New Platypus findings?
It has a leathery bill and lays eggs, and the first European naturalists to
see the platypus thought it was some kind of hoax from the colonies.
And the latest genetic research indicates there might be more 'duck' in the
duck-billed platypus than we've previously thought.
Humans, like all mammals, have two bits of DNA called chromosomes that
determine whether we're male(XY) or female (XX).
But the platypus has not two, but ten sex-determining chromosomes, so a male
platypus is an XXXXXXXXXX, while his mate is an XYXYXYXYXY.
This structure is unique to the swimming, breathing contradiction we call
the platypus - although it bears a passing simmilarity to the genetic
structure of modern birds!
Scott Burnett from the Wildlife Preservation Society says we know much more
about the platypus than we did a few years ago, but information is still
sketchy on the elusive aquatic animal.
That's thanks to the efforts of those geneticists who've charted the DNA of
the platypus, but also a dedicated team of volunteer platy-spotters across
the state.
These volunteers record where platypus have been seen, and what they were
doing.
Mr Burnett says the platypus is, despite its status as one of the world's
strangest creatures, a remarkably resilient character.
They live in waterways across Australia, and Mr Burnett says they are
regularly seen in some of Queensland's most populous areas, such as the
creeks running through metropolitan areas of the Sunshine Coast.