they swim dum but
Platypuses do not "talk". Platypuses communicate through a variety of vocalisations. The most common is a soft growling sound.
No whales eat fish
Platypuses and seals are both semi-aquatic mammals that find their food in water, but this is about where the similarities end. Platypuses lay eggs and seals give live birth; platypuses require fresh water and seals are marine mammals; platypuses use electroreceptors in their bills to find invertebrates on which they feed, while seals primarily eat fish.
No. Platypuses do not eat fish at all. Platypuses eat small water animals such as aquatic insect larvae of caddisflies, mayflies and two-winged flies, fresh water shrimp, annelid worms, yabbies and crayfish.
Platypuses communicate through a variety of vocalisations.The most common is a soft growling sound.
Platypuses are carnivores. Fish species come as both carnivores herbivores and omnivores.
No: platypuses do not eat fish at all. Platypuses eat small water animals such as aquatic insect larvae, fresh water shrimp, annelid worms, yabbies and crayfish.
Joeys are the young of koalas and any other marsupial. Their only commonality with platypuses is that they are mammals, and they live in Australia.
Platypuses do not eat fish, nor any other vertebrate. They feed on invertebrates such as crustaceans, annelid worms and larvae.
Platypuses communicate through a variety of vocalisations.The most common is a soft growling sound.
Some misunderstandings about platypuses are:that they are called "duckbilled platypuses": in fact, their common name is just "platypus"that they are the only mammal to lay eggs: this is not so, as the echidna is also a monotreme, or egg-laying mammalthat they eat fish and aquatic plants: platypuses are completely carnivorous, feeding on insect larvae, annelid worms, freshwater crayfish and other crustaceans and invertebrates which live in the bottom of creeks and riversthat they can breathe underwater: no mammals (not even marime mammals) can breathe underwater.that they can live in saltwater: platypuses are completely freshwater animalsthat they are part duck and part beaver: they are not - the platypus has only ever been a platypus
No. Platypuses do not currently qualify as threatened, nor Near Threatened, nor prior to 2001 as Conservation Dependent. The Australian Government lists the platypus as "common but vulnerable".