No. Male platypuses have venomous spur on their ankles, which are attached to venom glands in their thigh.
Platypus venom would certainly be enough to kill a snake - but the snake could well inject its own venom in the platypus at the same time.
The only way to be injected with platypus venom is to aggravate a male platypus sufficiently so that it lashes out with its ankle spur.
The platypus's spur is sharp and attached to a venom gland in the platypus's thigh. The echidna's spur is blunt, and is not attached to a functional venom gland.
The only way the venom of a male platypus could be removed would be for the entire venom gland to be removed.
The male platypus has a hollow spur on each of its hind ankles, which is attached to a venom gland within its thigh. The platypus delivers the venom through the ankle spur.
No. The platypus's venom gland is located within the male platypus's thigh.
No. A platypus's spur cannot be "milked" in the way a snake can be milked.
The platypus's venom gland is in its upper thigh. In the male platypus, this gland is attached to a hollow spur behind its rear ankle through which it can deliver the venom. Female platypuses do not have venom glands.
The platypus is not poisonous: it is venomous. Its venom gland is located in its thigh and the venom is delivered via a hollow spur in each of its hind legs.
A spur is a hollow spike on the male platypus' hind ankle which is attached to a venom gland within the animal's thigh. The venom can cause agonising and paralysing pain.
Male platypuses can produce venom.
A male platypus could kill a cat. It would have enough venom in its spur to achieve this. A female platypus does not have a venomous spur.