No. Otterns are not monotremes, which are egg-laying mammals. Otters are placental mammals. They give birth to live young.
Otters are carnivorous.
No, marine otters are not extinct. While they have faced threats from hunting and habitat loss, populations of marine otters still exist in various regions, particularly along the coastlines of the Pacific Ocean. Efforts are being made to protect and conserve these otters to prevent extinction.
The only three living species of monotremes are the platypus and two species of echidna (short-beaked echidna and the long-beaked echidna). Monotremes are egg-laying mammals found in Australia and New Guinea.
Sea otters usually have a baby but at times it can also have twins
Mammals that complete development outside of the body of the mother are called monotremes, specifically referring to egg-laying mammals such as the platypus and echidna.
Platypuses are only related to seals and otters in that they are all semi-aquatic mammals. Even there, the similarity is flimsy, because seals and otters are placental mammals, whereas platypuses are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals, one of only two types of such animals in the world.
Yes, monotremes are real.
No a Blue Whale is Not a monotremes.
The plural of otter is otters.
Monotremes never eat their young.
Monotremes are egg laying mammals, the platypus and the echidna are the only two monotremes.
No, monotremes do not have short internal development.
Eutherians and monotremes are in the phylum Chordata.
Monotremes are mammals; therefore they have lungs, not gills.
Monotremes are mammals that lay eggs, such as the Echidna and the Platypus.
Yes monotremes are warm blooded , they are like other mammals
Monotremes are unique for being egg laying mammals.