E
Species Profile

Echidna

Tachyglossidae

Spines, eggs, and ant-eating mastery
Susan Flashman/Shutterstock.com

Echidna Distribution

Click a location to explore more animals from that region

Endemic Species
Loading map...
the echidna has a long narrow snout which it pokes around looking for ants

At a Glance

Family Overview This page covers the Echidna family as a group. Stats below are general traits shared across the family.
Also Known As Spiny anteater, Spiny ant-eater, Antbear
Activity Nocturnal+
Lifespan 30 years
Weight 16 lbs
Status Not Evaluated
Did You Know?

Echidnas are monotremes: mammals that lay eggs and have a single opening (a cloaca) for waste and reproduction.

Scientific Classification

Family Overview "Echidna" is not a single species but represents an entire family containing multiple species.

Echidnas are egg-laying mammals (monotremes) characterized by spines, a tubular snout, powerful digging limbs, and a long sticky tongue used to feed mainly on ants, termites, and other soil invertebrates. Females lay a single leathery egg and incubate it in a temporary pouch; young are later reared in a burrow.

Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Mammalia
Order
Monotremata
Family
Tachyglossidae

Distinguishing Features

  • Monotreme (egg-laying mammal)
  • Spiny coat and compact, low-slung body
  • Elongated snout with electroreception and mechanoreception
  • Long protrusible sticky tongue; reduced/absent teeth
  • Strong forelimbs with large claws for digging
  • Temporary pouch in breeding females

Physical Measurements

Males and females differ in size

Length
1 ft 7 in (1 ft – 2 ft 9 in)
1 ft 6 in (12 in – 2 ft 6 in)
Weight
13 lbs (4 lbs – 35 lbs)
11 lbs (4 lbs – 35 lbs)
Tail Length
1 in (0 in – 3 in)
1 in (0 in – 3 in)
Top Speed
6 mph
About 5–10 km/h

Appearance

Primary Colors
Secondary Colors
Skin Type Mammalian fur with extensive keratin spines (modified hairs) on the dorsum; tough, leathery skin on the tubular snout; robust, thickened skin on feet/limbs adapted for digging; monotreme mammary areas secrete milk onto skin (no nipples).
Distinctive Features
  • Family-level size range (smallest to largest members): head-body length ~30-77 cm; mass ~2-17 kg; tail extremely short and often obscured by spines/fur. (Ranges reflect short-beaked Tachyglossus through the larger long-beaked Zaglossus.)
  • Lifespan range across the family: commonly ~10-30+ years in the wild (variable and often hard to estimate); exceptionally long-lived with records reaching ~40-50+ years in captivity for some echidnas (family noted for longevity among mammals).
  • Monotreme biology shared by all echidnas: egg-laying reproduction; a single cloaca (shared opening for digestive, urinary, and reproductive tracts); milk produced from mammary glands but delivered via skin/milk patches rather than nipples.
  • Female echidnas (Tachyglossidae) lay one leathery egg, keep it in a temporary pouch until it hatches into a 'puggle', then leave it in a burrow while they search for food and return to feed it.
  • Spines are stiff keratin structures (modified hairs) that provide mechanical defense; density, visibility, and contrast vary, with long-beaked echidnas often appearing shaggier due to longer fur partially concealing spines.
  • Tubular snout with reduced/absent teeth and a very long protrusible tongue coated in sticky saliva; specialized for capturing small invertebrates from soil, rotting wood, or termite/ant galleries.
  • Powerful digging adaptations: short, strong limbs; large curved claws; ability to excavate burrows and to 'plug' into soil with spines exposed when threatened.
  • Short-beaked echidnas (Tachyglossus) mostly eat ants and termites. Long-beaked echidnas (Zaglossus) often eat earthworms and other soil bugs, but diets change with local food.
  • Sensory specializations: mechanoreception and electroreception in the snout aid detection of prey underground; degree of reliance likely varies by species and habitat.
  • Behavior/ecology generalizations: typically solitary and quiet; activity ranges from nocturnal to crepuscular/diurnal depending on temperature and disturbance; use burrows, log hollows, rock crevices, and dense vegetation as refuges.
  • Thermoregulation pattern with variation: many populations use torpor and reduced activity in cold conditions; in temperate/high-elevation regions this can be seasonal, while tropical forms may show less pronounced seasonal dormancy.
  • Echidna family live in Australia (short-beaked widespread) and New Guinea (long-beaked limited, use fewer habitats). They use habitats from arid scrub and open woodland to temperate forest, alpine, and tropical montane rainforest.
  • Not related to porcupines or hedgehogs (placental mammals); spines are an example of convergent evolution rather than close relationship.

Sexual Dimorphism

Sexual dimorphism in Tachyglossidae is subtle. Males often have a hind-leg spur and can be a bit larger. Females form a temporary pouch when nursing. Color and spines overlap between sexes and vary more by species and habitat.

  • Hind-leg spur present (typically more evident in males); unlike the platypus spur it is not used for venom delivery in echidnas.
  • In some populations/species, males may be slightly larger or more robust, but size ranges overlap broadly with females.
  • Testes are internal (typical monotreme condition), so external sexual cues are limited.
  • Temporary brood pouch develops for egg incubation and early nursing; not a permanent pouch like in marsupials.
  • Typically lays a single egg per reproductive attempt; later rears the young in a burrow and returns to nurse via milk secreted onto the skin (no nipples).
  • External coloration/spine pattern generally not reliably different from males; identification often depends on reproductive condition (pouch) rather than coat traits.

Did You Know?

Echidnas are monotremes: mammals that lay eggs and have a single opening (a cloaca) for waste and reproduction.

Across the family, adults range roughly ~30-77 cm long and about ~2-16 kg, with long-beaked echidnas generally larger than short-beaked.

Females lay just one leathery egg per breeding attempt and incubate it in a temporary pouch until it hatches.

They produce milk but have no nipples-young lap milk from specialized skin areas (milk patches).

Some species (notably the short-beaked echidna) can detect faint electrical signals from prey using sensors in the snout.

Males may form "echidna trains," lining up to follow a receptive female during the breeding season.

Echidnas are among the longest-lived mammals for their size; lifespans commonly span ~30-50+ years (records around ~50 years are documented).

Unique Adaptations

  • Monotreme reproduction: egg-laying plus a cloaca; embryos develop in a leathery-shelled egg rather than a placenta-based pregnancy.
  • Nipple-less lactation: milk is secreted onto skin and fur from mammary glands, an unusual mammalian strategy.
  • Anti-insect feeding toolkit: a narrow tubular snout, strong jaw reduction and lack of functional teeth, and a long sticky tongue adapted to rapidly harvesting prey from nests and soil.
  • Spines and specialized musculature/skin help them resist predators and abrasion while digging; spine density/coat appearance varies among species and habitats.
  • Robust forelimbs and large claws for ripping into termite mounds, ant nests, and rotten logs; digging strength is a core family-level trait.
  • Low metabolic rate and flexible thermoregulation support survival in environments ranging from deserts to cool uplands.
  • Electroreception (best documented in short-beaked echidnas): sensory receptors in the snout can help locate prey under soil or leaf litter.

Interesting Behaviors

  • Power digging and "plugging in": when threatened, echidnas often dig straight down or wedge into soil/crevices, leaving only spines exposed; effectiveness varies with habitat and soil type.
  • Myrmecophagy with flexibility: most species focus on ants/termites, but diets can broaden to other soil invertebrates; long-beaked echidnas (Zaglossus) commonly take more earthworms and soft-bodied prey than short-beaked echidnas (Tachyglossus).
  • Nocturnal/crepuscular tendencies are common, but activity shifts with temperature and disturbance-some populations forage by day in cooler conditions.
  • Seasonal torpor/hibernation: many populations can enter torpor; in colder regions some individuals hibernate for extended periods, while tropical populations may use shorter torpor bouts.
  • Burrow-based rearing: after a brief pouch phase, the young (a "puggle") is typically left in a nursery burrow and visited for nursing; timing and frequency vary by climate and local risk.
  • Wide habitat use across the family: from arid and temperate zones to forests and alpine areas in Australia/Tasmania, and primarily forested/montane settings in New Guinea (especially for Zaglossus).

Cultural Significance

Echidnas (Tachyglossidae) are well-known in Australia, even on the 5-cent coin. "Millie" was a mascot at the Sydney 2000 Olympics. In New Guinea, long-beaked echidnas are important to highland communities and are symbols for conservation because several species face habitat loss and hunting.

Myths & Legends

In a number of Aboriginal Australian Dreaming traditions, stories explain the echidna's spines as transformed spears or weapons from an ancestral conflict-an origin tale for why it carries "spears" on its back.

Some Aboriginal stories feature the echidna as a clever digger and survivor, whose burrowing and rolling defenses are presented as ancestral lessons about resilience and knowing the country.

The animal's English name echoes Greek mythology: "Echidna" was a legendary creature (half woman, half serpent) in ancient Greek tradition; European naturalists later applied the name to these spiny monotremes as a striking, exotic parallel.

Conservation Status

NE Not Evaluated

Has not yet been evaluated against the criteria.

Population Unknown

Protected Under

  • Conservation status varies widely within the family: the short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus) is globally Least Concern, while long-beaked echidnas (Zaglossus spp.) include highly threatened taxa (notably Critically Endangered and Vulnerable species) with generally declining trends.
  • Australia: generally protected as native wildlife under state/territory legislation and management in many protected areas (relevant primarily to Tachyglossus aculeatus).
  • Papua New Guinea & Indonesian New Guinea (Papua): protections exist via national/provincial wildlife laws and occurrence in some protected areas, but enforcement and hunting control can be challenging in remote regions (critical for Zaglossus spp.).
  • Key conservation needs across the family include hunting reduction (where applicable), retention of intact forest/soil habitat, road-impact mitigation, and protection/management of remaining strongholds for the most threatened long-beaked echidnas.

You might be looking for:

Short-beaked Echidna

55%

Tachyglossus aculeatus

Widespread Australian and New Guinean echidna; the most commonly encountered species.

Western Long-beaked Echidna

18%

Zaglossus bruijnii

Large, long-snouted echidna from New Guinea highlands; threatened.

Eastern Long-beaked Echidna

17%

Zaglossus bartoni

New Guinea species with several described forms; generally montane.

Sir David's Long-beaked Echidna

10%

Zaglossus attenboroughi

Rare, poorly known long-beaked echidna from Papua (Indonesia).

Life Cycle

Birth 1 puggle
Lifespan 30 years

Lifespan

In the Wild
15–45 years
In Captivity
20–55 years

Reproduction

Mating System Polygynandry
Social Structure Solitary
Breeding Pattern Seasonal
Fertilization Internal Fertilization
Birth Type Internal_fertilization

Echidnas (Tachyglossus, Zaglossus) are mostly solitary. Both males and females often mate with multiple partners; males compete in mating trains. Fertilization is internal. Females lay one egg and give all care. No long-term pairs or helpers.

Behavior & Ecology

Social Train (seasonal mating aggregation) Group: 1
Activity Nocturnal, Crepuscular, Diurnal, Cathemeral
Diet Myrmecophage Ants and termites (dominant foods across Tachyglossidae; some long-beaked echidnas shift more toward earthworms/larvae where abundant)
Seasonal Hibernates

Temperament

Generally shy, low-aggression, and avoidance-oriented; defensive behaviors emphasize digging in, curling, and presenting spines rather than active confrontation.
Tolerance of conspecifics is usually limited to brief encounters, overlapping ranges, and breeding interactions; agonistic behavior is most evident among males during mating competition (e.g., jostling/positioning within trains).
Thermal and habitat conditions drive strong behavioral plasticity: individuals may shift activity and exposure (burrow use, shaded refuges, nocturnality) to manage heat/cold; this contributes to marked within-family variation in daily schedules and visibility.
Family Tachyglossidae adults are about 30–100 cm long and 2–16 kg. They often live 10–30+ years; some reach 40–50 years in good conditions, including captivity.
Shared ecological theme across the family: solitary, wide-ranging myrmecophagy/soil-invertebrate feeding with powerful digging and burrow use; degree of reliance on ants/termites vs. earthworms/other invertebrates varies among genera and local soils/vegetation.

Communication

Generally quiet; adults may produce low snuffles/huffs, soft grunts, and occasional squeaks during close contact or handling.
Young (puggles/juveniles) can emit higher-pitched calls/squeaks associated with distress or nursing context; vocal output varies with age and situation.
Chemical communication is important: scent cues (including cloacal/skin gland odors) are used for individual identification and reproductive state assessment; males in mating contexts track females via scent trails.
Tactile cues during courtship/mating interactions (close following, nudging, body positioning) are prominent in 'train' behavior.
Substrate-based cues: digging, scratching, and movement through leaf litter/soil can provide local mechanical/vibrational signals during close-range encounters Incidental rather than long-distance signaling
Sensory foraging adaptations can influence information use: electroreception and mechanoreception in the snout are best developed in some lineages (not uniform across all tachyglossids), and are used primarily for prey detection rather than social signaling.

Habitat

Biomes:
Tropical Rainforest Tropical Dry Forest Savanna Desert Hot Mediterranean Temperate Grassland Temperate Forest Temperate Rainforest Alpine Wetland +4
Terrain:
Mountainous Hilly Plateau Plains Valley Coastal Island Riverine Rocky Sandy Muddy +5
Elevation: Up to 13615 ft 6 in

Ecological Role

Invertebrate predator and ecosystem engineer in terrestrial soils and leaf litter (family-wide, with local variation in prey emphasis).

Population regulation of social insects (ants/termites) and other soil invertebrates Soil bioturbation from digging/foraging, which can increase aeration and water infiltration Nutrient cycling via disturbance of leaf litter/rotting wood and mixing of organic material into soil Creation of small pits and disturbed patches that can provide microhabitats for other organisms and influence seedbed/microtopography

Diet Details

Main Prey:
Ants Termites Soil and leaf-litter invertebrates

Human Interaction

Domestication Status

Wild

All Tachyglossidae (short-beaked echidna, Tachyglossus; long-beaked echidnas, Zaglossus spp.) are wild monotremes and not domesticated. People interact through Indigenous hunting and cultural knowledge in Australia and New Guinea, short-term captivity for research, rescue and care, and eco-tourism. Long-beaked echidnas in New Guinea face heavier hunting than Australian short-beaked ones.

Danger Level

Low
  • Spines can cause painful punctures/scratches if handled or stepped on
  • Scratches/bites are uncommon but possible when restrained
  • Zoonotic risk is generally low; basic hygiene is recommended after contact with any wild mammal (ticks/ectoparasites and environmental bacteria possible)

As a Pet

Not Suitable as Pet

Legality: Keeping echidnas as private pets is usually illegal. They are protected native wildlife. Private possession needs special permits and is mostly limited to zoos, sanctuaries, researchers, or rehabilitators. Rules vary by place. Zaglossus are highly protected.

Care Level: Expert Only

Purchase Cost:
Lifetime Cost: $20,000 - $150,000

Economic Value

Uses:
Ecotourism and wildlife viewing Conservation and education (zoos/sanctuaries) Scientific research (monotreme biology, reproduction, physiology) Subsistence use (localized; varies by region/species) Ecosystem services (invertebrate predation; soil disturbance via digging)
Products:
  • Non-commercial ecosystem and cultural value predominates; limited/localized use as bushmeat in some areas (not a broad commercial product).

Relationships

Related Species 5

Platypus
Platypus Ornithorhynchus anatinus Shared Order
Short-beaked echidna Tachyglossus aculeatus Shared Family
Western long-beaked echidna Zaglossus bruijnii Shared Family
Eastern long-beaked echidna Zaglossus bartoni Shared Family
Sir David's long-beaked echidna Zaglossus attenboroughi Shared Family

Types of Echidna

4

Explore 4 recognized types of echidna

Short-beaked echidna Tachyglossus aculeatus
Western long-beaked echidna Zaglossus bruijnii
Eastern long-beaked echidna Zaglossus bartoni
Sir David's long-beaked echidna Zaglossus attenboroughi

“One of only two mammals that lay eggs!”

Echidnas, formerly called the spiny or spiky anteater, are one of only two mammals that lay eggs! The other is the platypus. Interestingly, both animals are found in Australia. Echidnas are also found in New Guinea. Every other mammal gives birth to live young.

Like other mammals, the echidna also feeds its young with milk, is warm-blooded, and has fur.

5 Incredible Echidna facts

Echidna

The Echidna has the lowest body temperature of any mammal on earth today

  • One species of Echidna (Zaglossus attenboroughi) is named in honor of Sir David Attenborough!
  • The Echidna is earth’s oldest living mammal, with an evolution that dates back to the era of the dinosaurs!
  • The Echidna is one of the most genetically unique animals alive today, with characteristics rarely seen in other species.
  • The Echidna has the lowest body temperature of any mammal on earth today
  • Echidnas are one of only four non-aquatic species that use electroreception to locate food. The others are platypuses, cockroaches, and bees.

You can check out more incredible facts about echidnas.

Scientific names

These are four species of echidna: Zaglossus bruijni, Zaglossus attenboroughi, Zaglossus bartoni, and Tachyglossus aculeatus.

These are four species of echidna. Their scientific names are:

  1. Zaglossus bruijni
  1. Zaglossus attenboroughi
  1. Zaglossus bartoni
  1. Tachyglossus aculeatus.

The Zaglossus echidnas are native to New Guinea and the Tachyglossus echidna is native to Australia. As for the meaning of their names:

Zaglossus means “through the tongue” in Greek. It’s also called the Cyclop’s long-beaked echidna because it is from the Cyclops Mountains in New Guinea.

Zaglossus bruijni was named after the Dutch naturalist Antonie Augustus Bruijn, and Zaglossus bartoni, the eastern long-beaked echidna was probably named after the naturalist Benjamin Smith Barton. Zaglossus attenboroughi is named after the eminent English naturalist Sir David Attenborough.

Tachyglossus comes from the Greek for “quick” and “tongue.” Aculeatus means “spiny.”

Evolution and Origins

Echidnas may have evolved from an undiscovered monotreme ancestor during the Paleogene Period (65.5 to 23 million years ago).

Echidnas’ lack of teeth makes it difficult to study their evolutionary history because teeth fossilize well and help to determine relationships between mammals.

Appearance and behavior

Echidnas are animals that have robust bodies and beaks through which they extrude a sticky tongue that can lap up ants, earthworms, or termites. They defend themselves by rolling into a ball, very much like an aardvark or a hedgehog, and presenting their spines. Echidna spines are made of keratin, like human fingernails. They have surprisingly large brains for their size and well-developed cerebral cortices.

Echidna In Grass

The eastern long-beaked echidna, Zaglossus bartoni, differs from its cousins in that it has five claws on its front feet and four claws on its back feet. It can weigh between 11 and 22 pounds and is from two to a little over three feet long. It has spurred on its back legs like the platypus. Both males and females are born with spurs, and they are not venomous, unlike the spurs of the male platypus.

Females lose their spurs, but males keep them. Female eastern long-beaked echidnas are also bigger than males.

There are four subspecies of Zaglossus bartoni. They are Zaglossus bartoni bartoni, Zaglossus bartoni clunius and Zaglossus bartoni smeenki both of which have five claws on all of their feet, and Zaglossus bartoni diamond, which is the biggest member of the species.

Zaglossus bruijni, or the western long-beaked echidna, is the largest of all the egg-laying mammals. It can weigh up to 36 pounds and has long fur along with spines. It has three claws on its feet and a short tail. The snout curves down and makes up most of the length of the animal’s head.

It doesn’t have teeth but there are teeth-like projections on its tongue. The number of claws a member of Zaglossus bruijni has seems to depend on the individual. Some have claws on the middle three digits of a five-digit foot while others have five claws. Only the males have spurs.

Sir David’s long-beaked echidna, or Zaglossus attenboroughi is the smallest of the Zaglossus echidnas. It weighs between 11 and 22 pounds. In this case, the male is bigger than the female, and only he has spurs on his feet. It has dense, fine fur and only a few white spines.

Its lack of external genitalia gives it and other echidnas the order name Monotremata. This means that the animal excretes, mates, and lays eggs through one opening called a cloaca. Females also develop pouches.

Zaglossus attenboroughi is nocturnal and like other echidnas rolls up into a bristling ball when it’s threatened. Its snout is about 2.8 inches long and a bit straighter than that of the other species.

Tachyglossus aculeatus is the short-beaked echidna, named because of the speed with which its tongue catches its prey. Like other echidnas, it is toothless and does not have external ears. It weighs between 4 and 15 pounds and is 12 to 18 inches long. Hardened pads are found at the back of the animal’s mouth, and males have spurs on their hind legs.

This echidna has powerful front legs and claws much like a mole. This lets it burrow into the ground quickly. It is adapted to living underground because it can tolerate environments with low oxygen and high carbon dioxide. It cannot sweat, so it stays in its burrow during the hottest part of the day.

The short-beaked echidna hibernates or goes into torpor during the winter.

Unlike the Zaglossus echidnas, the short-beaked echidna is abundant and found in nearly all Australian habitats and into the eastern part of New Guinea.

Habitat

Echidna in the dirt

The echidna is an animal that prefers moderate temperatures and can be found escaping heat in shaded areas like tunnels, fallen logs, caves, or even burrowing underground. The Zaglossus echidnas live in forests high in the mountains or in alpine meadows and tend to avoid the coast. They are found in New Guinea and Australia. 

Diet

Long-beaked echidnas eat worms and insect larvae, while short-beaked echidnas eat mostly ants and termites. Similar to anteaters, echidnas use their specially adapted snouts and tongues to extract these small prey from hard-to-reach places.

Echidnas also use an electroreceptive system to locate their food. They have 400-2,000 receptors in their snouts, making them incredibly sensitive to subterranean movements and therefore able to locate prey easily.

While this adaptation is common in aquatic or amphibious animals, echidnas are one of only four non-aquatic species with this adaptation. The others are platypi, bees, and cockroaches.

Other incredible Echidna adaptations

Unusually, the Echidna not only lays eggs like a reptile, but they also have a pouch like a kangaroo, protective spikes like a porcupine (though not hollow like a porcupine) a snout like an anteater, and a spiky tongue for extracting hard to-reach-food. With the lowest body temperature of any mammal and slow metabolism, echidnas can live up to 50 years in captivity.

Predators and threats

The greatest threat to echidnas is hunting. Aboriginal Australians consider the small creature to be a food delicacy. Though the short-beaked echidna’s conservation status is Least Concern, the other echidnas are vulnerable or critically endangered. Indeed, one species might even be extinct.

Zaglossus Bruijn has critically endangered thanks to the loss of its habitat and hunting. People in Papua, where it lives, consider it a delicacy. However, hunting has been banned save under special circumstances.

The eastern long-beaked echidna’s conservation status is Vulnerable because of habitat loss and hunting by both humans and feral dogs. However, its status has improved from critically endangered.

Echidnas are also put in danger by parasites such as tapeworms, which they get by drinking water used by infected animals.

Reproduction, babies, and lifespan

Echidna Baby

A wild baby echidna in Tasmania, Australia

Echidnas are solitary and only come together to mate. After they mate, the females raise the babies exclusively.

Most people do not know the exact mating habits of Zaglossus echidnas because they are so scarce, and it is difficult to even place tracking devices on them because of their spines. Biologists assume that these echidnas mate and reproduce much like their cousin Tachyglossus aculeatus.

Captive short-beaked echidnas reach sexual maturity when they’re between five and 12 years, and females lay eggs between every other year to every six years. There are no special names for male and female echidnas, probably because it took people so long to find out which sex was which.

During the mating season, which is between June and August, the female is followed by one or a group of males. Males follow in single file in what’s called an “echidna train.” This can go on for a few days or for weeks, but the female only mates once per season and only with one male.

The female is pregnant for about 23 days, and during that time she creates a nursery burrow. She lays one egg in her pouch. Echidna eggs are leathery and cream-colored. They are about half an inch in diameter and weigh between .053 and .071 an ounce. The egg hatches in 10 days, and the baby helps itself escape with an egg tooth, much like a chicken.

Baby echidnas are called puggles, and they are about 0.6 inches long and weigh between .011 and .014 of an ounce. They leave the pouch and attach themselves to areas on their mother’s chest that secrete milk. These are not the nipples or teats found in other animals, but patches. The milk oozes out from dozens of tiny pores.

The milk is so rich that it is sometimes pink from its iron content. This allows the baby to go for long periods without feeding while the mother leaves the burrow to look for food. Most puggles nurse for about 200 days, then leave the burrow soon after. When this happens, the baby and its mother cease to have contact.

Population

• Biologists believe there are between 5 and 50 million short-beaked echidnas in Australia, though they are much more rare in New Guinea.

• The numbers of Zaglossus bruijni are in severe decline, and the animal may be extinct

• There are about 10,000 adult Zaglossus bartoni as of 2015.

• Though the number of adult Zaglossus attenboroughi is unknown, its population is also decreasing.

View all 185 animals that start with E

Sources

  1. David Burnie, Dorling Kindersley (2011) Animal, The Definitive Visual Guide To The World's Wildlife / Accessed November 10, 2008
  2. Tom Jackson, Lorenz Books (2007) The World Encyclopedia Of Animals / Accessed November 10, 2008
  3. David Burnie, Kingfisher (2011) The Kingfisher Animal Encyclopedia / Accessed November 10, 2008
  4. Richard Mackay, University of California Press (2009) The Atlas Of Endangered Species / Accessed November 10, 2008
  5. David Burnie, Dorling Kindersley (2008) Illustrated Encyclopedia Of Animals / Accessed November 10, 2008
  6. Dorling Kindersley (2006) Dorling Kindersley Encyclopedia Of Animals / Accessed November 10, 2008
  7. David W. Macdonald, Oxford University Press (2010) The Encyclopedia Of Mammals / Accessed November 10, 2008
Rebecca Bales

About the Author

Rebecca Bales

Rebecca is an experienced Professional Freelancer with nearly a decade of expertise in writing SEO Content, Digital Illustrations, and Graphic Design. When not engrossed in her creative endeavors, Rebecca dedicates her time to cycling and filming her nature adventures. When not focused on her passion for creating and crafting optimized materials, she harbors a deep fascination and love for cats, jumping spiders, and pet rats.
Connect:

Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?


Echidna FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions)

Echidnas are carnivores that specialize in insects and invertebrates.

The short-beaked echidna eats termites and ants. They create pits in the soil as they look for food, usually in the shade of large old trees. They tear open ant colonies and termite nests with their claws and use their tongues to catch the insects. Then, they grind them up with the hard pads in their mouths. Because it is almost impossible not to eat soil along with the ants and termites, the echidna’s feces are often full of dirt.

Sir David’s long-beaked echidnas are thought to eat worms and other invertebrates. People sometimes find the holes their snouts poke in the ground as they look for food.

The eastern long-beaked echidna feeds at night on grubs and earthworms. The spiny, toothlike structures on their tongues help them get a firm grip on the soft bodied invertebrates. They often find prey in rotting logs or by pressing their head and forelimbs into wet earth. This causes them to uncover the earthworms.

Zaglossus bruijni eats earthworms almost exclusively. They eat the earthworm head first, holding it in place with the spikes in its tongue. Zaglossus bruijni may also eat termites, ants or grubs.