Monotremes lay eggs. Neither the platypus nor the echidna (the only known monotremes) eat plants of any type.
They lay eggs
Yes. Monotremes are mammals which lay eggs.
Monotreme .
No horses are viviparous (give birth to live young). Monotreme mammals lay eggs
No. Eggs are in their abdomens and they lay their eggs either on or near their host plants. Host plants are the plants that the caterpillars eat. Each butterfly has its own specific species of plant or plants that it can eat as a caterpillar.
Monotremes are mammals which lay eggs rather than give birth, therefore an elephant is not a monotreme.
Monotremes are mammals which lay eggs rather than give birth, therefore a chimpanzee is not a monotreme.
No, a ladybug is not a monotreme. The term in question references mammals that lay eggs. A ladybug will deposit eggs, as an insect class member of the Coccinellidae family.
A platypus reproduces by laying eggs. Like the echidna, it is a monotreme.
No; a bear is not a monotreme. A monotreme is a mammal which lays eggs. Bears do not lay eggs, but give birth to live young. There are only three monotremes: the platypus, the short-beaked echidna and the long-beaked echidna.
Plants do not lay eggs.
Plants do not lay eggs.