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vicuna[vikOO´nyu, vikyOO´nu] Pronunciation Key, wild South American hoofed mammal, Vicugna vicugna, the smallest member of the camel family. It is 30 in. (75 cm) high at the shoulder, with a long, slender neck and pale, fawn coloring. Vicunas live in herds on high plateaus of the Andes, at altitudes of 14,000 to 18,000 ft (4,3005,500 m); they feed on grasses and other vegetation.
Their fleece is exceptionally soft and silky, and in the time of the Incas was reserved for royal robes. The vicuna has never been successfully domesticated; wild herds were rounded up for shearing. Hunted nearly to extinction for its wool and flesh, it is now protected and has recovered enough to permit wool harvesting. Today wool is harvested from animals in the wild and others confined to ranches or enclosed ranges.
The vicuna is classified in the phylum Chordata, subphylum Vertebrata, class Mammalia, order Artiodactyla, family Camelidae.
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