Want this question answered?
They use their tails to propel themselves backwards.
How I Met Your Mother - 2005 Lobster Crawl 8-9 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-PG
Because snakes can't crawl
It faces backwards. This is useful when the wombat is digging a burrow.
Cheetahs can crawl, walk, or dig burrows, but they are most known for dashing - running and chasing prey at relatively high speeds.
because they can. it is also a form of survival i suppose
yes there very mobile
No. All of a wombat's feet face forwards. The female wombat's pouch is the only backwards-facing part of the wombat. It faces backwards so that, when the mother digs a burrow, the dirt does not get into the pouch.
As with all pronograde organisms with sensory organs located on the head, the normal motion of a lobster is notionally "forward" in that direction; but in many crustaceans like shrimp, lobster, crayfish, there exists a "caridoid escape reaction" by which they can achieve a burst of speed by abdominal muscle compression, used to escape predators, in effect flipping their tail to swim suddenly backwards.
The mother gets on shore digs a burrow then lays eggs in it. After a while the eggs with hatch and the baby's will crawl to the ocean
Platypuses do not live in dens, but rather in burrows. A platypus's burrow extends up to 30 metres, or 100 feet, into a riverbank. The burrow is only large enough for the platypus - and snakes - to crawl into. Females have a chamber at the end of the burrow for nesting, but this is just large enough for the female to curl around her eggs.
A lobster hides then if predator gets too close then it will us it's tail to thrust backwards to avoid conflict. If the predator gets the lobster in a corner like (in a fish tank or under coral) the lobster will tuck his tail under himself and try to use his claws to protect himself.