Yes Spiny Ant Eaters as Echidnas are often known are hatched from an egg.
Echidnas are hatched. They are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals.
Platypuses and echidnas are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals.
i don't know if it is different for everyone but i got a togepi
No; echidnas, unlike porcupines, are not members of the rodent family. Echidnas are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals.
Both spiny anteaters (echidnas) and wombats have a pouch. Wombats are marsupials, like most pouched mammals. Echidnas are not marsupials, but monotremes. Monotremes are egg laying mammals. Echidnas have a pouch so they can carry the egg they lay and, once the egg hatches, the baby echidna.
Yes. Platypuses and echidnas are the only monotremes, or egg-laying mammals.
Echidnas are unusual because, along with platypuses, they are the world's only known monotremes, which means they are egg-laying mammals. Though egg-layers, they are classified as mammals because the young suckle mothers' milk.
No, echidnas are not marsupials. They are monotremes, that is, egg-laying mammals. However, during breeding season, the female does develop a rudimentary pouch in which she incubates her egg, but this is really nothing more than a flap of skin.
Not at all. Echidnas and porcupines are not even remotely related. Echidnas are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals. porcupines are placental mammals, a quite different order of mammals.
Incubator
Yes: echidnas are quite real. Echidnas are egg-laying mammals that live throughout Australia, from the desert, to bushland, to sub-alpine mountain habitats.
No. Echidnas are monotremes, meaning they are egg-laying mammals. They do not give birth to live young, but lay eggs in order to reproduce.