Platypuses spend most of their time diving and swimming, searching for food, as they must eat the equivalent of their own body weight daily.
sorry if wrong i think it is a duck billed platypuse
no it is a carnivore
platypuse
Platypuse Shoes
yourmums fat asss hole
A platypus does not have a specific time period of mating
The echidnas are the only living relatives of the platypus.
Well it looks like a beaver with a duck bill. It is usually brown and has an orange bill thats rectangular.And do u know where i can find sheet music to the song " im gonna sit at the welcome table" ?
Males Are Poisonous and Have Hooks Kind of Like A Dew Claw On A Dog That Are Called Spurs and Are Located On Both Hinde Legs... They Inject By Hugging The Foe and Sinking Them Deep Into The Predator, Killing Anything The Size of A Dog... Humans Get Very Sick From The Sting and Have Been Known To Be Hospitalized For Weeks... The Platypuse Is The Only Mammal In The Whole World That Is Poisonous...
the philosopher's stone (Latin: lapis philosophorum; Greek: chrysopoeia) is a legendary substance, supposedly capable of turning inexpensive metals into gold; it was also sometimes believed to be an elixir of life, useful for rejuvenation and possibly for achieving immortality. For a long time, it was the most sought-after goal in Western alchemy. In the view of spiritual alchemy, making the philosopher's stone would bring enlightenment upon the maker and conclude the Great Work.[1]Yes there is a philosophers stone, it is carried in the platypuses pouch! by Natalie.O There is no philosophers stone in a platypuse pouch, what also supports my state is that you didnt spell philosopher right. the philosophers stone is from HARRY POTTER and the PHILOSOPHERS STONE
It is unknown what the actual population of platypuses is. The closest estimate is that platypus numbers are in the low thousands. Not many surveys of platypus populations have been done, and even those have only been carried out in selected rivers on Australia's eastern coast. Recent research suggests that the average platypus population density along some of the better quality streams in part of the Great Dividing Range in Victoria is only around one to two animals per kilometre of channel. Besides this, the only information we have is that, apart from in South Australia where platypuses can no longer be found in the wild, the platypus population is believed to be the same as it was at the beginning of European settlement in Australia. There also appear to be very few platypuses living in zoos outside of Australia. Even in Australia, a limited number of Australian zoos and universities hold permits to keep platypuses in captivity for the purpose of either display or research.
Here are just a few of the animals that live in New South Wales. Australian Brush Turkey, Australian Magpies, Bandicoots, Bowerbirds, Brush Tailed Possum, Dingoes, Echidnas, Emus, Flying Foxes, Frogs, Gliding possums, Glossy Black Cockatoos, Ibis, Kangaroos & Wallabies, Koala, Laughing Kookaburra, Little penguin, Lord Howe Island Woodhen, Lyrebirds, Malleefowl, Parrots, Platypuse, Purple Copper Butterflies, Shearwaters, Snakes, Terns, Wedge Tailed Eagle and Wombats.