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Kill the ants in your back yard.

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How do spiny anteaters move?

Spiny anteaters, or echidnas, move with their feet.


Why do spiny anteaters are spiny?

Because the name is spiny which makes them spiny


How many legs do anteaters have?

Spiny anteaters, more correctly known as echidnas, have four legs.


Do spiny anteaters have lungs?

Yes. Spiny anteaters, more correctly known as echidnas, are mammals. All mammals breathe using lungs. Therefore, echidnas have lungs.


Do platypuses and spiny anteaters give birth to young alive?

No. Platypuses and spiny anteaters, more correctly known as echidnas, are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals. The young are hatched, not born.


What do spiny anteaters use for shelter?

Spiny anteaters, more properly known as echidnas, may shelter in hollow or rotting logs; they may dig burrows; or they shelter under bushes.


Why is it incorrect to call the echidna a spiny ant eater?

The echidna is sometimes called a spiny anteater, but it bears no relation to anteaters. Anteaters are placental mammals, and echidnas are monotremes (egg-laying mammals).


Do spiny anteaters have hair and spines?

Yes. The spiny anteater, more correctly known as the echidna, has both fur and spines.


Why one scientist thinks that spiny anteaters are mammals?

All scientists believe that spiny anteaters (more correctly known as echidnas) are mammals because they feed their young on mothers' milk. This is the defining characteristic of a mammal.


How are spiny anteaters related to seals?

Very, very tenuously. Seals and spiny anteaters (echidnas) are both mammals. They are not, however, even the same type of mammals. Seals are placental mammals and echidnas are monotremes (egg-laying mammals).


Does a spiny anteater have fur?

All mammals have fur or hair. That includes spiny anteaters (echidnas). The spines on the echidna are actually modified hairs.


Are anteaters placental?

Yes. Anteaters are placental mammals because they do not have a pouch like most marsupials, and they do not lay eggs like the monotremes. The echidna, which is sometimes called the "spiny anteater", is not a true anteater. It is a monotreme, or egg-laying mammal.