The spiny anteater, or echidna, lives on land. it does not give birth to live young, but lays eggs in order to reproduce. It is a monotreme, like the platypus.
Yes,they are. *other characteristics of mammals. Suckle their young Give birth to life young expect spiny anteater and platypus Warm blooded Have backbone Covered with hair
Spiny ant anteaters lay eggs. Although,they are mammals,they are the type of mammals that lay eggs.Hope this answer was useful.
The spiny anteater, also known as the echidna, belongs to the order Monotremata along with the platypus. This order is for egg-laying mammals, and the platypus and echidna are the only egg-laying mammals known to man. All other mammals give birth to live young. The echidna was hard to classify because it had all the other attributes of a mammal besides giving birth to live young.
The correct name for the spiny anteater is echidna. The echidna and platypus are different from other mammals because they are the only egg-laying mammals. All other mammals, both placentals and marsupials, give live birth.
No. Platypuses and spiny anteaters, more correctly known as echidnas, are monotremes, or egg-laying mammals. The young are hatched, not born.
Well, the platypus is an egg-laying mammal which would be an exception to the rule for mammals which typically give live-birth. The platypus and 4 types of echidna (spiny anteater) are egg-laying mammals. Whales, dolphins and porpoises are also mammals, though they don't have 4 limbs or fur/hair. They do breathe air, give birth to live young, nurse their young and are warm-blooded. And armadillos have no teeth.
most give birth to live young but a few lay eggs at the bottom of the oceanYes, the eggs will hatch while they are still inside the mother's body.Most do not, they lay 'purses'. However some do such as the Spiny Dogfish.
No, true anteaters do not lay eggs. They are placental mammals, and give birth to live young. They are not monotremes, which are egg-laying mammals.True anteaters should not be confused with "Spiny anteaters", more properly known as echidnas. These creatures are monotremes, meaning that they are egg-laying mammals, like platypuses.
It bears a single offspring after a gestation period of 190 days, which will stay near the mother until she becomes pregnant again. The baby spends much of the first part of its life riding on its mother's back, until it is nearly half her size The Spiny anteater, more correctly known as the echidna, does lay eggs but it is not an anteater - it is a monotreme, and is completely different from regular anteaters (like the Giant anteater). Regular anteaters are in the family Vermilingua, (also known as xenarthrans and edentates, it contains anteaters, armadillos and sloths) Spiny anteaters are in the family monotremes (also known as Monotremata and egg-laying mammals, it contains Spiny anteaters and the platypus). Yes
Spiny anteaters, more properly known as echidnas, have eggs in order to ensure the continuity of their own kind. They are monotremes, which means that they are egg-laying mammals, like the platypus.
No, penguins do not give birth to live young. They give birth to eggs.