Platypuses breed just once a year. Each breeding season they lay between one and three eggs.
Generally, no, platypuses do not live together. They are usually solitary animals. The female and babies may live as a family group until the next breeding season.
Platypuses reproduce 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 find food on the bottom of freshwater riverbeds and creek beds.
Despite being mammals, platypuses lay eggs. They are monotremes, that is, egg-laying mammals.
Platypuses swim in freshwater creeks, rivers, billabongs, lakes and dams.
Yes. When baby platypuses hatch, they are completely hairless.
Ponies have babies, not eggs. All mammals except for platypuses and echidnas give birth to live young.
Platypuses are not born; they are hatched. The female lays between one and three eggs each breeding season.
Platypuses and echidnas are different from other mammals because they are monotremes, i.e. mammals which lay eggs.
The platypus has an average of two babies each year. Platypuses are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals, and the female lays between one and red eggs each breeding season, which occurs once a year. The average number of babies tends to be two.
Reindeer usually have one calf at a time.