No, a beaver isn't related to a platypus. Even though they're both mammals, a beaver gives birth to live young while a platypus lays eggs.
No. Beavers and platypuses are from different continents.
No. Platypuses are not beavers; nor are they related to beavers. Platypuses are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals. Beavers are placental mammals, meaning they give live birth.
no!!
Platypuses are completely within their own category - a sub-group known as monotremes. Platypuses are definitely not a type of beaver. Beavers are placental mammals, while platypuses are monotremes, which are egg-laying mammals. Ducks are not even remotely related to platypuses, as they are birds.
Yes. Platapuses Can move . they are kind of like beavers with their tail they swim sort of like a fish. and have poisonous hind legs
Platypuses do not live in dams like beavers do, or dams that are artificially created for storing water. Platypuses dig their burrow in riverbanks or creek banks, usually underneath an overhang of earth or tree roots, in order to disguise the entrance.
They are tree friends, such as a moose, bunnies, baby bears, squirrels, skunks, beavers, platypuses, anteaters, porcupines, moles,and racoons. And they are happy.
No. Platypuses are nothing like beavers, and they do not build dams. Platypuses do not have teeth, so would be unable to gnaw wood to build dams. Their grinding plates are purely for grinding their food.For shelter, platypuses dig burrows in the banks of the freshwater creeks, rivers or lakes where they do their hunting. These burrows can be over 30m in length (100 feet). The entrances are disguised beneath overhangs, or by tree roots and other vegetation. Platypuses have webbed feet with retractable webbing which enables them to dig their burrows.
No: platypuses are not a good choice for the zoo. Platypuses need a specialised environment, and there are heavy restrictions on zoos keeping them, along with strict regulations which must be adhered to by any zoo or animal sanctuary. Also, few platypuses breed in captivity. All these are reasons why platypuses are not a good choice for a zoo.
Not really. Platypuses are essentially solitary animals, living and swimming alone. Young platypuses swim with their mothers while they are learning to hunt, but this is only for a few months. In addition, the territory of several platypuses along a riverbank will overlap, so a few platypuses may interact with each other while swimming.
It got its name from the high populations of beavers that lived along the creek.
Platypuses have their place in their niche, and they are certainly not harmful to tgeir environment. Although they dig burrows, they are just above the waterline and do not cause erosion. Unlike beavers, platypuses do not make dams, so they do not affect watercourses. Their primary food sources include worms, insect larvae, and freshwater shrimp. Even when they dig these up from the bottom of the river or creek where they dive and hunt for food, their impact is minimal.
Joseph R Walker trapped beavers in Utah along the Great Salt Lake and among the Sierra Nevadas up to a route to California
Well some insects can't get wet. For instance, A butterfly. Chinchillas are one of the animals that shouldn't get wet.
Platypuses are found only along the eastern coast of Australia (including its island state of Tasmania). This would probably equate to less than one percent of the earth.