Thorny devils do not raise their babies. The female thorny devil digs a burrow in the sand, and deposits the eggs there. Then she leaves them to hatch on their own, a process which can take many months. When the young thorny devil hatch, they are able to care for themselves, and start eating ants immediately.
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∙ 10y agoWiki User
∙ 10y agoThey don't.
Female thorny devils lay between 3 and 10 eggs in a burrow with a chamber. This burrow may be about 30 cm below the surface. After laying the eggs, the female backfills the burrow, leaving a chamber filled with air. She then leaves the eggs.
The eggs incubate for anywhere between 3 and 6 months, depending on the outside temperature (they hatch sooner in hot weather). Once the baby thorny devils hatch, they are able to start eating ants almost immediately.
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∙ 10y agoThey don't.
Thorny devils lay their eggs in chambers in a burrow which is about 30cm deep. After this, they have no further parental involvement. Once the young thorny devils hatch, they are able to begin eating ants immediately.
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∙ 9y agoYes. Thorny devils have small, sharp teeth to enable them to chew stuff
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∙ 13y agoyes they do they have 2-3 at one time.
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∙ 11y agoNo. Reptiles do not have wings.
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∙ 9y agoa thorny devil has 100 babys
a thorny devil has 100 babys
Thorny devils are not mammals: they do not have nipples.
They are 63-65 millimeters long. Tough question!
There are many aboriginal dialects. In the language of the Pitjantjatjara and Yankunytjatjara people, who populate the area where the thorny devil is mostly found, the thorny devil is known as Ngiyari.
The thorny devil isn't a mammel
Yes. The Thorny devil belongs to the order Squamata.
There is no specific name for a male thorny devil.
There are no accurate figures for the population of the thorny devil, as this lizard is not endangered.
the thorny devil is a lizard and the tasmanian devil is sort of a dog. also the tasmanian devil lives in tasmania and the thorny devil lives in south australia
The thorny devil's body is covered with sharp protuberances, or spikes.
a thorny devil cost 90 to 1,000 dollars
As the thorny devil is not endangered, there are no accurate figures available on its population. Websites that state the thorny devil is endangered, with around 1000 reptiles remaining, are incorrect.