Monotremes These primitive mammals produce a shelled egg like their reptilian ancestors. Only three species exist today: two species of spiny anteater (echidna) and the duckbill platypus. [View (48K)] Marsupials ...
monotremes Egg-laying mammals; e.g., the spiny anteater and the duck-billed platypus. morph A distinct phenotypic variant within a population.
[edit] Monotremes Monotremes, only five species of which exist, all from Australia and New Guinea, lay eggs. They have one opening for excretion and reproduction called the cloaca.
Subclass Prototheria: Order Monotremata: Monotremes (typified by the platypus and echinda) lay eggs that have similar membranes and structure to reptilian eggs. Females burrow in ground and incubates their eggs.
There are many more marsupials than monotremes. Kangaroos, koalas, bandicoots, and possums. You'll find a lot of them in Australia. Australia is an island continent. Because of its isolation, placental mammals didn't take hold in their ecosystems.
Though laying eggs is a primitive reptilian trait, monotremes share many morphological, physiological, and reproductive characteristics with other mammals. Extant monotremes include the duck-billed platypus and echidna.
A subclass of the Class Mammalia (others are monotremes and marsupials). Embryo and fetus are nourished by a placenta.
For example, the monotremes are mammals that lay eggs and the marsupials are mammals that give birth to immature young which remain in a special pouch which has mammary glands within it.
See also: Mammals, Monotreme, Animals, Animal, Human
 
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