No. Platypuses are carnivores. They are predators, feeding on small water animals such as aquatic insect larvae of caddisflies, mayflies and two-winged flies, fresh water shrimp, annelid worms, yabbies and crayfish. Occasionally, while foraging for food, they may accidentally ingest plant matter, but they do not seek to eat vegetation.
Platypuses are carnivores, but they do not eat "meat" in the usual sense of the word. They are predators; they eat small water animals such as aquatic insect larvae of caddisflies, mayflies and two-winged flies, fresh water shrimp, annelid worms, yabbies and crayfish.
Platypuses do not generally eat frogs, tadpoles, fish or plants. Analysis of platypus pellets has - rarely - indicated the presence of fish or frog parts, but on the whole, platypuses do not feed on these creatures.
Platypuses are carnivores, but they do not eat meat in the conventional sense. They eat small water animals such as aquatic insect larvae of caddisflies, mayflies and two-winged flies, fresh water shrimp, annelid worms, yabbies and crayfish.
It should be noted that platypuses do not generally eat frogs, tadpoles, fish or plants. Analysis of platypus pellets has - rarely - indicated the presence of fish or frog parts, but on the whole, platypuses do not feed on these creatures, but prefer nvertebrates.
No. Platypuses are carnivores. They are predators; they eat small water animals such as aquatic insect larvae, fresh water shrimp, annelid worms, yabbies and crayfish. During summer, they eat more than during winter, in order to build up reserves of fat.
To catch their prey, platypuses must make several hundred dives a day in order to catch enough food. They use the fine, sensitive electroreceptors on their bills, which detect the tiny electrical impulses made by underwater creatures. After locating their prey, they dig up the mud with their bill to grasp them, crushing the creatures between grinding plates in their bills.
Baby platypuses drink mother's milk.
It should be noted that platypuses do not eat frogs, tadpoles, fish or plants.
No. Although a platypus is a carnivore, it doe not eat fish. It eats tiny crustaceans and larvae that live on the bottom of creeks and rivers
No. Platypuses eat no plant matter, and that includes vegetables. They are purely carnivorous, feeding on aquatic invertebrates such as crayfish, annelid worms and insect larvae.
Platypuses do not eat plants. Platypuses are carnivores. They are predators, and feed on small water animals such as aquatic insect larvae, fresh water shrimp, annelid worms, yabbies and crayfish. The only times they eat plants are if they accidentally swallow them while ingesting invertebrates.
Platypuses do not eat plants. They are completely carnivorous and only eat small freshwater creatures such as yabbies and crayfish, and insects and their larvae. Sometimes, plant parts will be ingested accidentally as the platypus seeks other food, but vegetation is not part of the platypus's diet.
Platypuses are not omnivores, but carnivores. They eat tiny insect larvae and other invertebrates, shrimp, shellfish and annelid worms they find on the bottom of creeks and rivers. They do not eat plants of any description.
No. Platypuses do not eat mangroves or any other plant matter.
Platypuses do not eat earthworms or other terrestrial worms. They eat aquatic annelid worms.
No. Platypuses eat small water animals such as aquatic insect larvae, fresh water shrimp, annelid worms, yabbies and crayfish. They do not eat anything terrestrial.
No. Cougars do not eat platypuses, for the simple reason that platypuses and cougars occupy different continents. Platypuses are endemic to Australia, and there are no cougars in Australia.
Platypuses are carnivores. They are predators; they eat small water animals such as aquatic insect larvae of caddisflies, mayflies and two-winged flies, fresh water shrimp, annelid worms, yabbies and crayfish.It should be noted that platypuses do not eat frogs, tadpoles, fish or plants.
No whales eat fish
Probably the largest thing which platypuses eat are small yabbies, which are a type of freshwater crayfish.
No. Platypuses are completely carnivorous, feeding on tiny water-dwelling crustaceans.
Platypuses do not eat plankton, so they do not need to find it.