Showing posts with label Camel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Camel. Show all posts

Camels used to live in the Arctic, reveal scientists (although it was 3½million years ago when it was at least 14C warmer)

By NICK MCDERMOTT, SCIENCE REPORTER

Artist's impression of the camels that lived in the Arctic - which was at least 14C warmer than it is now

They are known as the ships of the desert which makes it all the more surprising that the remains of a giant camel have been discovered in the high arctic.
Bone fragments of the shaggy creature were found on Canada’s Ellesmere Island - the furthest north the species has ever been discovered.
They reveal that the creature must have roamed the frozen northern forests around 3.5 million years ago and that it was 30 per cent larger than its modern counterparts.
Although the region where the fragments were found would have been between 14C to 22C warmer than today, the land would have still been covered with snow for up to nine months of the year.

Bone fragments of the shaggy creature (pictured) were found on Canada's Ellesmere Island

Scientists claim the discovery may change the way we think of the camels, suggesting they were originally ‘adapted to living in an Arctic forest environment’ instead of their present day habitats.
Traits found in modern camels, such as their humps which serve as a fat store, would have benefited their ancestors during the deep winters when food was scarce.
Other camel characteristics that would have been useful in the frozen conditions include the species’ wide flat feet, which support the animal on loose sand in the same way that a snowshoe helps a person walk on snow.

Scientists found the bone fragments 750 miles further north than the species has ever been found before

Their large eyes would also have helped the prehistoric camels forage during months of Arctic darkness.
In total, 30 bone fragments from a tibia, or lower-leg bone, were recovered 750 miles further north than the species has previously ever been found.
‘This is an important discovery because it provides the first evidence of camels living in the high arctic region,’ said Dr Natalia Rybczynski, a palaeontologist with the Canadian Museum of Nature, who led the field expeditions in Canada’s Arctic.

Scientists claim the discovery may change the way we think of the camels, suggesting they were originally 'adapted to living in an Arctic forest environment'

‘It extends the previous range of camels in North America northward by about 1,200 km and suggests that the lineage that gave rise to modern camels may have been originally adapted to living in an Arctic forest environment.’
Camels originated in North America about 45 million years ago, and dispersed to Eurasia by seven million years ago using the Bering land bridge that joined modern-day Alaska to Russia.

Dr Mike Buckley, from the Manchester Institute of Biotechnology, helped to extract collagen from the bone fragments and to compare them to 37 modern species

‘We now have a new fossil record to better understand camel evolution...and the simplest explanation for this pattern would be that Paracamelus [ancient camel species] originated there,’ said Dr Rybczynski.
‘So perhaps some specialisations seen in modern camels, such as their wide flat feet, large eyes and humps for fat may be adaptations derived from living in a polar environment.’



source: dailymail

Swapping the car for a camel: Meet the family who use their six-strong herd to pick up the children from school as well as head to the pub and run err

By JILL REILLY

School's out: Rebecca Fossett picks up Daisy, 13, and Leo, 10, from the local school on two of their six camels

If they don't fancy a car trip to pick up their children from school, the Fossett family simply hop on one of their six camels.
Rebecca and Joseph are the only people in Britain to own a herd of the animals which are normally desert dwellers.
Their camels - named Ruby, Sahara, Sophia, Kokoso, Kazak and Veneta - live in fields surrounding their village home.
Locals in Idlicote, Warwickshire, have become accustomed to spotting the couple along with their two children Daisy, 13, and Leo, 10 out on the beasts.

Rare pets: The Fossett family are the only people in Britain to own a herd of the animals which are normally desert dwellers

Community custom: Locals in Idlicote, Warks, have become accustomed to hearing and spotting the family out and about on the beasts

Mrs Fossett, 42, said: 'They are very much a part of the family. The kids joke that the camels get treated better than they do.
'We love them as if they were extra members of the family.
'Our local pub even has a sign that reads 'dogs and camels welcome'.

Thirsty work: The Fossett's have a drink with their camels at The Horseshoe Inn in the nearby town of Shipton on Stour, Warwickshire

Affinity: Mr Fossett, who was raised in a circus family, has always had a long-standing connection with the towering mammals, which can grow to seven feet tall and weigh 2,000lbs

'They can be very high maintenance and take an awful lot of care, but the similarities between them and domestic animals are plentiful.
'They prove to be great company and are very affectionate.'
The family has owned their herd of three dromedary and three Bactrian camels for five years.
Mr Fossett, who was raised in a circus family, has always had a long-standing connection with the towering mammals, which can grow to seven feet tall and weigh 2,000lbs.

Village visitors: Despite normally being found roaming the Gobi desert or Arabian plains, these six camels - which cost £10,000 each - can today be seen on the street of Warwickshire

And despite normally being found roaming the Gobi desert or Arabian plains, these six camels - which cost £10,000 each - can today be seen on the tree lined lanes of Warwickshire.
Mr Fossett, 52, said: 'I had camels as a child while growing up in the circus and have loved them ever since.
'They are such great animals, all with their own intricate personalities.

Business brains: The family, who have turned their bizarre pets into a thriving business, regularly take friends, family and paying customers on treks across the countryside

'We have already got bundles of animals from dogs and cats to ferrets.
'But the camels are priceless - I wouldn't swap them for all the tea in China.
'We are the only people in Britain who have a whole herd of camels and I can't see that changing any time soon.'
The family, who have turned their bizarre pets into a thriving business, regularly take friends, family and paying customers on treks across the countryside.
And parents at the school gate are used to seeing Rebecca pick up her kids astride the towering mammals several times a year.

Reaction: Mrs Fossett added: 'We go out in public with them once or twice a week - sometimes for a trek. People love seeing them'

Mrs Fossett has even occasionally shunned the family car for their more environmentally friendly transport - that runs on oats and grass - to pick up the groceries.
Mrs Fossett added: 'We go out in public with them once or twice a week - sometimes for a trek. People love seeing them.
'Obviously people are surprised - it is not every day you see camels strolling down the road. They do look out of place.

Camel chauffeurs: Mrs Fossett runs an errand in the town while her husband holds on to the reins

'We get comments all the time about how mild-mannered they are and how they smell so clean. They have a bit of a bad reputation but it is very undeserved.
'The camels are very good around people. People think they are grumpy and spit all the time but that couldn't be further from the truth.
'They are in fact incredibly nosy and rush to the garden gates to have a look whenever anyone goes past, so they enjoy being out and about and interacting with people.'
Mr Fossett continued: 'They love the beach, they think it is great.
'As soon as they get the sand between their toes you can see they instantly feel at home.

Part of the family: The couple with Ruby, Sahara, Sophia, Kokoso, Kazak and Veneta

'The sea slightly puzzles them. We haven't been for a while because of the weather but if the summer is nice maybe we will get the chance to take them down there for a day.'
It costs the couple thousands of pounds each year in upkeep - including hay for the stables purposefully built in their garden.

Pricey pets: Incredibly, such is the value of the UK's only camel herd, the pair have public liability insurance totalling a staggering £5 million

Here to stay: Mr Fossett said: 'They aren't the cheapest pets that's for sure, but we wouldn't change it for a thing'

They get through 400 bales of hay a year, thousands of gallons of water and feed them on a diet of sugar beat, barley and oats.
And as a treat, the camels will be served freshly picked strawberries.
Mr Fossett said: 'They aren't the cheapest pets that's for sure, but we wouldn't change it for a thing.
'It is hard to pinpoint exactly how much we spend as there are lots of hidden costs like grooming and the upkeep of the stables but it costs thousands each year.

source: dailymail

Ships of the desert? Camels show they're pretty nippy in the frozen tundra too

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

Bumpy ride: Mongolian tribesmen take part in a camel race during a winter Naadam festival in Hulun Buir, north China's Inner Mongolia region

Camels, usually known as the ships of the desert, here show that they are pretty handy for traversing the snow-covered tundra as well.
These incredible pictures are from the winter Naadam festival in Hulun Buir, in north China's Inner Mongolia region.
The event showcases Mongolian nomads' traditional sports and pastimes, including folk dancing, wrestling, archery, and, or course camel racing.

Lovely weather for a sleigh ride together... a Mongolian tribesman rides a sleigh pulled by a camel during the winter Naadam in Hulun Buir

The festival's origin lies in the warlike past of the Mongolian people, and it is believed to have existed for centuries in one form or another.
The Naadam - which in Mongolian means, simply, games - begins with an elaborate introduction ceremony featuring dancers, athletes, horse riders, and musicians.

Snow contest: Traditional horse racing in the Naadam, which China is promoting as a tourist attraction. Its latest five-year plan calls for tourism revenues to rise 10 per cent

Towns with significant Mongolian populations in China have their own, smaller Naadam celebrations.
The Hulun Buir festival is the latest event seized upon by Chinese authorities to promote tourism in remote parts of the coutry during the cold winter months.
China's latest five-year economic plan calls for tourism revenues to rise 10 per cent annually to 2.3trillion yuan by 2015, up from 1.44trillion yuan in 2010.

Keeping out the cold: A group of Mongolian women provide a splash of cheerful colour in their traditional costumes and fur hats

Snow business: Mongolians in exotic national costumes put on a show for the tourists during the Naadam. The biggest games are held in the capital Ulaanbaatar

source: dailymail

Duel of the dromedaries: Afghan camels in wrestling showdowns to celebrate Persian New Year

By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

Battle: Afghan festival-goers watch as a camel fight starts during the second day of Persian New Year celebrations in Mazar-i Sharif, northern Afghanistan


An Afghan camel's life is not an easy one. If they survive the arid conditions, heavy work and littering of landmines that characterise this war-torn country, they still have one more test to face: camel fighting.

Afghans gathered in their hundreds of thousands in Mazar-e-Sharif last week to watch this spectacular duel of the dromedaries - part of the celebrations for Nowruz, the Persian New Year.

The male camels, which can stand up to 2m tall and weigh up to half a tonne, go head to head in a 10-minute showdown, slamming necks and butting heads as raucous crowds watch and gamble on the outcome.


Brains not brawn: As well as using sheer brute force, camel wrestlers feint and sweep their opponents legs to try and win a submission


And there's only one thing that will get these usually placid ships of the desert to turn so fierce - mating season.

Once the two bulls are led out into the arena, a young cow is paraded around to get them excited. The beasts are ready to clash, the trainers know, when streams of viscous milky saliva begin to stream from their mouths and nostrils.

Once the two bulls will get down to it and actually try to wrestle one another they do not simply use brute force. They wrestle artfully, feinting in here and there, eventually locking a fore-leg inside the leg of the opposition and leaning on him to topple him over in a dromedary's version of a wrestling fall and pin.


Savage: Camel fights do not usually end tragically, but have been condemned by animal rights campaigners for their brutality


The fights, while savage, are not usually fatal. Each camel's mouth is tied tightly closed to prevent biting. Often the loser will run into the crowd of spectators causing panic as onlookers try not to get trampled. Other hazards include splashes of viscous camel spittle.

In Turkey, the spiritual home of camel-wrestling, fights are far more organised - and high profile. There the camel wrestlers are considered the body builders of their species, and they are carefully fed so as to be enormous. The best specimens are regarded as well-formed martial artists, and they are prized by their owners.

The annual Selcuk championship, named for the western city where the event takes place, draws roughly 20,000 fight fans. Bizarrely, they also enjoy eating camel meat while watching the duels.


Celebration: Afghans gather around the Shrine of saint Sakhi Saib, Kabul, as they celebrate the Persian New Year


The Persian New Year, which has been celebrated for at least 3,000 years, is the most revered celebration in the greater Persian world, which includes the countries of Iran, Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Turkey, and portions of western China and northern Iraq.

It started on March 21 and coincides with the astronomical vernal equinox.


source: dailymail

US Army soldiers guard the entrance of Baghdad's main presidential palace near a camel named Josephine


US Army soldiers guard the entrance of Baghdad's main presidential palace near a camel named Josephine 15 April 2003. The camel fled from Uday Saddam Hussein's private zoo.




A US Army tank guards the entrance of Baghdad's main presidential palace near a camel named Josephine 15 April 2003. The camel fled from Uday Saddam Hussein's private zoo.




A US Army officer stands guard at the entrance of Baghdad's main presidential palace with a camel the soldiers have named Josephine 15 April 2003. The camel fled from Uday Saddam Hussein's private zoo.



US soldiers stand guard at the entrance of Baghdad's main presidential palace with a camel named Josephine 15 April 2003. The camel fled from Uday Saddam Hussein's private zoo.


source: daylife
photo: Gettyimages