The Guanaco
- 1 March 1954
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Oryx
- Vol. 2 (5) , 273-279
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0030605300036814
Abstract
In South America there are many animals, such as chinchillas, coypus and armadillos, which have no near relatives elsewhere. Among them are the South American camelidae, which are not true camels but only camel-like. They have no hump, their ears are proportionately long and their tails short and bushy, but their slender build and long necks remind one of camels. Like camels, they walk on two toes or phalanges, on the last one, as do all artiodactyles, and also on the penultimate one, so that they seem to be rather digitigrades than unguligrades. Behind their relatively long claws, below the second phalange, there is a kind of little cushion which serves as a callous sole.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mammals of the Collins-Day South American expedition, by Wilfred H. Osgood.Published by Smithsonian Institution ,1916
- Notes on GuanacosArkiv för zoologi / utgivet af K. Svenska vetenskaps-akademien., 1913
- Saggio sulla storia naturale del Chili /Published by Smithsonian Institution ,1782