Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Platypus Ornithorhynchus anatinus
Whitney Gunn David Coleman John Rice
2
Platypus Facts Common Name: Platypus
Scientific Name: Ornithorhynchus anatinus They live for about 10 to 15 years Natural habitat is East Australia and New Guinea Carnivorous diet Call sound
3
History Estimate of the Monotremes-Theria divergence, time range between 160 and 120 Myr ago. The red line shows these are small mammals that developed hair, lactation, and homoeothermic.
4
Characteristics Has spurs on its hind feet
Platypus is one of the few venomous mammals. The male platypus can delivers a poison through a spur on its hind foot. Adults do not have teeth Baby platypus are born with teeth this may be due to a “throwback” from its ancestors. Once they lose them they do not grow new teeth back. Adults do not need teeth because they use horny pads to grind their food.
5
Characteristics The have no true stomachs Female platypus lay eggs
She lays 1-3 eggs, which she incubates between her abdomen and tail. Lactation The female platypus do not have nipples, so it’s young ones suck milk from patches on the abdomen
6
Evolution of Platypus
7
Lactation and Eggs It has been proposed that early lactation evolved as a water source to protect porous parchment-shelled eggs from desiccation during incubation or as a protection against microbial infection. Parchment-shelled egg-laying monotremes also exhibit a more ancestral glandular mammary patch or areola without a nipple that may still possess roles in egg protection
8
Similarities Both are only found in Australia and New Guinea
Monotreme means "one-holed," referring to the cloaca, a single hole that serves the urinary tract, anus, and reproductive tract in monotremes. Both lay eggs
9
Differences Echidna Platypus Has a point snout Pointy spines on coat
Has duck like bill Short dark brown fur
10
Further Studies Recently scientist have been taking the platypus genome and comparing it to humans. A study on why they secret milk through their abdominal muscles instead of through nipples would be helpful to further understand its evolutionary process.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.