Hemiauchenia (SciiFii)

The North American llama (Hemiauchenia americanus) is a species of lamine camelids that evolved in North America in the Miocene period about 10 million years ago and was once extinct since the Late Pleistocene, but has since been brought back from extinction by SciiFii and reintroduced to the forests, open woodlands, and grasslands of North America to help boost biodiversity. The North American llama is a rather large species for a lamine camelid, growing to be about 2.4 meters in length, 170 centimeters in height, and weighing about 200-400 kg. It is an opportunistic herbivore, feeding on a variety of plant types, grasses, shrubs, leaves, flowers, fruits, cacti, and thorn bushes. The conservation status of the North American llama is Least Concern due to successful conservation efforts, the North American llama's wide introduced range (in Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, and Mississippi) and natural range, as well as the North American llama's tolerance to habitat loss in a same level as the whitetail/mule deer's habitat loss tolerance, allowing the camels to survive and flourish in the cities and suburbs.