Being a mammal, a platypus breathes using its lungs, nostrils and respiratory system. Unlike some marine mammals (dolphins, porpoises and whales) it does not have a blowhole on the top of its head.
The platypus is able to hold its breath for up to two minutes underwater when diving for food, and because of this, may make hundreds of dives in order to find enough food for a single feeding. Platypuses may also hold their breath underwater for 5-6 minutes if they are threatened.
Yes. When first hatched, a baby platypus can breathe on its own.
Yes. The platypus is a mammal and all mammals have lungs. Even marine mammals such as dolphins and whales must use lungs to breathe. When swimming, the platypus must surface regularly to breathe.
No. Platypuses have lungs.
Yes, a platypus dives. A platypus will make hundreds of dives every day to search for food. When actively seeking food, it can only stay underwater for one to two minutes, so it needs to frequently resurface in order to breathe.
The platypus is semi-aquatic because, although it must live and shelter on dry land, it needs to hunt for its food in creeks and rivers. Platypuses cannot breathe underwater; nor can they search for food on land.
a platypus's bill is a bill that is on a platypus
a platypus's bill is a bill that is on a platypus
The platypus frog is also known as the Gastric brooding frog. Like other frogs, when they are tadpoles, they breathe using gills and a spiracle. When they have completed their metamorphosis, they breathe using lungs, and through their skin while they are in the water.
Platypuses cannot breathe underwater, just like mammals and dolphins can't. They tend to stay underwater for one to two minutes at a time, and can stay underwater as long as ten minutes, if left undisturbed.
A Platypus is not a primate.
No. The platypus is not a hoarder.
Ornithorhynchus anatinusThe original name was Platypus anatinus, from Greek and Latin words meaning "flat-footed, duck-like". After realising that the name "platypus" had already be given to a group of beetles, the scientist involved assigned the platypus the scientific name of Ornithorhynchus anatinus, the first word of which means "bird-like snout".