Humans affect platypuses through habitat loss and pollution of waterways. People have introduced predatory species such as dogs and foxes. Using nets to catch fish has caused innumerable platypus deaths in the past, but this practice is now illegal.
In the past, humans affected the platypus by killing them for their pelts, but since the platypus has become a protected species, its numbers have returned to figures similar to what they were before European settlement in Australia. There are fewer platypuses in the wild in South Australia than there once were.
Now, the platypus is officially protected.
Mt Helen's affect human lives as the eruption in 1980 was devastating
No. There is only one species of platypus, and it lives only near fresh water.
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It is not an insect. Platypus is a semi-aquatic mammal (it finds its food in water but it lives on land) found in Eastern Australia.Specifically, the platypus is a monotreme, which is an egg-laying mammal.
The planets have constant effects on human lives despite the inability to see the majority by human eye. The planets alter weather, gravity, daylight, and many other aspects.
Americium doesn't affect the lives of people.
Since a platypus lives in freshwater creeks, rivers and billabongs, it most likely drinks water from these sources.
The Platypus lives in the Yarra River.
A diplodocus is actually a platypus that lives in the ocean.
Human environment is the surrounding things around where people lives and how the things around is can affect our living conditions.
A platypus does not benefit from the tides because it is a freshwater-dwelling animals. It lives only in freshwater creeks, rivers and ponds.