Navigated to Why Does a Platypus Lay Eggs? Lesson 89

Why Does a Platypus Lay Eggs? Lesson 89

August 19
24 mins

Episode Description

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

https://erynlynum.com/club

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