw; and uniquely among mammals, elliptical
red blood cells. They also have a unique type of
antibodies lacking the light chain, in addition to the normal antibodies found in other species. These antibodies are being used to develop '
nanobodies'.
Camelids have long legs that, because they lack tensor skin to bridge between thigh and body, look longer still. They don't have hooves, rather a two-toed foot with toenails and a soft footpad (Tylopoda is Latin for "padded foot"). The main weight of the animal is borne by these tough, leathery sole-pads. The South American camelids, adapted to steep and rocky terrain, can move the pads on their toes to maintain grip. Many fossil camelids were
unguligrade and probably hooved, in contrast to all living species.
Adult camelids have a single pair of
incisor teeth in their upper jaw, and also have hook-shaped
canines. They have a wide
diastema, and grinding,
selenodont, cheek teeth. Old World camelids have a larger, and somewhat variable, number of
premolars than their New World counterparts. The
dental formula for the New World camelids is:
The two Afro-Asian camel species have developed extensive adaptations to their life in harsh, near-waterless environments. Wild populations of the bactrian camel are even able to drink
brackish water, and some herds live in nuclear test areas.
Evolution
Camelids are unusual in that their modern distribution is almost a mirror-image of their origin. Camelids first appeared very early in the evolution of the even-toed ungulates, around 45 million years ago during the middle
Eocene, in present-day
North America. Among the earliest camelids was the rabbit-sized
Protylopus, which still had four toes on each foot. By the late
Eocene around 35 million years ago, camelids such as
Poebrotherium had lost the two lateral toes, and were about the size of a modern
goat.
The family diversified and prospered but remained confined to the North American continent until only about 2 or 3 million years ago, when representatives arrived in
Asia, and (after the formation of the
Isthmus of Panama),
South America.
The original camelids of North America remained common until the quite recent geological past, but then disappeared, possibly as a result of hunting or habitat alterations by the
earliest human settlers. Three species groups survived: the
Dromedary of northern
Africa and south-west Asia; the
Bactrian Camel of eastern Asia; and the South American group, which has now diverged into a range of forms that are closely related but usually classified as four species:
Llamas,
Alpacas,
Guanacos, and
Vicuñas.
Fossil camelids show a wider variety than their modern counterparts. One North American genus,
Titanotylopus, stood 3.5 metres at the shoulder, compared with the approximately two metres of the largest modern camelids. Other extinct camelids included small, gazelle-like animals, such as
Stenomylus. Finally, there were a number of very tall, giraffe-like camelids, adapted to feeding on leaves from high trees, including such genera as
Aepycamelus, and
Oxydactylus[.
]Scientific classification
Phylogenetic tree
Extinct genera of camelids
The newly discovered giant Syrian Camel is yet to be officially described.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Camel Family'.
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