Platypuses have been called the strangest animal on earth, but is it true? Discover this amazing creature with its duck-like bill, beaver-like tail, otter-like webbed feet, reptile-like claws, snake-like venom, and that lays eggs like a turtle!
Here’s our trail map:
- Why Does a Platypus Lay Eggs?
- How Is a Platypus Venomous?
- Why Do Platypus Have a Bill?
- What Does Scripture Say About Being Different?
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Scriptures Referenced in This Episode:
“How many are your works, Lord!
In wisdom you made them all;
the earth is full of your creatures.” Psalm 104:24 (NIV)
“Do not be shaped by this world; instead be changed within by a new way of thinking. Then you will be able to decide what God wants for you; you will know what is good and pleasing to him and what is perfect.” Romans 12:2 (NCV)
“I have given them your teaching. And the world has hated them, because they don’t belong to the world, just as I don’t belong to the world. I am not asking you to take them out of the world but to keep them safe from the Evil One. They don’t belong to the world, just as I don’t belong to the world.” John 17:14-16 (NCV)
“Christ accepted you, so you should accept each other, which will bring glory to God.” Romans 15:7 (NCV)
Terms Learned in This Episode:
- Mammal: A group of animals that have hair or fur, are warm-blooded, have a backbone, (most) have live births, and feed their babies with milk from their bodies.
- Monotremes: A small group (order) of mammals that lay eggs instead of having live births. Monotremes include the duck-billed platypus and four types of echidnas.
- Platypus Spur: A spike on the insides of a male platypus’s ankles that injects venom into an opponent.
- Crural Gland: A pocket inside the male platypus’s thigh that, during mating season, produces venom that the male platypus injects through the spur on its ankle when battling other male platypuses.
- Carnivore: A creature that only eats meat from other creatures, not plants.
- Mechanoreceptors: Tiny sensors on a platypus’s bill that help it feel movement and pressure changes under the water.
- Electroreceptors: Tiny sensors on a platypus’s bill that help it feel electrical charges from nearby creatures.
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Mentioned in this episode:
Explore Creation and the Bible in the Nat Theo Club
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