Notas del episodio
In 1799, a British scientist took scissors to a strange pelt arriving from Australia, certain he was the victim of a hoax. A duck's bill grafted onto a beaver's body simply could not be real. He never found the stitches.
This deep dive unpacks why the platypus, far from a biological mistake, is an evolutionary masterpiece. Pulling from historical accounts, genetic sequencing, and behavioral studies, we explore the bizarre adaptations that make this egg-laying mammal one of the most highly specialized survivors on Earth, and why it is now under threat.
- How it feeds its young, called puggles, by oozing milk through modified sweat glands since it has no teats
- Why it has no stomach, having lost the genes for acidic digestive enzymes entirely
- The 40,000 electroreceptors in its bill that let it hunt blind, deaf, and wit ...Â