She gathers food beforehand then wen it is born she feeds it milk untill it is old enough to find its own food.
That's a duck-billed platypus.
Platypuses are not born; they are hatched, as the platypus is one of just two types of egg-laying mammals. The female platypus takes very good care of its young for several months until they are weaned. The young sometimes stay with the mother as a family group until the next breeding season.
Yes: the mother platypus is a dutiful creature, tending her young carefully in a chamber at the end of a burrow, ensuring they do not get wet after she has been swimming and hunting for food. The young feed from mothers' milk for several months, as platypuses are mammals.
The mother platypus feeds her babies on mothers' milk for about four months. The young then continue to stay with her for between 18 months and two years.
The few mammals that lay eggs (the Platypus and the Echidna) are monotremes. They are warmblooded, produce milk and take care of their young. Most mammals are placental, give birth to live young, give milk and take care of their offspring.All mammals are warm blooded by definition. Although the earliest mammals probably laid eggs, the only ones that do today are the spiny anteaters (echidnas) and the platypus. The platypus cares for its young by digging a deep burrow where it builds a nest, and then incubating the eggs. After the eggs hatch, she nurses the babies for 3 to 4 months. After a female echidna lays an egg, she places it in her pouch. When the egg hatches, she carries the baby in her pouch and nurses it until it grows spines. Then she digs a burrow for it. She continues to nurse it until it is about 7 months old.
they dont. young take care of themselves
how do hyenas care for their young
Yes, bats take care of their young. The young are all together in a 'nursery', where all mothers take care of their young. Each mother bat can recognise the cry of her young.
she feeds it milk untill it is old enough to find its own foodandshe barley leavs it to find food for herself thats why she gathers food when she is pregnent
Yes, camels take care of their young.
how do bottlenose dolphins take care of there young
it dont really take of it young the young normally takes care of its self