Yes and no. Platypuses are semi-aquatic. They are land animals, as they live in dry burrows above the waterline of creeks and rivers.
Platypuses are also completely dependent upon the water for their food. They make hundreds of dives daily, in order to find the freshwater crustaceans and annelid worms they need to eat.
Aquatic animals in Austalia. Duck like bills, fur & nest eggs. Live in burrows on creek banks and suckle their young with mammalian glands. Feed in small aquatic animals using there sensitive bill to forage the water bed.
Platypus are monotremes one of the only two egg laying mammal's.
No. Platypuses do not walk particularly fast on land.
No. By nature, platypuses are solitary animals.
Platypuses mate on land, not in the water.
Platypuses breed on land. They only hunt for food in the water.
Platypuses breed on land. They do not mate in the water.
Platypuses are shy creatures which do not readily interact with other animals.
Yes and no. Platypuses are semi-aquatic. They are land animals, as they live in dry burrows above the waterline of creeks and rivers. However, platypuses are completely dependent upon the water for their food. They make hundreds of dives daily, in order to find the freshwater crustaceans and annelid worms they need to eat.
Yes - platypuses live on land. They only hunt in water. Platypuses dig burrows in the riverbank or creek bank near which they do their hunting.
There is no collective name for a group of platypuses. Platypuses are solitary animals and do not live or move in groups.
Platypuses are solitary animals and generally live alone.
Platypuses are solitary animals, tending to live alone.
Platypuses do not eat land food. They feed entirely off crustaceans and small water creatures.