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  2. Echidna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echidna

    Echidnas have short, strong limbs with large claws, and are powerful diggers. Their hind claws are elongated and curved backwards to aid in digging. Echidnas have tiny mouths and toothless jaws, and feed by tearing open soft logs, anthills and the like, and licking off prey with their long, sticky tongues. The ears are slits on the sides of ...

  3. Short-beaked echidna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short-beaked_echidna

    The short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus), also called the short-nosed echidna, is one of four living species of echidna, and the only member of the genus Tachyglossus. It is covered in fur and spines and has a distinctive snout and a specialised tongue , which it uses to catch its insect prey at a great speed.

  4. List of examples of convergent evolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_examples_of...

    Hydrothermal vent adaptations like the use of bacteria housed in body flesh or in special organs, to the point they no longer have mouth parts, have been found in unrelated hydrothermal vent species of mollusks and tube worms (like the giant tube worm). [198] Lichens are partnerships of fungi and algae. Each "species" of lichen is make of ...

  5. Long-beaked echidna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long-beaked_echidna

    The long-beaked echidna's limb posture is sprawled, similar to extant reptiles like lizards and crocodilians. Although the stances between the animal groups are similar, the way the limbs move are very different between the clades. The echidna swings its limbs at a 45 degree angle while a lizard's is more horizontal.

  6. Echidna nocturna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Echidna_nocturna

    Echidna nocturna is a moray eel found in the eastern Pacific Ocean, in the Gulf of California and around Peru and the Galapagos Islands. [1] It was first named by Cope in 1872, [1] and is commonly known as the freckled moray or the palenose moray. [2] It was discovered that Echidna nocturna and Muraena acutis are the same species. [3]

  7. Eastern long-beaked echidna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_long-beaked_echidna

    The long snout proves essential for the echidna's survival because of its ability to get in between hard-to-reach places and scavenge for smaller insect organisms such as larvae and ticks. Along with this snout, they have a specific evolutionary adaptation in their tongues for snatching up various earthworms, which are its main type of food source.

  8. Barred moray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barred_moray

    The barred moray (Echidna polyzona), also known as the banded moray, the dark-banded eel, the girdled moray, the girdled reef eel, the many banded moray eel, the ringed moray, the ringed reef moray, the striped moray and the zebra eel, [3]) is a moray eel of the family Muraenidae. [4]

  9. Megalibgwilia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megalibgwilia

    Megalibgwilia is a genus of echidna known only from Australian fossils that incorporates the oldest-known echidna species. The genus ranged from the Pliocene until the late Pleistocene, becoming extinct about 50,000 years ago. [2] Megalibgwilia species were more widespread in warmer and moist climates. Their extinction can be attributed to ...