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Echidnas

Sometimes known as the spiny anteater, the echidna is an egg-laying mammal of Australia and New Guinea. It has adapted to living in a variety of habitats, from deserts to mountains, as long as there is a ready source of its favorite food of termites. Questions and answers about echidnas can be found here.

500 Questions

Do echidnas go underground when they are scared?

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Asked by Wiki User

Yes. Echidnas have strong front legs and sharp claws that enable them to dig quickly into the ground to avoid danger. They "flatten out" as they dig, appearing to sink horizontally into the ground, thus ensuring their sharp spines are exposed through the process.

Does the Echidna have any behaviours that help them survive?

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Asked by Wiki User

Most of the echidnas' adaptations are physiological or structural. However, one behaviour which certainly helps the echidna to survive is its tendency to burrow. Echidnas have strong front legs and sharp claws that enable them to dig quickly into the ground to avoid danger. They "flatten out" as they dig, appearing to sink horizontally into the ground, thus ensuring their sharp spines are exposed through the process.

How many spikes does an echidna have?

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Asked by Wiki User

The echidna does not have spikes; it has spines, in numbers of between 5,000 and 10,000.

How do spiny anteaters feed their young?

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Asked by Wiki User

The spiny anteater, more properly known as the echidna, is a mammal, so it does indeed feed its young on mothers' milk.

Can you find echidnas in the Australian outback?

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Asked by Wiki User

Yes, the echidna is native to Australia, but it is also native to New Guinea. The species in Australia is the short-beaked echidna and the species native to New Guinea is the long-beaked echidna. These are the only two countries in which the echidna is found.

How do Echidnas protect themselves?

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Asked by Wiki User

Like a hedgehog an Echidna can curl up into a tight spiky ball. Due to the presence of their spines, echidnas simply do not have many predators. Even young echidnas develop spines by the time they are about 3 months old. Echidnas have strong front legs and sharp claws that enable them to dig quickly into the ground to avoid danger. They "flatten out" as they dig, appearing to sink horizontally into the ground, thus ensuring their sharp spines are exposed through the process.

Are echidna exoskeletons?

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Asked by Wiki User

No. echinoderms have no exoskeleton.

Related Information:

Echinoderms are deuterostomes, a group belonging to the Phylum, Chordata but separate from the vertebrates, also of this phylum. While there is a close relationship between the echinoderms and the vertebrates, echinoderms are endoskeletal invertebrates.

What are echidnas' prey?

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Asked by Wiki User

The biggest threat to echidnas occurs when they are young. Snakes will sometimes enter their burrow and eat the baby echidna. Other animals do not usually attempt to eat this spiky creature, but some echidna predators include very brave foxes, and goannas. Goannas will dig into an echidna's burrow and eat the young.

A fascinating museum exhibit in Australia shows a fossilised snake eating a fossilised echidna. It would appear the echidna's spikes caught as it was being swallowed by the snake, and both creatures perished.

Are echidnas nocturnal or diurnal?

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Asked by Wiki User

Echidnas in northern Australia are nocturnal. On occasion, they are seen during the day when the weather is mild. Echidnas in southern Australia tend to be more active during the day, especially during winter.

Does an echidna have a long tongue?

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Asked by Wiki User

The echidna has a long tongue with sticky saliva, which it uses to catch and eat termites and ants.

How strong is knuckles the echidna?

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Asked by Wiki User

so strong he can...

break 2 rocks with the force of 1 punch,throw eggman across the world,kill a bee,stop a falling tree,break peanut brittle,and rip your ear off.[i did not mean to make it ryme].

How many eggs does an echidna lay at one time?

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Asked by Wiki User

The echidna usually lays just a single egg at a time.

What is a female echidna called?

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Asked by Nl298

There is no specific name given to a female echidna. It is just a female echidna.

Does rouge the bat love desperately knuckles the echidna?

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Asked by Wiki User

Any romantic feelings Knuckles has for Rouge are unofficial. He has shown to have slight feelings for her, but is irritated that she constantly uses him to get the master emerald. A Shadow-Rouge relationship seems much more likely at this point. Knuckles is also painfully shy around girls which would explain his awkward behavior. If I were to guess, I would say he has a small crush on Rouge but would not be devastated if she were to reject him.

Knuckles has a secret crush on rouge but rouge has a secret crush on him too. The way knuckles acts around her in the games shows that he likes her more than she likes him.

Do echidnas have lungs?

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Asked by Wiki User

Yes. The echidna is a mammal, and all mammal have lungs.

What is the average price of an echidna?

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Asked by Wiki User

Echidnas cannot be bought. They are native animals, and therefore protected by law.

What is the correct name for a spiny anteater?

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Asked by Wiki User

The spiny anteater, more correctly known as the echidna,is a monotreme. This means it is an egg-laying mammals, one of only two such types of animals in the world. The other monotreme is the platypus.

Is an Echidna Ectothermic or Endothermic?

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Asked by Totodile960

eels like fish are cold blooded

Does the female echidna have teats?

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Asked by Wiki User

No. The young echidnas suckle milk from milk patches on the mother's skin.

What body part do echidnas have pouches?

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Asked by Wiki User

The echidna is not a marsupial, but a female echidna develops a pouch, or rather a flap of skin, during the breeding season. She curls up and lays her single egg in this pouch, where it is then incubated until it hatches.

Sometimes, the male even develops a pouch during breeding season, but it serves absolutely no function.

How many echidnas live together?

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Asked by Wiki User

Echidnas are generally solitary animals. They do not live in groups.

Where in Australia are echidnas found?

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Asked by Wiki User

The echidna found in New Guinea is a different species to that found in Australia. The theory goes that Australia, New Guinea, the islands of Oceania, South America, Africa and Antarctica were all once part of a supercontinent known as Gondwana. With continental drift, the continents and islands separated, this isolating certain animal types to selected parts of the world - this is one of the reasons why the majority of marsupials are found in Australia. Being close together, New Guinea and Australia would have been one of the last to separate. The long-beaked echidna of New Guinea would have adapted to the high terrain and humid conditions of the island, while the short-beaked echidna of Australia developed ina way that enabled it to live virtually anywhere on the flatter, drier, continent.

What types of echidnas are there in the world?

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Asked by Wiki User

The short-beaked echidna occurs mainly in Australia, where it is common throughout the mainland and the Australian island state of Tasmania, while the long-beaked echidna lives in New Guinea. There is a small pocket in southeast papue New Guinea where the short-beaked echidna is also found.

Is it possible to pat an echidna?

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Asked by Wiki User

Yes. Echidnas are often subject to dog attacks or being hit by cars, so they need to be handled by wildlife carers. It is quite possible to pat an echidna: one just needs to pat in the direction the spines go, which is away from the echidna's head.