The animal you are describing is the platypus. It is a unique monotreme, meaning it is one of the few mammals that lay eggs. The platypus has gills during its early developmental stages, a pouch for carrying its young, and webbed feet, which are adapted for swimming. These distinct features make it one of the most unusual mammals in the animal kingdom.
platypus
a platapuss
a platypus
Salamander
The female lays eggs in the pouch on the stomach of the male. The eggs develop in that pouch, then the live sea horse babies come out of the eggs and out of the male's pouch.
The only furred animals which lay eggs are the three species of mammals which lay eggs, known as monotremes. The only known monotremes are the platypus, the short-beaked echidna and the long-beaked echidna.
It's the female who make the eggs, but she deposits them in a pouch on the male seahorse's stomach for him to carry while the eggs develop. When the eggs hatch, the pouch opens, and tiny, tiny sea horses swim out to start their own lives.
The animal you are describing is a bat. Bats are the only mammals capable of sustained flight, have hair, possess webbed fingers that form wings, and have teeth. They give birth to live young rather than laying eggs.
Boy animals do not give birth. The only animal that can even closely do that is the male seahorse, but it technically does not give birth. It just stores the eggs in its pouch.
No, they are kind of like marsupials and have a pouch for their eggs
The female deposits the eggs in a pouch on the male seahorse's stomachs. When the eggs hatch, the pouch opens, and tiny, tiny sea horses swim out.
A female woodlouse keeps her eggs in a pouch on the underside of her body.