When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  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

    They do not have a home territory they defend against other echidnas, but range over a wide area. [36] The range area has been observed to be between 21–93 ha (52–230 acres), although one study in Kangaroo Island found the animals there covered an area between 9–192 ha (22–474 acres). [ 36 ]

  4. Platypus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platypus

    Platypuses have been used several times as mascots: Syd the platypus was one of the three mascots chosen for the Sydney 2000 summer Olympics along with an echidna and a kookaburra, [134] Expo Oz the platypus was the mascot for World Expo 88, which was held in Brisbane in 1988, [135] and Hexley the platypus is the mascot for the Darwin operating ...

  5. Understanding the Sixth Sense of the Platypus - AOL

    www.aol.com/understanding-sixth-sense-platypus...

    While the echidna species has 400 to 2,000 electroreceptor skin cells, the platypus has 40,000 across the top and bottom of its bill. ... the mammal lost its teeth to make room for the many nerve ...

  6. Snowflake moray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowflake_moray

    The snowflake moray (Echidna nebulosa), also known as the clouded moray among many vernacular names, is a species of marine eel of the family Muraenidae. [3] It has blunt teeth ideal for its diet of crustaceans, a trait it shares with the zebra moray ( Gymnomuraena zebra ).

  7. Monotreme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monotreme

    The echidna spurs are vestigial and have no known function, while the platypus spurs contain venom. [42] Molecular data show that the main component of platypus venom emerged before the divergence of platypus and echidnas, suggesting that the most recent common ancestor of these taxa was also possibly a venomous monotreme.

  8. Long-beaked echidna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long-beaked_echidna

    The long-beaked echidnas (genus Zaglossus) make up one of the two extant genera of echidnas: there are three extant species, all living in New Guinea. [2] [3] They are medium-sized, solitary mammals covered with coarse hair and spines made of keratin. They have short, strong limbs with large claws, and are powerful diggers.

  9. Teeth whitening: What is it, how to do it safely and how to ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/teeth-whitening-100042380.html

    Teeth whitening strips are easy-to-use, peel-and-stick strips that you wear on your teeth for 15 to 30 minutes each day. "Most kits come with a 30-day supply and are relatively easy to use," says ...