Beyond both being mammals, coyotes and platypuses have nothing more in common. They are both warm-blooded vertebrates, covered in fur, which bathe air using lungs, and that feed their young on mothers' milk. This is where the similarities end.
Platypuses are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals, while coyotes are eutherians, or placental mammals. They do not have the same diet or hunting habits, and they do not even live on the same continent.
Both the platypus, an egg-laying mammal, and the waratah, a plant, are found only in Australia.
the waratah and platypus is the nsw state emblem
All of these items are emblems of the Australian state of New South Wales.The Waratah is the floral emblemThe Kookaburra is the avian (bird) emblemThe Blue groper is the fish emblemThe black opal is the gemstone emblem (only announced in 2008)The platypus is the faunal (animal) emblem
The New South Wales floral emblem is the waratah(Telopea speciosissima).The faunal emblems are the platypus and the kookaburra.
Yes, the noun waratah is a common noun, a type of plant.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:The SS Waratah, a ship that disappeared with 211 passengers and crew in 1909.Waratah, Mt. Gambier, South Australia a heavy equipment manufacturer.Waratah Coal, Brisbane, QLD AustraliaWaratah Golf Club, Argenton, NSW Australia
The Australian Waratah is red.
Spiders and that's all that eats a waratah.
Waratah Cup was created in 1991.
The Waratah Anemone is on the rocky waters of Australia
There is no such thing as a "Eucalyptus platypus".
Ornithorhynchus anatinusThe original name was Platypus anatinus, from Greek and Latin words meaning "flat-footed, duck-like". After realising that the name "platypus" had already be given to a group of beetles, the scientist involved assigned the platypus the scientific name of Ornithorhynchus anatinus, the first word of which means "bird-like snout".
Waratah railway station was created in 1858.
Waratah Mayfield Cheetahs was created in 1927.