The platypus most of its time searching for food as it must eat the equivalent of its own weight daily to meet its own energy needs. So, for an average 1kg platypus, that means it must consume at least a kilogram's worth of insect larvae, crustaceans and small fish each day.
The platypus is one mammal which must eat its own weight in food each day.
A platypus eats about the equivalent of its own weight daily.
The platypus most of its time searching for food as it must eat about 20% of its own weight in food each day, while a lactating female must eat the equivalent of its own weight daily to meet its own energy needs. So, for an average 1kg platypus, not a lactating female, that means it must consume at least 250g of insect larvae, crustaceans and small fish each day.
No. A platypus has no teeth, only grinding plates, and is unable to eat food that has bones. So they wouldn't eat their own young.
The consumption-to-absorbtion ratio in a platypus is very high. Meaning that is must eat more, so it can gain weight and not be undernourished.
The food pyramid. it shows you what percentage of what to eat a day.
Platypuses are essentially nocturnal, active at dawn and dusk. However, because a platypus needs to eat the equivalent of its own weight each day, it feeds more often than that, spending quite a few of the night-time hours searching for food.
A platypus spends most of its time finding food. The platypus has to eat the equivalent of its own weight daily, and its weight averages from 800 grams (for females) to around 2kg for males. This means the platypus has to find anough yabbies, crustaceans, insect larvae and other tiny creatures to meet this weight every day.
It is illegal to eat platypus.
The platypus tends to be crepuscular, meaning that most of its hunting and feeding is done at dawn and dusk. However, it must make hundreds of dives a day in order to find enough food to meet its energy needs, so it will continue feeding through the night as well.
Yes. As a living creature that is able to move on its own, eat food in order to make energy and to reproduce, the platypus is a member of the animal kingdom.
No. There are no antelope in Australia, which is the natural home of the platypus. Even if there were, it is highly unlikely that an antelope would wish to eat a platypus.