Echidnas belong to the group of mammals known as monotremes. They are mammals that lay eggs, as opposed to placental mammals, which give birth to live young. (Marsupials - pouched mammals - are also placental mammals.) Their order is "monotremata", and there are only five living monotreme species: the platypus and four species of echidna (also known as spiny anteaters). All of them are found only in Australia and New Guinea.
The echidna belongs to the family Tachyglossidae, which is in the group of egg-laying mammals known as monotremes.
Echidnas belong to the Class Mammalia, Order Monotremata and the family Tachyglossidae.
The echidna is a monotreme, an egg-laying mammal of Australia and New Guinea.
the barracudas belong to an animal group call battery
Platypuses are monotremes, which means they are egg-laying mammals. This is a unique group consisting of just three species: the platypus, the short-beaked echidna and the long-beaked echidna.
Sea Stars, also know as starfish, belong to the animal group echinoderms.
insects belong to the group arthropods :)
they belong to cnidarians
it is belong to the Chesapeake
reptile
The flamingo belongs to the bird group.
Mollusca
coelenterates
mammal
Insects.