Monotremes do not have nipples like most mammals, so the young can't suckle milk. Instead, monotremes have pores that ooze milk. The baby monotremes then lap up the milk.
Yes. Although echidnas are egg-laying mammals, known as monotremes, they are fully mammal. The defining characteristic of a mammal is to feed its young on mothers' milk.
Echidnas are mammals, despite being egg-laying mammals, or monotremes. Therefore, like all mammals, they feed their young on mothers' milk.
Yes. Monotremes are egg-laying mammals. they are mammals because they feed their young on mothers' milk.
These egg-laying mammals are known as monotremes. The group known as monotremes includes just the platypus and the echidna.
The four mammals that lay eggs and feed milk to their young are known as monotremes. These include the platypus and three species of echidnas, also called spiny anteaters. Monotremes are unique among mammals for their reproductive method of laying eggs rather than giving birth to live young. They nurse their offspring with milk after hatching.
Monotremes and marsupials are both mammals. They are warm-blooded vertebrates which have fur and breathe using lungs (instead of gills). As they are mammals, they both feed their young on mothers' milk.
Yes. The fact that these animals feed their young on mothers' milk is one of the defining characteristics of all mammals, including the placentals, marsupials and monotremes.
Monotremes are the only egg-laying mammals. They are fully mammal because they feed their young on mothers' milk. Marsupials are the only mammals to give birth to undeveloped young after a short gestation period. These young are unable to exist independently of their mothers' nourishing teats, and for the most part, they are protected by a pouch, or marsupium - although this is not the case with all marsupials.
No, not all mammals breastfeed their young. Some mammals, like monotremes (such as platypuses and echidnas), lay eggs and do not produce milk to feed their offspring.
Both the platypus and the echidna are egg-laying mammals. They belong to the group known as monotremes and, like all mammals, they feed their young on mothers' milk.
Birds do not feed their young on milk. The lyrebird is a bird, so it does not feed its young milk.
MammalsAll mammals feed their young on mothers' milk, but there is one group of mammals known as monotremes which actually lay eggs. The platypus and echidna are both egg-laying mammals.