That's a duck-billed platypus.
A turtle or tortoise
to find out in an easy way for u to now if the animals cold or warm blooded would be if they animal had live young and the mother fed it milk from her Brest the one animal that is a warm blooded animal but dose not have live young would be the the platypus it hatches eggs but still gives its young milk and a animal that is could blooded that gives signs of warm blooded animals would be sea horse and some sharks because they have live young well some shacks have live young
It lays it's eggs in abandoned animal burrows/dens.
Not necessarily. Birds are considered warm-blooded, but they lay eggs. Monotreme mammals (platypuses and echidnas) are considered warm-blooded, but they lay eggs too.
Probably yes, when a cold blooded animal such as a reptile (snake) lay their eggs they stay with them until the eggs have hatched and then off they go. While a warm blooded animals generally give live births (other than birds) they tend to stay with their young and care for them until they are old enough to take care of themselves.
Can only lay eggs, but can eat less than warm blooded animals.
No. Birds and platypuses are warm blooded, but they lay eggs(:
warm blooded, breaths oxegen, has animal cells, and has live babies *not in eggs!*
no. Dolphins are mammals (warm blooded, bear their young alive, suckle their young). Sharks are fish (cold blooded, lay eggs)
Mammals have hair or fur, are warm blooded, and deliver live young (with the exception of the platypus and echidna, that lay eggs).
The few mammals that lay eggs (the Platypus and the Echidna) are monotremes. They are warmblooded, produce milk and take care of their young. Most mammals are placental, give birth to live young, give milk and take care of their offspring.All mammals are warm blooded by definition. Although the earliest mammals probably laid eggs, the only ones that do today are the spiny anteaters (echidnas) and the platypus. The platypus cares for its young by digging a deep burrow where it builds a nest, and then incubating the eggs. After the eggs hatch, she nurses the babies for 3 to 4 months. After a female echidna lays an egg, she places it in her pouch. When the egg hatches, she carries the baby in her pouch and nurses it until it grows spines. Then she digs a burrow for it. She continues to nurse it until it is about 7 months old.
warm blooded, breaths oxegen, has animal cells, and has live babies *not in eggs!*