No.
no
Female alpacas and llamas are called "Hembra" and male alpacas or llamas are called "Macho". Alpacas and llamas look similar in the face but are different in size and fur.
No.
Yes, llamas can live in captivity. They are often domesticated and kept on farms for their wool, meat, and as pack animals. With proper care and living conditions, llamas can thrive in captivity.
Yes, all animals excrete waste.
It can be any colour, depending on what you have eaten.
Brown, black or white.
Goldfish poop can be almost any colour depending upon what it has been eating.
No. The color is affected by what you eat, not by your sex.
A dark brown sort of colour.
Yes of course whales poop! All animals poop even the ones in the sea. I hope that answers your strange question. Their poop doesn't look like poop at all strangely - it's a reddish pink - the colour of the krill it eats (the only thing it eats!)
The green colour is due to "biliverdin", which is usually converted to "bilirubin" by biliverdin reductase which is then excreted in the bile juice and gives the brown colour of feces, so if this reaction doesnt take place, then biliverdin turns poop green!
It can be. The colour of a fishes excreta is often affected by the colours in the food it eats.
llamas
Llamas.
There are no wild llamas in Australia. Some animal sanctuaries and zoos have llamas.