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Echidna
- English
URL: http://www.tasmanianadventures.com/wildlife/echidna.html
The echidna is a small egg laying mammal ( monotreme), which are found throughout Tasmania. [ eng ] |

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Echidna
- English
URL: http://www.wildlife-australia.com/echidna1.htm
The echidna has no particular habitat requirements.
Shelter is found beneath thick bushes in hollow logs, under debris or in burrows. [ eng ] |

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Long-beaked Echidna Zaglossus bruijni
- English
URL: http://www.panda.org/resources/publications/species/underthreat/page11.htm
Restricted to
New Guinea where it is widespread.
Absent from the Fly Plains and northern New Guinea at altitudes below
1,200m, as well as all of the North Coast Range (Flannery, 1990). The
species occurs in the Lorentz National Park, Arfak Mountains, Tamrau
Selatan, and Salawati Utara Strict Nature Reserves. [ eng ] |

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Echidna/Spiny Anteater Printout
- English
URL: http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/mammals/echidna/Echidnaprintout.shtml
The Echidna (also known as the Spiny Anteater) is a primitive, egg-laying mammal that lives in Australia. [ eng ] |

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About: Echidna - an Australian anteater
- English
URL: http://www.ozramp.net.au/~senani/echidna.htm
An echidna is about 50 cm (20 inches) long and it is dome-shaped. It has short sharp spikes covering its body (like
a porcupine). It has a short pointy snout and a sticky tongue with which it catches ants and termites. It has no teeth.
The echidna has very sharp claws too and can burrow underground very quickly. An echidna has short stubby feet
and waddles when it walks. [ eng ] |

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Survival: Spiny Anteater or Echindna
- English
URL: http://www.lineone.net/learning/survival/echidna.html
The Spiny Anteater is found in New Guinea, eastern Australia and Tasmania in grassland, scrub, bush and open woodland.From an evolutionary point of view the echidna is a fascinating creature. [ eng ] |

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Animal Info - Long-beaked Echidna
- English
URL: http://www.animalinfo.org/species/zaglbrui.htm
Biology, ecology, habitat, and status of rare, threatened and endangered species of mammals and information on their native countries: biodiversity, ecosystems, population, and land use. [ eng ] |

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Life Forms - ECHNIDNA - LONG NOSED
- English
URL: http://www.speciescentral.com/specdata/mammal/12607.html
Bruijn's Echidna (Zaglossus bruijni) is one of three large species of echidnas that inhabit New Guinea. It is an egg-laying mammal that can be up to 32 inches in length and has a long bird-like beak. Although discovered some 100 years ago, very little of its life is yet known. [ eng ] |

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Long-nosed Echidna
- English
URL: http://www.press.jhu.edu/books/walker/monotremata.tachyglossidae.zaglossus.html
At one time, as many as four species of Zaglossus were recognized, but now these are generally considered to belong to the single species Z. bruijni (Griffiths 1978). This species currently is found in New Guinea and possibly on nearby Salawatti Island. [ eng ] |

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Zaglossus bruijni (Long-Nosed Echidna): Narrative
- English
URL: http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/zaglossus/z._bruijni$narrative.ht
Geographic Range, Physical Characteristics, Natural History. [ eng ] |

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Echidna
- English
URL: http://www.fbe.unsw.edu.au/exhibits/scientia/wwwjan96/dowell/part2.htm
The echidna is found throughout the Australian mainland. The echidna is about 45 cm long, with its body covered in course black hair, the yellow, black tipped spines only growing from its back. The legs are small and powerful, and each paw has five spade like nails, The tail is short, spineless and hairless. [ eng ] |

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Short-nosed Echidna
- English
URL: http://www.lpzoo.com/tour/factsheets/mammals/echidna.html
The short-nosed echidna frequents a variety of habitats, including forests, rocky areas, hilly tracts and sandy plains. It shelters either in burrows or in crevices among rocks, and it emerges late in the afternoon or at night. [ eng ] |

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Short-nosed Echidna
- English
URL: http://www.press.jhu.edu/books/walker/monotremata.tachyglossidae.tachyglossus.ht
The single species, T. aculeatus, inhabits most of mainland Australia, many nearby islands, Tasmania, and central and southern New Guinea (Collins 1973; Griffiths 1968, 1978). A number of apparently well-marked subspecies have been described, based primarily on characters of the pelage and spines. The subspecies T. a. setosus of Tasmania is often considered a distinct species. [ eng ] |

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Tachyglossus
- English
URL: http://www.funet.fi/pub/sci/bio/life/mammalia/monotremata/tachyglossidae/tachygl
Scientific names, Finnish names, English names. [ eng ] |

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Tachyglossus aculeatos
- English
URL: http://www.groton.k12.ct.us/WWW/ws/Tach.html
This little mammal eats cheeseburgers. The Echidna has a stickey tongue that catches ants and termites. An Echinda is about 50 cm (20 inches) long. [ eng ] |

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Comparative Mammalian Brain Collections: Echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus)
- English
URL: http://brainmuseum.org/specimens/monotremata/echidna/
The spiny anteater or echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus), Suborder Prototheria, Order Monotremata, family Tachyglossidae, live in burrows in Australia and eastern New Guinea. Our specimens were obtained by Dr. Richard Lende in order to study the patterns of organization of their sensory and motor regions of cerebral neocortex.
[ eng ] |

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Short-beaked echidna, Tachyglossus aculeatus
- Russian
URL: http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Delphi/2970/echidna.htm
Description of the echidna, Tachyglossus aculeatus, with vocabulary in three Australian Aboriginal languages spoken in central Cape York Peninsula, Queensland: Oykangand, Olkola and Pakanh. [ eng ] |

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Tachyglossus aculeatus (Short-Nosed Echidna): Narrative
- Russian
URL: http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/Tachyglossus/t._aculeatus.html
Australian: Tachyglossus aculeatus inhabits most of Australia and many nearby islands including Tasmania and New Guinea. [ eng ] |

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Monotremata Tachyglossidae Tachyglossus
- English
URL: http://www.press.jhu.edu/books/walker/tables/table.genus.monotremata.tachyglossi
World Distribution Table. [ eng ] |

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