Echidna babies are not born: they are hatched, as echidnas are monotremes, i.e. egg-laying mammals. The female echidna lays a single egg in the rudimentary pouch she develops during breeding season.
There is a belief that echidna young are called "puggles". Even certain government wildlife departments are guilty of perpetuating this myth. This misnomer developed and spread by the appearance of a soft toy, called a puggle, which resembled a baby echidna.
NO!
Ponies have babies, not eggs. All mammals except for platypuses and echidnas give birth to live young.
Echidnas are mammals, so the young feed on mothers' milk.
Echidnas are generally solitary animals. They do not live in groups.
Given that echidnas have a conservation status of "least concern" throughout Australia, there are very likely to be as many echidnas in 5 years as there are now. It is unknown how many echidnas there are, but being a very adaptable animal that can survive wherever there are ants, it is expected the echidna has a very secure future.
Yes: echidnas certainly do live in the many bushy reserves in and around Brisbane, Queensland.
Echidnas do not hibernate.
No. Echidnas do not hop. They walk.
There are no echidnas in Bali. Echidnas are found only in Australia and on the island of New Guinea.
No. All echidnas are mammals, and all mammals are vertebrates. Echidnas are different from "echinoderms".
No. Echidnas eat termites.
Echidnas, or spiny anteaters, are mammals. Therefore, they do feed their young with mothers' milk. This is one of the defining characteristics of a mammal.