Baby Llamas (Crias): Amazing Facts About Newborn Llamas
Everything about baby llamas (crias): birth process, first steps, mother-offspring bond, development stages and curious facts about llama reproduction.
Baby llamas, known as crias, are among the most remarkable newborns in the animal kingdom. Born fully alert and capable of standing within the hour, these incredible infants arrive ready to face one of the planet's most demanding environments — the high Andean plateau.
The Daytime Birth
By evolutionary instinct, almost all llama births occur between 8 AM and 2 PM. This is no coincidence: the timing ensures that the cria's wet coat can dry thoroughly under the sun before the freezing Andean night sets in. A wet newborn at altitude after dark could be fatal. This behavioral adaptation is so deeply ingrained that even llamas born in low-altitude farms in Europe or North America maintain the same pattern.
Standing Within an Hour
Unlike human newborns, a llama cria can get to its feet and take its first steps within approximately one hour of birth. This rapid motor development is directly tied to survival: on the open puna, a cria that cannot move quickly is easy prey. By the end of its first day, a healthy cria will be trotting alongside its mother with reasonable confidence.
The Maternal Bond
Llama mothers do not lick their newborns as many other mammals do — their tongues are simply too short for the task. Instead, bonding happens through nose-to-nose nuzzling and constant humming. The mother begins a soft, low hum almost immediately after birth, and the cria responds with higher-pitched humming that will serve as their mutual recognition call for weeks. This vocal dialogue is the foundation of the mother-offspring bond.
Weight and Appearance at Birth
Crias are born weighing between 9 and 14 kilograms, roughly 8–10% of the mother's body weight. They arrive with open eyes, already-erupted incisor teeth, and a fully formed coat — wet at first but drying within hours into the characteristically soft, springy fleece of a young llama.
Newborn crias typically emit high-pitched humming while seeking their mother for their first nursing. The mother responds with lower, longer hums that serve as a sonic guide. This vocal exchange continues for weeks and forms the basis of mutual recognition between mother and offspring.
Gestation: 11 Months of Waiting
Llama gestation lasts approximately 345–350 days — nearly 11 and a half months. This is one of the longest gestations among ungulates of comparable size. The long gestation is directly linked to the advanced state of development with which the cria is born: unlike species whose neonates are highly dependent, the llama cria must be ready to move within hours in a high-altitude environment where immobility means danger.
Llamas generally give birth to a single cria per gestation. Twin births exist but are extremely rare (fewer than 1% of cases) and frequently result in weaker offspring requiring additional care.
The First Months: Feeding and Growth
During the first hours of life, the cria must ingest colostrum — the first maternal milk — to receive the antibodies that will protect its immune system. If the cria does not nurse within the first 6–12 hours, the risk of infectious disease increases considerably.
Nursing lasts between 4 and 6 months. During this period, the cria grows at a rapid pace — gaining up to 500 grams per day in its first weeks. Weaning is gradual: the mother begins limiting nursing sessions, and the cria progressively joins the herd's diet of grass and hay.
- Week 1: exclusive milk feeding, exploration of the immediate surroundings.
- Weeks 2–8: first attempts to graze alongside the mother.
- Months 2–4: mixed feeding, progressive integration into the herd's social dynamics.
- Months 4–6: weaning and full dietary independence.
Socialization and Early Learning
Llama crias learn the herd's social rules from their earliest weeks. They observe and imitate adults: learning what to eat, how to communicate with other animals, and where they fit in the group hierarchy. This period is also critical for socialization with humans: crias that have frequent, positive, and respectful contact with people from their first weeks of life develop a far more docile temperament as adults.
However, there is a common mistake to avoid: over-handling crias, and especially bottle-rearing them without contact with their own species, can produce animals that do not recognize appropriate boundaries with humans and become dangerous as adults. This phenomenon is known as excessive imprinting and is a frequent cause of behavioral problems in domestic llamas.
Scientific Curiosities About Crias
- Baby llamas are officially called "crias" (without an accent in English, from the Spanish), and this term is accepted in international scientific literature.
- The technical name for the sound crias make while searching for their mother is "neonatal humming," and it differs in frequency and pattern from adult humming.
- Crias have a higher body temperature than adults during their first weeks of life, making them more vulnerable to hypothermia if temperatures drop sharply.
- The color of a cria's fleece is often slightly different from its definitive adult color; some individuals lighten their tone with successive molts.
- Young females can become pregnant from 18–24 months of age, though responsible breeders wait until at least 2 years to ensure the mother's full physical development.
Llama Crias: Life and Development in the First Months
Llama crias are one of the most compelling demonstrations of evolutionary adaptation: animals born ready to face one of the most demanding environments on the planet, guided by sophisticated maternal communication and a highly developed social instinct. Understanding their development not only generates admiration for these animals — it is essential knowledge for anyone who wants to raise them responsibly.
International Cria Quality Competitions: Halter Shows and Fiber Classes
The world of selective llama and alpaca breeding has a well-developed international competition structure, especially in the United States and the United Kingdom. Halter shows (conformation shows) evaluate animals — including crias — based on body structure, limb alignment, neck and head proportions, and visible fiber quality. In the United States, the Alpaca Owners Association (AOA) and the International Llama Association (ILA) organize dozens of shows annually across the country, with the most prestigious being the National Western Stock Show (Denver, Colorado) and the Oregon Flock and Fiber Festival. Crias compete in separate categories by age (junior: under 12 months) and sex, and prize-winning animals can reach market values exceeding $10,000.
In the United Kingdom, the British Llama Society and the British Alpaca Society hold their principal annual event — the British National Show — with specific categories for crias in both halter and fiber classes. Fiber competitions evaluate fleece samples taken directly from the crias during or after their first shearing: measurements include mean micron count, uniformity, luster, and absence of guard hair. Crias with micron counts below 20 microns at first shearing are candidates for excellence awards, and their pedigrees are registered in international selective breeding databases. In Spain and the rest of Europe, although the competitive circuit is still developing, associations such as the European Llama Association are working to align standards with the Anglo-Saxon systems.
TodoLlamas Team
Passionate about Andean culture and the world of camelids. Our mission is to research and share the most curious information about llamas.