No. Dingoes are placental mammals. There are just three species of monotreme: the platypus, the short-beaked echidna and the long-beaked echidna.
It's a mammal.
A Tasmanian devil is a Tasmanian devil, and a marsupial. It is not a kiwi (bird), a dingo (placental mammal) or an echidna (monotreme).
No, they are a marsupial and not a monotreme. There are only 2 members in the monotreme category which are the echidna and the platypus.
A platypus is a monotreme.
A monotreme is a mammal that lays eggs.
* The Tasmanian Devil is an Australian marsupial * A dingo is an Asian and Australian placental mammal, though it is not native to Australia * An echidna is a monotreme (egg-laying mammal) found in Australia, while another species is found in Papua New Guinea * The kiwi is a small, flightless bird of New Guinea
The echidna is a monotreme which eats ants.
That is the correct spelling of "monotreme" (a mammal that lays eggs).
The platypus is a monotreme mammal.
The reproductive system of a monotreme empties into the cloaca.
Yes, there is. The echidna is also a monotreme.
Yes a monotreme does have a backbone because it is a type of mammal and a mammal is a vertebrate.
i THINK IS THE THAI Dingo