I live in rural Kentucky horse-farm area not far from a farm that bucks the trend and instead raises bison for meat, leather and I don’t know what else. Recently, I drove past it and was startled to see five camels in an otherwise-empty field. Although they were huddled together presumably for company, I could see that there were three dromedaries (single-humped) and two Bactrians (twin-humped).
Seeing the two kinds mixed together prompted me to wonder if they were also mixed-sex and then to muse: are the two species interfertile? If so, how many humps does the result have? One? Two? Two and a half? Three? Not finding the answer in Cecil’s online compedium of knowledge and wisdom or in this Forum, I put the question (okay, six questions) to you all.
Wikipedia has this pretty much covered: Hybrid camel - Wikipedia
Interestingly camel-llama hybrids (camas) can also be produced by artificial insemination, which is of note as camels and llama belong belong to different tribes - I’m not sure if there are any known mammalian hybrids where the lowest shared taxonomic rank is as high.
Interesting wiki! The pertinent part that answers the OP is:
Thanks! Always knew the SD Teeming Masses were, collectively, at least as edifying as the Master himself.