Camel is the singular of camel, and it is an animal that lives in the desert and follows the order of the two-toed camels. It is famous for its fatty mass on its back called the hump, and its body is covered with hair. The term camel is also used to refer to true camels such as: two-humped camels and Arab camels, in addition to the four semi-camels that live in South America: guanas, llamas, vicuñas, and alpacas
Milk teeth The milk teeth of a camel begin to appear shortly after birth, and the first folds appear in the lower jaw during the postpartum period until the age of two weeks, and then the quadrants appear from the age of two weeks until a month, and during this period, molars begin to appear The three upper fronts in succession, in addition to the two front molars in the lower jaw.
During the period from one and a half to two months, the teeth of the lower jaw appear, then the canines of the lower and upper jaw. As for the incisors of the upper jaw, they appear during the period from two to four months, and all the milk teeth are completed when he is six months old, and their number is on the lower and upper jaws (22) The teeth are distributed as follows: in the lower jaw there are six incisors, four molars and two canines, and in the upper jaw are two incisors, six molars and two canines. Permanent teeth The permanent teeth begin to appear when the camel reaches the age of one year until it reaches the age of one year and three months. The bottom to permanent folds when he reaches the age of four and a half years until the age of five years, then the third molar of the permanent molars appears in the same period, then the front molar in the upper jaw changes to permanent (the second and third molars), and the second molar of the lower jaw at the age of five years up to the age of five and a half years. The quadrants change in the lower jaw during the age of five and a half to six years, and the canines and incisors of the upper and lower jaws during the age of six and a half years until the age of seven years, then the first molar from the front molars of the lower and upper jaws at the age of seven years until the age of seven and a half years, and the teeth are complete At the age of seven and a half years, their total number is (34), distributed as follows: in the upper jaw there are two canines, two incisors, and twelve molars, and in the lower jaw are two canines, six incisors and ten molars.