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The camel πŸͺ a strange or a perfect creature ? #camel #Science #explained #life #animals

@life_laps_official
4.7M views258.3K likes1:56ENMay 9, 2026
260 words1553 characters25 sentencesReadability: Middle School

Transcript

Before you say anything, that's disgusting. I agree. But why does the camel do that? And no, that's not its stomach. That's not something going wrong. It's actually a real organ. What you're seeing is called the doula, a soft inflatable sack inside a male camel's mouth. Camels push it out during mating season. They inflate it, make loud bubbling sounds, and it works as a visual and audio signal. Basically, it tells other camels, "I'm strong, I'm healthy, stay away." Weird? Yes, useless, not at all. And that's just the beginning, because the camel is one of the most perfectly adapted animals on earth. They live in deserts, where temperatures reach 50 degrees Celsius, yet they can walk for kilometers without water or rest. Their hump doesn't store water. It stores fat, which the body converts into energy and even produces small amounts of water as a byproduct. Their blood cells are specially shaped to retain water, allowing camels to survive days, sometimes weeks without drinking. Food in the desert is scarce, dry plants, thorns, cactus. But a camel's mouth is so tough, it can chew sharp thorns without injuring. Its thick fur works like insulation, blocking heat during the day, and trapping warmth during freezing desert nights. Even their feet are engineered for sand, wide, padded, flexible, so they don't sink like natural desert snowshoes. So yeah, the camel looks strange, but nothing about it is accidental. Every feature solves a problem. Every detail has a purpose. The camel doesn't just survive the desert, it's built for it.