No. A platypus is an egg-laying mammal, and could not be classed as an amphibian, for several reasons:
No. Platypuses are mammals, not amphibians, despite the fact that both platypuses and amphibians lay eggs. Platypuses are mammals because they feed their young on mothers' milk, and this is the defining characteristic of a mammal.
The platypus also has fur, breathes through lungs throughout its life, and is warm-blooded.
An amphibian has moist skin, not fur. It is cold-blooded, and it only breathes through lungs as an adult; juveniles breathe through gills.
a platypus it is not really a fish it is an amphibian that lays eggs
The platypus does not experience metamorphosis. It is not an amphibian. When first born, the platypus is about the size of a bean and barely resembles its parent. However, like all young of mammals, it gradually develops the features of its parent as it grows. This is not metamorphosis - it is growth.
No, absolutely not. They are totally different. Mammals have fur or hair ambhibians do not. Mammals give birth except for the Platypus & Echidna, and amphibians lay eggs
A salamander is a amphibian.
it is a Amphibian... A frog is an amphibian, not a reptile.
The state amphibian of Louisiana is the green tree frog. The amphibian was chosen as the state amphibian in 1993.
amphibian
amphibian
Amphibian.
amphibian
A frog is an amphibian.
a platypus's bill is a bill that is on a platypus