Probably sharks
yes, humans are animals and we attack their habitat.
Pythons and goannas eat platypus eggs. The female platypus will actually place earthen plugs along the length of her burrow before the chamber which holds the eggs, in order to deter such predators.
All animals are in the "platypus kingdom", since the kingdom for the platypus is Animalia, which as you might guess from the name includes all animals.
No animals share the same genes as the platypus. To suggest they do would be to suggest the platypus is a mixture of other animals which, or course, it is not.
Yes. A platypus is a secondary consumer. Secondary consumers are animals that eat primary consumers, and although platypuses do not eat fish, they do eat other primary consumers such as crustaceans, insect larvae and annelid worms.
All animals have a diet. The platypus's diet is primarily tiny crustaceans and insect larvae that live on the bottom of freshwater creeks, rivers and lakes. (They do not eat fish.)
It is illegal to eat platypus.
wolves eat all diffrent kinds of animals they may try to eat a platypus a hippo a dolphin a antalope a cat a dog or any animals they can pretty much find!
No. There are no antelope in Australia, which is the natural home of the platypus. Even if there were, it is highly unlikely that an antelope would wish to eat a platypus.
Wild animals do not go on diets, but they do have a diet. The platypus's diet is primarily tiny crustaceans and insect larvae that live on the bottom of freshwater creeks, rivers and lakes. (They do not eat fish.)
Platypuses do not eat larger live animals or vegetation of any kind. They hunt for small crustaceans and larvae which live on the bottom of creeks and rivers.
Platypuses are not hunters of vertebrates: they eat only invertebrates. However, the venom of a male platypus can kill animals up to the size of a small dog.