The camel has a small head and a long, thick, curved neck like that of a goose. The carcass is tall and the body hair is brown. The camel is very capable of enduring hunger and thirst. Camels can survive without water for three weeks and without food for up to a month.
From the point of view of quantity, the world in 1978*** there are dromedary and bactrian camels about 16.99 million peaks or so, and in 2010 the number of non-complete statistics rose to 18 million peaks, of which 16 million dromedary camels, bactrian camels 2 million peaks. Africa has the largest number of camels, accounting for about 71.75% of the total number of camels in the world, especially in the Sahara Desert in North Africa, the southeast border of the country, the camel occupies a very important economic position; Asia, second, accounting for about 26.9% of Europe, Oceania accounted for only 1.35%.