No.
No. The koala is an example of a marsupial. The only two examples of monotremes, or egg-laying mammals, are the platypus and te echidna.
The koala is a marsupial. Monotremes are egg-laying mammals, and koalas do not lay eggs, but give birth to live young.
No, they are a marsupial and not a monotreme. There are only 2 members in the monotreme category which are the echidna and the platypus.
A monotreme is a mammal that lays eggs.
A platypus is a monotreme.
The numbat is a marsupial. It is a small, native termite-eating marsupial found in Western Australia. Unlike almost all other marsupials, the numbat does not have a pouch.
The echidna is a monotreme which eats ants.
The platypus is a monotreme mammal.
That is the correct spelling of "monotreme" (a mammal that lays eggs).
Yes, there is. The echidna is also a monotreme.
Yes a monotreme does have a backbone because it is a type of mammal and a mammal is a vertebrate.
No horses are viviparous (give birth to live young). Monotreme mammals lay eggs