Platypuses have dense, velvety fur. Their bill is leathery, not hard.
The only way in which platypuses are like reptiles is that they lay eggs.
Like all mammals, platypuses reproduce by sexual means.
Platypuses are mammals: therefore, mother platypuses, like all mammals, feed their young on mothers' milk.
Platypuses do not roar. At most, they make a soft, puppy-like growling sound.
No. Platypuses, like echidnas, are monotremes, meaning they are egg-laying mammals. Baby platypuses hatch from soft, leathery eggs.
It has a duck like beak.
justin beiber
they have duck bills/beaks
No. America does not have platypuses. Platypuses are endemic to eastern Australia.
No. Platypuses have no interest at all in peanut butter (or peanut paste as it is still known in many parts of Australia).
Platypuses are not domesticated animals, no. Their relationship with humans is that they try to avoid us and don't really like interacting with us.
Platypuses are mammals; therefore, like all other mammals, the mother feeds her young on mothers' milk. As the young platypuses grow, she introduces them to worms and larvae that she brings back from her creek or river dives.