Yes. Platypuses lay eggs.
Only if it's a platypus or an echidna.
yes platypuses lay eggs and they hatch from them.
Yes. Egg-laying mammals are called monotremes. They include the platypus and the echidna.
The only mammals that lay eggs are echidnas and the Platypus. Female platypuses lay their eggs in their burrows (in riverbanks), which they make over 60 times longer when they are going to lay an egg. A female echidna curls up, lays the egg, and puts it in a pouch on her abdomen.
Yes, many of them. Only two mammals lay eggs, the platypus and the echidna.
The platypus and echidna are the only mammals that have hair and lay eggs. They are both unique egg-laying mammals known as monotremes. These animals are found in Australia and surrounding regions.
No; only the female can lay eggs, as with all vertebrate species which lay eggs. The female platypus lays the egg and incubates it. The male has nothing to do with the young.
mammals Correction: There are two types of egg-laying mammals - the platypus and the echidna.
Monotremes are egg-laying mammals. They include the platypus and echidna.
Bats do not lay eggs. They are placental mammals, not monotremes (egg-laying mammals) like the platypus and the echidna.
There is no such thing. Mammals are one classification, and birds are another. All birds lay eggs. The platypus and the echidna are the only egg-laying mammals.
There are many animals that lay eggs such as: *Chickens *Birds *Lizards *Penguins * platypus