Platypus is indeed one of the strangest yet of the more interesting animals ever

    by Substantial-Monk4316

    38 Comments

    1. thataintmyfoot on

      The venom is from spurs on their back legs not from being bitten.

      Just in case its not weird enough…

      EDIT: back legs not feet. And only the male is venomous.

    2. ThatHelpfulNerd on

      This animal feels like an unfinished prototype that was accidentally released.

    3. Also they have no nipples, sweat milk, and work as federal agents within the tri-state area.

    4. *light turns on. Doofenschmirtz looks down to see a regular Platypus
      “A platypus?”

      *light turns off and UV light turns on

      “PERRY THE PLATYPUS!”

    5. ciderandtoast on

      Lived 35 years in australia in the right spots and still never just stumbled across one.

    6. For Phineas and Fern fans: Dan Povenmire confirmed that the fluorescence thing was discovered (or he only learned about it) long after Perry the Platypus was created, so it was complete coincidence that the iconic teal colour of Perry was actually correct, in a way

    7. Ecstatic_Bike7532 on

      Robin Williams has the best explanation how the fuck that thing came to existence.
      And I won’t accept any other explanation

    8. Historical_Sherbet54 on

      Woah. …they glow under uv light like flying squirrels ???

      Damn, I had a platypus that lived in my creek (castle forbes tasmania) and as a Canadian I loved it

      But I didn’t get to see it as often as I’d have liked….so the UV light aspect woulda been great knowledge —> TIL, cheers

    9. Ironmasked-Kraken on

      I keep telling people it’s a real life pokemon and people don’t wana believe me

    10. impendingcatastrophe on

      Bill Hicks clearly explained the history behind the creation of the platypus. And Republicans.

    11. Fun fact: platypus are older as a species than ducks, so ducks have a platypuslike beak, not the other way around. Also, the Dutch name for a platypus is vogelbekdier (birdbeakanimal)

    12. I honestly hope the p&f crew make a joke at some point, where someone who burns very easily pulls Perry into their house and he just turns brown. And Phineas lurches back and says “WHAT DID YOU DO TO HIM!?” To which the response is “Remove the Uv light?”

    13. zillskillnillfrill on

      They are very elusive. I’ve seen a wild one in my life as a kid in the Blue mountains. (New South Wales, Australia) playing in a rock pool which was pretty awesome . They are almost cryptozoology

    14. SilverShark307 on

      For those wondering why this is the case, platypus (and echidna) are monotremes, a mammal group that split off from placental mammals 200 million years ago.

      Apart from the swimming adaptations in platypus, living monotremes have more similar characteristics (egg laying, milk from sweat glands) to ancient mammals

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