The spiny anteater, more properly known as the echidna, is insectivorous, as it eats termites and ants, and sometimes other insect larvae. Apart from these, it does not feed on any other animals.
The spiny anteater, more properly known as the echidna, is insectivorous. Its preferred food is termites, but it also eats ants, and sometimes other insect larvae.
Echidnas, or spiny anteaters, are mammals. Therefore, they do feed their young with mothers' milk. This is one of the defining characteristics of a mammal.
Spiny anteaters, more properly known as echidnas, are mammals. Therefore, they feed their young with mothers' milk.
Spiny Anteater is another name for the echidna. However, echidnas are not related to anteaters at all, despite the name. Echidnas are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals, while anteaters a placental mammals. Echidnas have sharp spines, hence the name 'spiny' and they feed primarily on termites, as well as ants.
The spiny anteater, more properly known as the echidna, is a mammal, so it does indeed feed its young on mothers' milk.
No, the spiny anteater, also known as the echidna, is not a bird. It is a mammal and belongs to a group called monotremes, which are egg-laying mammals. Echidnas are characterized by their spiny coats and long snouts, and they primarily feed on ants and termites.
Ants.
The correct name for the spiny anteater is echidna.The echidna can be regarded as carnivorous because it feeds almost exclusively on termites, with ants also making up the bulk of their diet. They also (rarely) feed on insect larvae. Strictly speaking, they could be said to be insectivorous.
It bears a single offspring after a gestation period of 190 days, which will stay near the mother until she becomes pregnant again. The baby spends much of the first part of its life riding on its mother's back, until it is nearly half her size The Spiny anteater, more correctly known as the echidna, does lay eggs but it is not an anteater - it is a monotreme, and is completely different from regular anteaters (like the Giant anteater). Regular anteaters are in the family Vermilingua, (also known as xenarthrans and edentates, it contains anteaters, armadillos and sloths) Spiny anteaters are in the family monotremes (also known as Monotremata and egg-laying mammals, it contains Spiny anteaters and the platypus). Yes
Some animals eat grasses and other plants. Other animals feed on these animals that feed on plants. Some animals are omnivores ad feed on both plants and other animals,
There are many things that feed off of other animals. Animals feed off of other animals and we feed off of animals.
Desert animals either feed on plants or they feed on other animals.