VICUNAS - significado y definición. Qué es VICUNAS
Diclib.com
Diccionario ChatGPT
Ingrese una palabra o frase en cualquier idioma 👆
Idioma:

Traducción y análisis de palabras por inteligencia artificial ChatGPT

En esta página puede obtener un análisis detallado de una palabra o frase, producido utilizando la mejor tecnología de inteligencia artificial hasta la fecha:

  • cómo se usa la palabra
  • frecuencia de uso
  • se utiliza con más frecuencia en el habla oral o escrita
  • opciones de traducción
  • ejemplos de uso (varias frases con traducción)
  • etimología

Qué (quién) es VICUNAS - definición

SPECIES OF MAMMAL
Vicuna; Vicugna vicugna; Vicunas; Vicuñas; Vicunna; Vicunya; Lama vicugna; Convention on the Conservation of the Vicuña; Convention on the Conservation and Management of the Vicuña
  • Parties to the 1979 Vicuña Convention
  • Herd of vicuñas near Arequipa, Peru
  • Chimborazo]] in Ecuador

vicuna         
[v?'kju:nj?, -ku:-, v?'ku:n?]
¦ noun
1. a wild relative of the llama, inhabiting mountainous regions of South America and valued for its fine silky wool. [Vicugna vicugna.]
2. cloth made from this wool.
Origin
C17: from Sp., from Quechua.
Vicuña family         
The Vicuña family in Chile became politically influential since the beginning of the 19th century, and played a very significant role in Chilean politics. Among its most prominent members we find:
Ramón Subercaseaux Vicuña         
  • An Old Masonry Bridge (1875)
  • The Dikes of Valparaíso (1884)
CHILEAN PAINTER (1854-1937)
Ramon Subercaseaux Vicuna
Ramón Subercaseaux Vicuña (10 April 1854, Valparaíso – 19 January 1937 Viña del Mar) was a Chilean painter, politician and diplomat.

Wikipedia

Vicuña

The vicuña (Lama vicugna) or vicuna (both , very rarely spelled vicugna, its former genus name) is one of the two wild South American camelids, which live in the high alpine areas of the Andes, the other being the guanaco, which lives at lower elevations. Vicuñas are relatives of the llama, and are now believed to be the wild ancestor of domesticated alpacas, which are raised for their coats. Vicuñas produce small amounts of extremely fine wool, which is very expensive because the animal can only be shorn every three years and has to be caught from the wild. When knitted together, the product of the vicuña's wool is very soft and warm. The Inca valued vicuñas highly for their wool, and it was against the law for anyone but royalty to wear vicuña garments; today, the vicuña is the national animal of Peru and appears on the Peruvian coat of arms.

Both under the rule of the Inca and today, vicuñas have been protected by law, but they were heavily hunted in the intervening period. At the time they were declared endangered in 1974, only about 6,000 animals were left. Today, the vicuña population has recovered to about 350,000, and although conservation organizations have reduced its level of threat classification, they still call for active conservation programs to protect populations from poaching, habitat loss, and other threats.

Previously the vicuña was thought not to have been domesticated, and the llama and the alpaca were both regarded as descendants of the closely related guanaco. But DNA research published in 2001 has shown the alpaca may well have vicuña parentage. Today, the vicuña is mainly wild, but the local people still perform special rituals with these creatures, including a fertility rite.

Ejemplos de uso de VICUNAS
1. The vicunas were sheared beneath a cloudless sky, under a cliff where a rainbow–colored wiphala flag –– the symbol of Andean indigenous peoples –– rippled in a forceful gale.
2. During the year, the 800 people in Lucanas protect some 7,500 almond–eyed vicunas on the Pampa Galeras, where the animals feed on tufts of feather grass.
3. Today, these vicunas are captured, shorn and released once a year in Peru‘s national chaccu, a roundup that is both a renewed expression of indigenous culture and a triumph for an international campaign to save the once–endangered animals.
4. "The vicunas are no longer in danger of extinction, and we are protecting them and reinforcing their presence," said Wilder Trejo, president of the National Council of South American Camelids.
5. Hundreds of villagers march side by side along the wind–blasted Andean plain, closing in on their prey: herds of nervous, fast–moving vicunas –– the smaller, wilder cousins of llamas and alpacas.