Sunday, January 31, 2010

Platypus Body Form Platypus......???

Platypus......??? - platypus body form

May I ask if an animal is warm-blooded or cold-blooded?
Platypus has any tips?
His body is covered with fur?

9 comments:

Tuna County said...

hot
yes
yes

lltwink said...

Dinosaurs evolved from cold-blooded animals (reptiles) and developed in warm-blooded animals) (birds. All the dinosaurs were not the same, and perhaps also their different physiology. The huge dinosaurs and small dinosaurs may be the heat of the various control strategies, such as using different strategies to other aspects of life. A good argument for this is found in modern mammals. Although warm-blooded mammals (monotremes, egg-laying mammals like the platypus), whose metabolism is on the verge, in cold blood

KTDykes said...

A laminate is a mammal, and "hot blood". The body temperature is actually more to keep as a variable for most mammals, like many of us at a constant temperature. Platys can happily cope with one or two degrees or below average. His hair and four legs.

maggot_b... said...

It is a warm-blooded mammal, the members and short, thick skin has. The echinda platypus and spiny have the honor of the only mammal that eggs as a means of reproduction are.

getashot... said...

The platypus is a period of four meters from the Australian egg-laying mammal with webbed feet, hairy body, large tail and a bill broad leather living on earth, but spends most of her time in the water.

Marco Rossi said...

Platypus Facts:

http://www.platypus2.com.au/platypus.htm

michael c said...

The platypus is a mammal, that is, by definition, warm blooded.

Of course, it ends.

Of course it makes the hair / skin.

CJM said...

The blood is hot and consists of four members, with webbed feet, four. Both parties back into a poisoned male spores on them. Hair outside beak and tail, and feet covered.

Wilford Brimley said...

Your call Doche Wikipedia

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