Dictionary Definition
camel n : cud-chewing mammal used as a draft or
saddle animal in desert regions
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
etyl ang, from etyl la camelus, from etyl grc sc=polytonic, from ; compare Arabic sc=Arab) and Hebrew sc=Hebr.Pronunciation
- /'kæməl/
- Rhymes: -æməl
Noun
Translations
beast of burden
- Afrikaans: kameel
- Albanian: deve
- Amharic: sc=Ethi
- Arabic: (jámal)
- Aramaic:
- Armenian: ուղտ (ught)
- Azeri: dəvə
- trreq Basque
- trreq Bengali
- Bosnian: kamila
- trreq Breton
- Bulgarian: камила
- trreq Burmese
- Catalan: camell
- Chinese: 駱駝, 骆驼 (luòtuó)
- trreq Chuvash
- Croatian: kamila, deva
- Czech: velbloud
- Danish: kamel g Danish
- Dutch: kameel
- Esperanto: kamelo
- Estonian: kaamel
- Ewe: kposɔ
- Faroese: kamelur
- Finnish: kameli
- French: chameau
- Friulian: camęl
- Galician: camelo
- Georgian: აქლემი (ak‘lemi)
- German: Kamel , Trampeltier
- Greek: καμήλα
- Gujarati: ઊંટ (ū.nt')
- Hebrew: גמל (gamal)
- Hindi: ऊँट (ū.nt')
- Hungarian: teve
- Icelandic: úlfaldi
- Ido: kamelo
- Indonesian: unta
- Irish: camall
- Italian: cammello
- Japanese: 駱駝, ラクダ
- trreq Kannada
- Khmer: (’ūdtobobpī)
- Korean: 낙타 (nakta)
- Kurdish:
- Ladin: camel
- Latin: camelus , camela
- Latvian: kamielis g Latvian
- Lithuanian: kupranugaris g Lithuanian
- Macedonian: камила (kamila)
- Malay: unta
- Malayalam: ഒട്ടകം (ottakam)
- Maltese: ġemel
- trreq Marathi
- Mongolian: тэмээ
- trreq Nepali
- Norwegian: kamel
- Occitan: camèl
- trreq Oriya
- Persian: شتر
- Polish: wielbłąd
- Portuguese: camelo
- Punjabi: ਊਠ (ūṭh)
- Romanian: cămilă
- Romansh: chamel
- Romany: gumila
- Russian: верблюд
- Sami: kamela
- trreq Sanskrit
- Sardinian: camellu, cammellu
- Scottish: càmhal
- Serbian:
- Sindhi: ,
- Slovak: ťava, dromedár
- Slovene: kamela , velblod
- Spanish: camello, dromedario
- Sumerian:
- Swahili: ngamia
- Swedish: kamel, dromedar
- trreq Tamil
- Telugu: ఒంటె (oMTe), లొట్టిపిట్ట (loTTipiTTa)
- Turan: tüyə
- Turkish: deve ^, hecin
- Ukrainian: верблюд
- Upper Sorbian: kamel
- Urdu: (ū.nt') g Urdu
- Uyghur: tɵgə
- Vietnamese: lạc đà
- Welsh: camel
- West Frisian: kamiel
- trreq Yiddish
Related terms
Tocharian B
Noun
Extensive Definition
Camels are even-toed
ungulates within the genus Camelus. The dromedary, one-humped or
Arabian camel has a single hump, and the Bactrian
camel has two humps. They are native to the dry desert areas of western Asia, and central and
east Asia, respectively.
The average life expectancy of a camel is forty
to fifty years. The term camel is also used more broadly to
describe any of the six camel-like creatures in the family Camelidae: the two
true camels, and the four South American camelids, the llama, alpaca, guanaco, and vicuña.
A fully-grown adult camel stands at the shoulder
and at the hump. The hump rises about thirty inches out of its
body. Camels can run up to in short bursts and sustain speeds of up
to . Fossil evidence indicates that the ancestors of modern camels
evolved in North
America during the Palaeogene
period, and later spread to Asia. Humans first domesticated camels
between 3,500–3,000 years ago. The dromedary and the
Bactrian camel are both still used for milk, meat, and as beasts of
burden—the dromedary in western Asia, and the
Bactrian camel further to the north and east in central Asia.
Distribution and numbers
The almost 14 million dromedaries alive
today are domesticated animals (mostly living in Somalia, Sudan, Mauritania and
nearby countries).
The Bactrian
camel is now reduced to an estimated 1.4 million animals,
mostly domesticated. It is thought that there are about 1000 wild
Bactrian camels in the Gobi Desert
in China and Mongolia.
There is a substantial feral population of dromedaries
estimated at up to 700,000 in central parts of Australia,
descended from individuals introduced as transport animals in the
19th century and early 20th century. This population is growing at
approximately 11% per year. The government of South
Australia has decided to cull the animals using aerial
marksmen, because the camels use too much of the limited resources
needed by sheep farmers.
For more information, see Australian
feral camel.
A small population of introduced camels,
dromedaries and Bactrians, survived in the Southwest
United States until the 1900s. These animals, imported from
Turkey, were part of the US Camel
Corps experiment and used as draft animals in mines and escaped
or were released after the project was terminated. A descendant of
one of these was seen by a backpacker in
Los Padres National Forest in 1972. Twenty-three Bactrian
camels were brought to Canada during the Cariboo
Gold Rush.
Genetics
The karyotypes of different camelid species have
been studied earlier by many groups , but no agreement on
chromosome nomenclature of camelids has been reached. The most
recent study used flow-sorted camel chromosomes building
undoubtedly the camel's karyotype (2n=74) that consists of one
metacentric, three submetacentric and 32 acrocentric autosomes. The
Y is a small metacentric chromosome, while the X is a large
metacentric chromosome. . According to molecular data, the New
World and Old World camelids diverged 11 MYA. In spite of this,
these species turned out to be conserved sufficiently to hybridize
and produce live offspring(cama). The
dromedary-guanaco inter-specific hybrid provided the ideal platform
to compare the karyotypes of Old World and New World camels.
The cama is a
camel/llama hybrid bred by
scientists who wanted to see how closely related the parent species
were. The dromedary is six times the weight of a llama, hence
artificial insemination was required to impregnate the llama female
(llama male to dromedary female attempts have proven unsuccessful).
Though born even smaller than a llama cria, the cama had the short
ears and long tail of a camel, no hump and llama-like cloven hooves
rather than the dromedary-like pads. At four years old, the cama
became sexually mature and attracted to llama and guanaco females.
A second cama (female) has since been produced using artificial
insemination. Because camels and llamas both have 74 chromosomes, scientists hope
that the cama will be fertile. If so, there is potential for
increasing size, meat/wool yield and pack/draft ability in South
American camels. The cama apparently inherited the poor temperament
of both parents as well as demonstrating the relatedness of the New
World and Old World camelids.
Camels do not store water in their humps as is
commonly believed; they are actually a reservoir of fatty tissue.
When this tissue is metabolized, it acts as a source of energy, and
would yield more than 1 g of water for each 1 g
of fat converted through reaction with oxygen from air. This
process of fat metabolization generates a net loss of water through
respiration for the oxygen required to convert the fat.
Their ability to withstand long periods without
water is due to a series of physiological adaptations. Their
red
blood cells have an oval shape, unlike those of other mammals, which are circular.
This is to facilitate their flow in a dehydrated state. These
cells are also more stable in order to withstand high osmotic variation without
rupturing when drinking large amounts of water ( to in one
drink).
Camels are able to withstand changes in body
temperature and water content that would kill most other
animals. Their temperature ranges from at night up to during the
day, and only above this threshold will they begin to sweat. The
upper body temperature range is often not reached during the day in
milder climatic conditions, and therefore, the camel may not sweat
at all during the day. Evaporation of their sweat takes place at
the skin level, not at the surface of their coat, thereby being
very efficient at cooling the body compared to the amount of water
lost through sweating. This ability to fluctuate body temperature
and the efficiency of their sweating allows them to preserve about
five litres of water a day.
A feature of their nostrils is that a large
amount of water vapor in their exhalations is trapped and returned
to their body fluids, thereby reducing the amount of water lost
through respiration.
They can withstand at least 20-25% weight loss
due to sweating (most mammals can only withstand about 3-4%
dehydration before cardiac failure results from the thickened
blood.) A camel's blood remains hydrated, even though the body
fluids are lost, until this 25% limit is reached.
Camels eating green herbage can ingest sufficient
moisture in milder conditions to maintain their body's hydrated
state without the need for drinking.
A camel's thick coat reflects sunlight. A shorn
camel has to sweat 50% more to avoid overheating. It also insulates
them from the intense heat that radiates from the desert sand.
Their long legs help by keeping them further from the hot ground.
Camels have been known to swim.
Their mouth is very sturdy, able to chew thorny
desert plants. Long eyelashes and ear hairs, together with sealable
nostrils, form a barrier against sand. Their gait and their widened
feet help them move without sinking into the sand.
The kidneys and intestines of a camel are
very efficient at retaining water. Urine comes out as a thick
syrup, and their feces are so dry that they can fuel fires.
All camelids have an unusual immune system. In
other species, the Y-shaped antibody molecules consist of
two heavy (or long) chains along the length of the Y, and two light
(or short) chains at each tip of the Y. In the camel, the antibody
molecules have only two heavy chains, which makes them smaller and
more durable. These antibodies, which were discovered in 1993,
probably developed 50 million years ago, after camelids split from
ruminants and pigs, according to biochemist Serge
Muyldermans.
The camel is the only animal to have replaced the
wheel (mainly in North Africa) where the wheel had already been
established. The camel did not lose that distinction until the
wheel was combined with the internal combustion engine in the 20th
century.
Camel farming
Military uses of camels
Attempts have been made to employ camels as
cavalry and dragoon mounts and as freight
animals in lieu of horses and mules. In some places, such as
Australia, some
of the camels have become feral and are considered to be
dangerous to travelers on camels. The camels were mostly used in
combat because of their ability to scare off horses in close
ranges, a quality famously employed by the Achaemenid
Persians when fighting Lydia, although the
Persians usually used camels as baggage trains for arrows and
equipment. The horses detest the smell of camels, and therefore,
the horses in the vicinity become harder to control. The United
States Army had an active camel
corps stationed in California in the 19th century, and the
brick stables may still be seen at the Benicia
Arsenal in Benicia,
California, now converted to artists' and artisans' studio
spaces. Camels have been used in wars throughout Africa, and also
in the East Roman Empire as auxiliary forces known as Dromedarii
recruited in desert provinces.
Cuisine
Dairy
Camel milk is a staple food of desert nomad tribes and is richer in fat and protein than cow milk. Camel milk cannot be made into butter in the traditional churning method. It can be made if it is soured first, churned, and then a clarifying agent is added, or if it is churned at 24–25 °C (75–76 °F), but times will vary greatly in achieving results. The milk can readily be made into yogurt. Butter or yogurt made from camel milk is said to have a very faint greenish tinge. Camel milk is said to have many healthful properties and is used as a medicinal product in India; Bedouin tribes believe that camel milk has great curative powers if the camel's diet consists of certain plants. In Ethiopia, the milk is considered an aphrodisiac.Camel milk, until recently, was impossible to
make into traditional cheese since rennet was unable to coagulate
the milk proteins to allow the collection of curds. Under the commission of the
FAO, Professor J.P. Ramet of the
École Nationale Supérieure d'Agronomie et des Industries
Alimentaires (ENSAIA) was able to produce curdling by the
addition of calcium
phosphate and vegetable rennet. The cheese produced from this
process has low levels of cholesterol and lactose. The sale of
camel cheese is limited due to the low yield of cheese from milk
and the uncertainty of pasteurization levels for camel milk which
makes adherence to dairy import regulations difficult.
Meat
A camel carcass can provide a substantial amount of meat. The male dromedary carcass can weigh or more, while the carcass of a male Bactrian can weigh up to . The carcass of a female camel weighs less than the male, ranging between 250 and 350 kg (550–770 lb), but can provide a substantial amount of meat. The brisket, ribs and loin are among the preferred parts, but the hump is considered a delicacy and is most favored. It is reported that camel meat tastes like coarse beef, but older camels can prove to be tough and less flavorful.Camel meat has been eaten for centuries. It has
been recorded by ancient
Greek writers as an available dish in ancient Persia at banquets,
usually roasted whole. The ancient Roman
emperor Heliogabalus
enjoyed camel's heel. Camel meat is still eaten in certain regions
including Somalia, where it
is called Hilib geyl, Saudi
Arabia, Egypt, Libya, Sudan, Kazakhstan and
other arid regions where alternative forms of protein may be
limited or where camel meat has had a long cultural history. In the
Middle East, camel meat is the rarest and most prized source of
pastırma. Not
just the meat, but also blood is a consumable item as is the case
in northern Kenya, where camel
blood is a source of iron,
vitamin
D, salts and minerals.
Cultural prohibitions on consuming camel products
The consumption of camel blood is proscribed by Muslim beliefs, as blood products are not halal. According to Jewish tradition, camel meat and milk are not kosher. Camels possess only one of the two Kosher criteria; although they chew their cuds, they do not possess split hooves. (See: Taboo food and drink)Health issues
A 2005 report issued jointly by the Saudi Ministry of Health and the United States Center for Disease Control details cases of human bubonic plague resulting from the ingestion of raw camel liver.References
- Davidson, Alan. Oxford Companion to Food (1999). "Camel", p. 127
- Camels and Camel Milk. Report Issued by FAO, United Nations. (1982)
- Plague from Eating Raw Camel Liver, Center for Disease Control
- National plan sought to manage camel population, ABC (2005)
- Wilson, RT. "The Camel".
- Bulliet, Richard W. "The Camel and the Wheel".
- The Technology of Making Cheese from Camel Milk (Camelus dromedarius) Animal Production and Health Paper Issued by FAO, United Nations. (2001)
See also
External links
- Use of camels by South African police
- National Camel Research Centre, Bikaner (Rajasthan), India
- The A-Z of Camels
- Pet camel stomps, suffocates owner
- Camels: God's gift to the Bedouin
- Livius.org: Camels and dromedaries
camel in Afrikaans: Kameel
camel in Arabic: جمل
camel in Bengali: উট
camel in Min Nan: Lo̍k-tô
camel in Catalan: Camell
camel in Czech: Velbloud
camel in Welsh: Camel
camel in German: Altweltkamele
camel in Estonian: Kaamel
camel in Modern Greek (1453-): Καμήλα
camel in Spanish: Camelus
camel in Esperanto: Kamelo
camel in Basque: Camelus
camel in Persian: شتر
camel in French: Camelus
camel in Galician: Camelo
camel in Hakka Chinese: Lo̍k-thò
camel in Korean: 낙타
camel in Croatian: Deve starog svijeta
camel in Ido: Kamelo
camel in Indonesian: Unta
camel in Icelandic: Kameldýr
camel in Italian: Cammello
camel in Hebrew: גמל
camel in Georgian: აქლემი
camel in Haitian: Chamo
camel in Latin: Camelus
camel in Hungarian: Teve
camel in Malay (macrolanguage): Unta
camel in Dutch: Kamelen
camel in Japanese: ラクダ
camel in Norwegian: Kameler
camel in Occitan (post 1500): Camèl
camel in Uighur: Töge
camel in Uzbek: Tuya
camel in Polish: Wielbłąd
camel in Portuguese: Camelus
camel in Romanian: Cămilă
camel in Quechua: Kamillu
camel in Russian: Верблюды
camel in Simple English: Camel
camel in Slovenian: Velblod
camel in Serbian: Камила
camel in Finnish: Kamelit
camel in Swedish: Camelus
camel in Tamil: ஒட்டகம்
camel in Thai: อูฐ
camel in Vietnamese: Lạc đà
camel in Turkish: Deve
camel in Ukrainian: Верблюд
camel in Chinese: 骆驼
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Cape elk, Siberian husky, Virginia deer, antelope, ass, beast of burden, buck, camelopard, caribou, deer, deerlet, doe, draft animal, dromedary, eland, elephant, elk, fallow deer, fawn, gazelle, giraffe, gnu, hart, hartebeest, hind, horse, husky, kaama, llama, malamute, moose, mule, mule deer, musk deer,
okapi, ox, pack horse, red deer, reindeer, roe, roe deer, roebuck, sledge dog, springbok, stag, sumpter, sumpter horse, sumpter
mule, wildebeest