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What does the Vicuna eat? |
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Vicuña
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Average height of 3 ft (90 cm) at the shoulder and weighs 99.2 lb (45 kg). Has a slender body, with a relatively long neck. The fur on the chest is long, of an off-white color, which serves to protect the animal when it is resting on the ground. The neck, back, and sides are a light brown color. The ventral and inner thigh surfaces are white. The head is relatively small, with prominent ears and eyes; the lower lip has a central crevice. The lower incisors of vicuña are unique among the Artiodactyla, because they are always growing and have the enamel on only one side. Sometimes, the canines are absent in the lower jaw. The front premolars are simple and usually separated from the other cheek teeth.
DISTRIBUTION
In the Andes of Peru, Bolivia, Chile, and Argentina.
HABITAT
Inhabits semiarid grasslands and plains at elevations ranging 11,480-18,860 ft (3,500-5,750 m) in the Andes.
BEHAVIOR
Territorial males maintain family groups consisting of the male adult and subadults, females, and young less than one year of age. Adult males without territories form non-reproductive groups, composed of subadult males from one to four years of age that have been expelled from their family groups and of aging males that have lost their territories. Establishes and defends a year-round feeding territory and a separate sleeping territory.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
A grazer; its diet consists of almost all perennial grasses.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
May be polygamous. Mating occurs in March and April, and births take place in February and March. The gestation period lasts 330-350 days, and a single young weighs 8.8-13.2 lb (4-6 kg) at birth. The young can stand and walk 15 minutes after being born. Most females mate at about two years, and some are reproductive until 19 years old.
CONSERVATION STATUS
The entire population remains Vulnerable, according to the IUCN Red List. Certain populations are on the CITES Convention, with the provision that only cloth woven from the sheared wool of a live vicuña may be traded. Otherwise, the vicuña is on Appendix I of the CITES Convention.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
Vicuña produces one the finest wools in the world. Today, vicuña fiber is preferred for weaving fine cloaks and the cloths obtained from it are expensive in the international markets. At present, Peru and Chile have sustainable use programs based in the capturing, shearing, and release of these wild animals.
However, this sustainable use is allowed only on those populations placed in Appendix II of the CITES Convention.
http://www.answers.com/topic/vicu-a?cat=technology
First answer by An8thg. Last edit by An8thg. Contributor trust: 782 [recommend contributor]. Question popularity: 16 [recommend question]





