they are a different species than the one humped camel, not a mutation. there are plenty of other two humped, or bactrian, camels to breed successfully. one humped camels are called dromedaries and only breed with other one humped camels.
You ride behind the hump on a special saddle that kinda looks like a small chair. When racing (which is hilarious by the way), the rider will lean backwards a little more than if he was leading a caravan ( I searched for a picture with no such luck). Most of the time, a one humped camel is led by hand (leash) and will either carry or pull a load. Careful though, they are moody and will spit. Interesting fact: A camel will drink up to 32 gallons of water at a time (it's why a desert has no water).
A Bactrian camel. A one humped camel is called a dromedary.
One and two humped camels can breed and most likely the baby would have one large hump. This is often called an F1 camel.
Bactrian
I
The bactrian, two-humped camel, is a tad bigger than the one-humped Dromedary.
The haploid number of both the one-humped camel (dromedary) and the two-humped camel (bactrian) is 37.
a one humped camel can go about 4 days (4000 kilometres)
No. Dromedary is the correct name for the one humped, or arabian camel.
A camel is in the genus Camelus. The two species of camel are the dromedary, or one-humped camel (C. dromedarius) and the bactrian, or two-humped camel (C. bactrianus).
1/2 the time of a two humped camel can
One humped: Dromedary camel, Camelus dromedarius.Two humped: Bactrian camel, Camelus bactrianus.
a one-humped camel
Arabian camel
The bactrian, two-humped camel, is a tad bigger than the one-humped Dromedary.
A humpbacked camel. Well, true, but the specific description for a double-humped camel is - Bactrian camel. A single-humped camel is called a dromedary (FYI)
Yes. The one-humped camel is called a dromadary or Arabian camel. (The two-humped camel is the Bactrian camel.) The Arabian camel can be found from Morocco to Iran, although seldom if at all in the wild. Additionally, there is a large feral dromadary population in Australia.