that are as strange,
as the Duck Billed Platypus, they have parts of quiet a few other animals making them up, the duck (bill and
webbed feet), beaver (tail), and otter (body and fur), males are also venomous.
They have sharp stingers on the heels of their rear feet and can use them to
deliver a strong toxic blow to any foe, they lay eggs, but are mammals and
suckle their young, but not through nipples, the mothers do not have them, the
milk is delivered through the mothers skin, if all of that in one animal is not
strange enough it now appears they almost glow in the dark! photograph above from left:
visible light, ultraviolet light, and yellow-filtered UV light, photograph by
Jonathan Martin, a recent study published in the journal Mammalia adds to the duck-billed creature’s lengthy
list of peculiarities, apparently, when illuminated with ultraviolet light, the
platypus’s dull, brown coat glows. The discovery happened after Jonathan
Martin, an associate professor of forestry at Wisconsin’s Northland
College, shined a UV flashlight on a flying squirrel in his backyard, which he
found emitted a candy-colored pink hue. He then joined a few colleagues
to visit Chicago’s Field Museum, where they replicated the process on the
institution’s platypus collection, revealing the animals’ bright green and
purple coat, according
to one study, the fluorescent substances are found embedded
within mammals’ hair follicles, although scientists aren’t sure why. Sensory
biologist Sönke Johnsen told The New York Times that “just finding fluorescence
doesn’t mean it has any particular purpose.” Similar radiating colors exist
in coral reefs and sea turtles,
among other organisms, although the phenomena are less common in mammals, overall,
the discovery has prompted further questions about whether the platypus can see
UV light—most humans cannot, except for on certain items like white
T-shirts, I wonder what more secrets this fascinating animal holds?
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