No. Once mating is over, the platypus has nothing more to do with the female.
Playpus come in two sexes, male and female.
In animals, mating is done when a female and male come together. The sperm from the male and the ovum from the female fuse to create a new organism.
come back parry
The platypus did not come from any other species. It is not part otter, part beaver or part duck. It has only ever been a platypus.
they are males waiting for a female to come by. its called scramble competition mating
When breeding times comes, male geckos will fight each other violently over female geckos. A male gecko will approach a female and bite her on the neck in order to get a grip on her. He may copulate with her several times during the breeding season, each time producing another set of two eggs. The female will lay one of the sets of eggs approximately every 3 weeks until she's done.
Nope - after mating, the young snakes develop within the female's body. They are born enclosed in individual membranes, which the hatchling snake breaks out of as soon as it emerges from the female's cloaca.
Platypuses do not have poison; they have venom. The venom can paralyse a victim just by its severity. People who have been "spurred" by a platypus report that the pain is strong enough to cause vomiting that may last for days, weeks or sometimes even months. The pain cannot be relieved by morphine and other standard pain-killing drugs. It seems the only way it can be relieved is through anaesthesia of the main nerve from the spur site.
No when the male is done he leaves the female sloth
It doesn't. This is a myth. The platypus is not a mixture of any other animal.
The platypus is found only in the country of Australia, including its southern island state of Tasmania.
In the female the hormone Oestrogen is produced in the ovarys. In the male it is testosterone and is produced in the testes. These are involved in pig mating as these hormones encourage the pigs to mate, ie the sow (female pig) will come into oestrus.