No. The young echidnas suckle milk from milk patches on the mother's skin.
There is no specific name given to a female echidna. It is just a female echidna.
Mammary glands are exclusive to mammals. This means teats are exclusive to mammals, but not all mammals have teats. The mammals that don't have them are the platypus and the echidna.
A female echidna does not have any particular name. It is just a female echidna.
Female Rats and Mice have 12 teats.
Male cats do not have functional teats like female cats do. They may have small, underdeveloped nipples but they do not serve a purpose in the same way as a female cat's teats.
Usually, yes. But the teats on a bore are for no purpose.
Yes. Both the male and female echidna have equally sharp spines.
12 teats of course of you are not sure go look and get killed little brats
Pregnant or not, cats usually have 8 teats. It is possible for them to have extra, so-called "supernumerary", teats. (This can occur in dogs and humans, too.)
They are called teats on animals. Yes, they get teats when they are pregnant. They have them when they are not but they remain small. When a female gets pregnant the teats will expans to help with milk production to feed the babies.
White-tailed deer typically have four teats. These teats are located on the underside of the female, allowing fawns to nurse effectively. The number of teats can vary in some individual cases, but four is the most common.
No, male opossums do not have teats. Only female opossums possess teats, which they use to nurse their young after giving birth. Male opossums lack the reproductive structures necessary for lactation.