Posted on 03/04/2010 3:25:11 PM PST by JoeProBono
The platypus is among nature's most unlikely animals. In fact, the first scientists to examine a specimen believed they were the victims of a hoax. The animal is best described as a hodgepodge of more familiar species: the duck (bill and webbed feet), beaver (tail), and otter (body and fur). Males are also venomous. They have sharp stingers on the heels of their rear feet and can use them to deliver a strong toxic blow to any foe.
Platypuses hunt underwater, where they swim gracefully by paddling with their front webbed feet and steering with their hind feet and beaverlike tail. Folds of skin cover their eyes and ears to prevent water from entering, and the nostrils close with a watertight seal. In this posture, a platypus can remain submerged for a minute or two and employ its sensitive bill to find food.
These Australian mammals are bottom feeders. They scoop up insects and larvae, shellfish, and worms in their bill along with bits of gravel and mud from the bottom. All this material is stored in cheek pouches and, at the surface, mashed for consumption. Platypuses do not have teeth, so the bits of gravel help them to "chew" their meal.
On land, platypuses move a bit more awkwardly. However, the webbing on their feet retracts to expose individual nails and allow the creatures to run. Platypuses use their nails and feet to construct dirt burrows at the water's edge.
Platypus reproduction is nearly unique. It is one of only two mammals (the echidna is the other) that lay eggs.
Females seal themselves inside one of the burrow's chambers to lay their eggs. A mother typically produces one or two eggs and keeps them warm by holding them between her body and her tail. The eggs hatch in about ten days, but platypus infants are the size of lima beans and totally helpless. Females nurse their young for three to four months until the babies can swim on their own.
An unlikely mix of duck, beaver, and otter, the male platypus also has poisonous stingers on his rear feet.
Nowadays a good plastic surgeon could fix that ...
Ya think?
I want one.
God has a wonderful sense of humor. They are precious.
Also unique (along with echidna, again) among mammals in not dreaming...
I want two. A mating pair.
Our local lake, Travis, could support this creature.
Male platypuses are poisonous?! Ya learn something new every day!
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Thanks JoeProBono. They're so ugly they're cute. The name they were given definitely works against 'em though... |
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Hey, where’s Perry?
monotremes rock!!!
Platypus venom is very deadly. I remember seeing soemthing on Discovery or some other nerdy channel about an old Aussie guy who attempted to pick one up and got “spurred” by the animal’s venomous back “fangs”. The big problem was getting the proper antivenom, because people getting poisoned by Platypus venum is extremely rare. He nearly died, and it took months of experimental treatment to cure him.
Hmmmmmm, looks qualified for a government job at the white house.
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