Featured in today"s image are guanacos in Torres del Paine National Park, Chile. They are a fascinating camelid native to South America, and they"re the wild cousin of the llama! Unlike llamas, guanacos sport a more uniform coat colour, usually a warm light brown to dark cinnamon, with a white underside, a grey face and small, straight ears. They can live up to 28 years in the wild, making them some of the longest-living land mammals of their size in South America. Guanacos are one of the continent"s largest land animals today, sharing their megafauna status with South American giants like tapirs, marsh deer and jaguars. Guanacos munch on grasses, shrubs and even cacti, using a fascinating digestive process like, but distinct from, ruminants.
Two Guanacos, Torres del Paine National Park, Chile
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Vineyards in Varnhalt, Black Forest, Germany
-
Happy World Whale Day!
-
A traboule in Lyon, France
-
Adélie penguins
-
Dubrovnik, Croatia
-
European fallow deer in England
-
Corn maze in Saylorsburg, Pennsylvania
-
Blue hour in Trondheim, Norway
-
Wheatear, Peak District National Park, England
-
Bormio, Lombardy, Italy
-
Is anybody home?
-
Malshej Ghat, Maharashtra
-
Reticulated giraffe mother greeting calf in Kenya
-
Cinque Torri, Dolomiti, Cortina d’Ampezzo, Belluno, Veneto, Italy
-
Festival fever
-
76 glorious years of independence
-
Allens Hummingbird
-
Bardenas Reales Biosphere Reserve and Natural Park, Navarra, Spain
-
Corfu at night, Greece
-
Dragon waterfall, Venezuela
-
Castle Stalker, Argyll, Scotland
-
The beauty that lies below
-
Hiding in the woods
-
Celebrating the tropics
-
A mirror reflecting natures beauty
-
Kerala
-
A ghost on the mountain
-
Iguazu Falls at the border of Argentina and Brazil
-
Alps of the sea
-
Nature’s blue wonder
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

