Échidna
The echidnas (of the Latin echidna , of the old Greek ἔχιδνα / ékhidna , “viper”) divide with the Ornithorynque S within the order of the Monotrème S a mixture of characters reptilien S and Mammifère S typical.
One knows three species of them:
- the echidna with short nose:
- Tachyglossus aculeatus , discovered by Shaw in 1792, weighing from 3 to 6 kg, in Australia and Tasmanie;
- echidnas with long nose:
- Zaglossus bruijni , discovered by Peters and Doria in 1876, weighing from 5 to 10 kg;
- Zaglossus attenboroughi , in New Guinea.
- Zaglossus bartoni , (Re) - discovered in 1998 in New Guinea.
The site Mikko' S Phylogeny Files, quotes other species of the kind Zaglossus :
- † Zaglossus owenii
- † Zaglossus ramsayi (Owen, 1884)
- † Zaglossus robustus (Dun, 1895)
- † Zaglossus hacketti (Glauert, 1914)
- † Zaglossus harrisoni (Scott & Lord, 1922)
- † Zaglossus attenboroughi (Flannery & Groves, 1998)
- Zaglossus bruijni (Peters & Doria, 1876)
The echidnas have a covered robust body of a mixture of fur and prickles, digger members, have a small mouth, with fine a jaw, do not have teeth but a long sticking language with which they catch Termite S and others Arthropodes.
The echidnas generally live as recluses.
During the season of Reproduction, the Femelle lays a egg (seldom more) that it transfers directly from the Cloaque in a temporary ventral pocket for a Incubation of ten days. Naked with the birth, the young remainder inside this one during 6 to 8 weeks, licking the Milk which runs out of the glands mammaires emerging in the pocket.
See too
Taxonomic references
External bonds
- Mikko' S Phylogeny Files
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