Platypuses do not have "nests" in the usual sense of the word. Platypuses dig long burrows for shelter and protection, and during breeding season, the mother platypus prepares a chamber at the end of a burrow especially for the purpose of protecting the young.
Once the baby platypuses are hatched, the mother gives extra attention to the strength and lining of the chamber. As she leaves the chamber, the mother platypus makes several thin plugs made of soil along the length of burrow; this helps to protect the young from predators which would enter the burrow during the mother's absence. When she returns, she pushes past these plugs, thereby forcing water from her fur and helping to keep the chamber dry.
Despite being mammals, platypuses lay eggs. They are monotremes, that is, egg-laying mammals.
Platypuses lay one to three eggs once a year.
Yes; platypuses lay soft, leathery eggs rather than hard-shelled eggs.
Yes. Platypuses are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals. Female platypuses incubate their eggs. They do this by curling tightly around the eggs for around ten says, until they hatch.
Platypuses are hatched from eggs. They are one of just two species of egg-laying mammals.
The only way in which platypuses are like reptiles is that they lay eggs.
a disadvantage is that there will be more platypuses and the advantage is that they will not be extinct.
no they do not exept for platypuses.
Yes. Only female platypuses are able to lay eggs. This is the case with all egg-laying vertebrates.
Platypuses do not have pregnancy. Although they are mammals, they are monotremes, which is the small group of mammals which lay eggs. Platypuses lay between one and three eggs at a time, once a year.
Male platypuses do not have babies.Only the female can have young, and she does so by laying eggs. Platypuses are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals.
Platypuses are one of the 2 mammals that lay eggs. The other is the echidna.