The platypus is uniquely adapted to live in a semi-aquatic environment. It has:
The platypus is brown in colour, with more yellowish fur on its underbelly. It naturally camouflages in with the colour of the water in which it swims and the bushland around its riverbank burrow, but it is unable to change its colour to match its surroundings.
The platypus is uniquely adapted to live in its semi-aquatic environment. It is found in freshwater creeks and rivers, within bushland, alpine or sub-tropical areas.
The platypus is a semi-aquatic animal, with thick, waterproof fur. It has a flat tail which acts as a rudder when it swims. It also has two eye lids for protection, and in fact closes its eyes when it dives and swims underwater. The liver gets rid of water but stores fat.
The ecosystem helps the platypus survive because it provides the food this animal needs. The platypus dives into creeks and rivers for its food, and can remain underwater for between one and five minutes. Its bill has sensitive electroreceptors which pick up tiny nerve and electrical impulses generated by crustaceans and other animals that inhabit the bottom of the creek or river. The platypus then uses its bill to shovel away the dirt, and find the food. It does not have teeth, but hard bony plates which it uses to grind the food.
The platypus has webbed feet which help it to swim, and which have a retracting webbed membrane which can expose the claws, enabling the platypus to effectively dig burrows in riverbanks for shelter, and the webbing membrane retracts for that purpose, but spreads between its toes when it needs to swim - which it needs to do to get its food.
During mating season, the female platypus digs a separate chamber at the end of her burrow. The eggs are laid here, and once hatched, the mother "closes off" the chamber with a wall of leaves when she leaves, to protect the young. The wall of leaves is also designed in such a way that it helps remove excess water from the platypus when she returns, thus keeping the chamber as dry as possible.
The platypus's fur colour allows it to blend into its surroundings so that it may hide from predators.
The platypus is brown in colour, with more yellowish fur on its underbelly. It naturally camouflages in with the colour of the water in which it swims and the bushland around its riverbank burrow. If it is in the water when a predator approaches, it is able to remain underwater, motionless, for up to eight minutes, blending in with its underwater habitat. This allows it to hide from such predators as goannas, spotted quolls, eels, hawks, owls, dingoes and eagles.
The platypus does not actively employ camouflage, but its natural colouring allows it to blend in with its surroundings. It is brown in colour, with more yellowish fur on its underbelly. It naturally camouflages in with the colour of the water in which it swims and the bushland around its riverbank burrow, but it is unable to change its colour to match its surroundings.
The grey-brown colouring of the platypus's fur and its streamlined body enable it to swim just beneath the surface of creeks and rivers and to be virtually undetectable.
Oddly enough, it usually crawls under large boulders or trees to find shelter from it's prey.
Lions are apex predators, an as such nothing predates them so the have no need to hide or escape.
They fly away to escape or hide
they hide!
Wolves are the apex predator in most of their habitat so have no animals from which they need to escape or hide.
they blend in.
fly away
the principal reason for the family to hide themselves was to escape from Nazis
They will run away and they will hide.
They either run or hide.
They run away, or turn and fight.
they swim faster and hide in small places
Run and hide, I would think.