An egg-laying mammal. No teeth. Reptilian gait. Built-in body armour. If the short-beaked echidna sounds like a checklist of contradictions, that"s because it is—and it owns it. Native to Australia, Tasmania and parts of New Guinea, it"s one of the few surviving monotremes, or mammals that lay eggs. Despite the headlines, it still qualifies as a mammal: it has fur, produces milk and is warm-blooded. The twist? Milk is released through specialised skin patches rather than nipples, leaving the young to lap it up.
Short-beaked echidna, Adelaide Hills, Australia
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Externsteine in the Teutoburg Forest, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
-
The Great Blue Hole, Belize
-
Hay Festival
-
Glenariff Forest Park, County Antrim, Ireland
-
Twinkle twinkle, little bugs
-
Taughannock Falls State Park, New York
-
Independence Day of the Bahamas
-
Holding back the tide
-
Lei Day
-
Great wildebeest migration at Mara River, Kenya
-
Bright blue lakes and rugged mountains
-
Eagles assemble!
-
Like paint on a canvas
-
‘Night shining’ clouds
-
Stockholm Public Library, Sweden
-
Alpine marmot
-
266 years of the British Museum
-
A touch of magic
-
International Museum Day
-
Church of Notre Dame de Bon-Port, Les Sables-dOlonne, France
-
JRR Tolkien Day
-
Pride in London
-
Oktoberfest begins
-
Ocracoke Lighthouse on Ocracoke Island, North Carolina, USA
-
Trooping the Colour
-
Canary Wharf tube station, London
-
Kings Mountain, Chugach Mountains, Alaska, United States
-
Squirrel Appreciation Day
-
Tiger siblings in Jim Corbett National Park, Uttarakhand, India
-
Life on the lake
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

