An egg-laying mammal. No teeth. Reptilian gait. Built-in body armor. 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 specialized skin patches rather than nipples, leaving the young to lap it up.
Short-beaked echidna, Adelaide Hills, Australia
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Bringing together history and technology
-
The snows of Fuji
-
Crescent-tail bigeye fish, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
-
Happy Independence Day!
-
Penguin Awareness Day
-
Tombeau du Géant in Bouillon, Belgium
-
Victory in Europe, 75 years ago
-
International Day for Biological Diversity
-
Black History Month
-
A cutting-edge art gallery opens in Paris
-
International Womens Day
-
Irohazaka Road in fall, Nikko, Tochigi, Japan
-
World Space Week begins
-
World Otter Day
-
Road to Hana, Maui, Hawaii
-
Atop the Needle of Chamonix
-
Sunbeams across Tartu County, Estonia
-
Maple and bamboo forests in Arashiyama, Kyoto, Japan
-
Diving into World Oceans Day
-
Leap day
-
Mediterranean red sea stars
-
A Festivus for the rest of us
-
Gazing down on planet Earth
-
European hedgehog, France
-
Windmills in Kinderdijk, the Netherlands
-
It s Republic Day in India
-
Lake Tyrrell, Victoria, Australia
-
Formal garden at Château de Villandry, Loire Valley, France
-
Flower of Life symbol drawn in snow
-
Pegadung Rock, Lampung, Sumatra, Indonesia
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

