The platypus is in the mammal classification. It is a monotreme, or egg-laying mammal.
the whale
The sub-group of mammals which lay eggs are called monotremes.This group includes the platypus and the two species of echidna.
The only two living montromes are the platypus and the echidna. These unique mammals are the only surviving members of the montreme group, a type of egg-laying mammal found in Australia and New Guinea.
Agnatha, also known as jawless fish, are the oldest vertebrate fossils with no jaws. This group includes ancient species like the ostracoderms and the agnathan fish.
There are none. The meaning of, or the reason for, vertebrate classification is that all the animals placed under this group have a backbone/spine. While it may not look similar to the human back, it is a back nonetheless. Animals with no backbone are invertebrates
The platypus is a mammal, specifically a monotreme.
An Axolotl is like a type of salamander so it is in the Amphibian vertebrate group :)
yes, a platypus a is a vertebrate. all mammals are.
It is a vertebrate because it has a spinal column in its skeletal system. Also it is a mammal, although it lays eggs, and every mammal (or other warm-blooded creature, like a bird) is a vertebrate.
Type your answer here... Rodents
Amphibia. They're a type of salamander.
Birds belong to Chordata
The platypus's family group is Ornithorhynchidae.
Platypuses do not eat fish, nor any other vertebrate. They feed on invertebrates such as crustaceans, annelid worms and larvae.
The aye-aye is a primate, a type of mammal.
The mammal group to which the platypus belong is monotremata.There are only two animals in that group: the platypus and the echidna, and they are known as monotremes.
Penguins belong to a vertebrate group called aves.