Frigate Birds
The magnificent frigate bird is one of nature's most aerial of all birds.
With some features of a duck, a beaver, and an otter, the platypus is a mammal without nipples who still nurses, a male with venom and "a show and tell" for our Creator!
The Australian platypus and the long and short-billed echidnas of New Zealand are the only mammals in the world whose babies are not born live, but hatch from eggs. They're also monotremes, meaning they use just one body opening for defecation, urination and reproduction. About the egg-babies: After breeding, the mamma platypus looks for a vegetation-covered riverbank. Then, with the web between her toes not by accident retracted on land-so sharp claws on her hind paws are revealed, she digs into the moist earth making an elaborate, perhaps 60-foot-long burrow. Afterwards she moves into a room in the burrow, and seals herself in. She incubates the eggs with her body for some 10 days, her flat, beaver-shaped tail designed not by accident to double-up against her abdomen so her lima-bean-sized helpless offspring are held securely against her abdomen until they hatch and develop strength.