After being hatched (not born), baby platypuses initially feed exclusively on mothers' milk. Like other mammals, they move by instinct, and lured by the smell, to the mother's abdomen, where they feed on milk that is secreted through modified sweat glands, rather than teats.
As they get older, they are shown by the mother platypus how to find food in rivers and creeks.
Baby platypuses initially feed exclusively on mothers' milk. As they get older, they are shown by the mother platypus how to find food in rivers and creeks.
Baby platypuses initially feed exclusively on mothers' milk. The mother platypus does not have teats for the baby platypuses to latch onto, but instead secretes milk through grooves on either side of her abdomen. The young platypuses suck up this milk. As they get older, they are shown by the mother platypus how to find food in rivers and creeks.
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Platypuses do not eat plankton, so they do not need to find it.
Nowhere. Platypuses are endemic to Australia alone.
no
No. Platypuses live near freshwater creeks and rivers. They are not marine dwellers.
Platypuses find food on the bottom of freshwater riverbeds and creek beds.
Yes. On average, platypuses can hold their breath for up to two minutes when hunting underwater, or longer if they remain still. However, in flood times, platypuses have been known to drown - particularly baby platypuses - when they are swept out of their burrows by floodwaters.
As soon as a baby shark is born, the first thing it does is swim away from its mother to avoid being eaten, find a suitable hiding spot, and look for smaller fish and invertebrates to consume.
Platypuses tend to stay around freshwater creeks and rivers. Being semi-aquatic, they dig burrows in the riverbank, and they find their food in the water.
It is usual for platypuses to make hundreds of dives every day in order to find sufficient food.