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Platypus: Nature’s most unlikely animal

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When explorers brought the first platypus specimen to England in the late 18th century, . And unders

When explorers brought the first platypus specimen to England in the late 18th century, [scientists believed it was a hoax](. And understandably so. The long, duck-like bill, webbed feet, and fur resembling an otter’s made it seem like an animal patched together from other creatures—[more jackalope than science](. “It naturally excites the idea of some deceptive preparation by artificial means,” zoologist George Shaw wrote in 1799. And it wasn’t until almost a century later that scientists discovered that platypuses lay eggs. On a genetic level, the platypus has been assembled from bits and pieces of different classes. The species still intrigues modern researchers, both as a potential, if unlikely, source of medical breakthroughs, and as an animal that may fall victim to climate change. Let’s see what fits the bill. 🐦 [Tweet this!]( 🌐 [View this email on the web]( [Quartz Daily Obsession] Platypus March 30, 2020 It’s a bird! It’s a reptile! It’s a mammal! --------------------------------------------------------------- When explorers brought the first platypus specimen to England in the late 18th century, [scientists believed it was a hoax](. And understandably so. The long, duck-like bill, webbed feet, and fur resembling an otter’s made it seem like an animal patched together from other creatures—[more jackalope than science](. “It naturally excites the idea of some deceptive preparation by artificial means,” zoologist George Shaw wrote in 1799. And it wasn’t until almost a century later that scientists discovered that platypuses lay eggs. On a genetic level, the platypus has been assembled from bits and pieces of different classes. The species still intrigues modern researchers, both as a potential, if unlikely, source of medical breakthroughs, and as an animal that may fall victim to climate change. Let’s see what fits the bill. 🐦 [Tweet this!]( 🌐 [View this email on the web]( By the digits [0.7–2.4 kg (1.5–5.3 lb):]( Weight range [50 cm (20 in):]( Average length of a male [43 cm (17 in):]( Average length of female [>3 ft (0.9 m):]( Length of prehistoric platypuses [31.3 seconds:]( Mean dive time for food foraging [12.4 hours:]( Continuous foraging activity platypuses require to eat each day [20 m (66 ft):]( Length of the burrows female platypuses dig for their eggs [10-12 days:]( Time eggs are incubated in the burrow [30%:]( Extra energy platypuses exert on land compared to similar-sized mammals [73%:]( Projected population decline for platypuses in the next 50 years due to territory loss and climate change Reuters Origin of the species story The missing link --------------------------------------------------------------- The platypus has stumped scientists for centuries, and there have been new discoveries about its genetic makeup in the last decade. While it is a mammal, it [shares genes]( with reptiles and birds, and is something of a hybrid between these animal classes, posing questions and [offering up answers about the evolutionary process](. Its hybrid qualities are more than skin deep: Like a bird, it lays eggs. Platypuses are one of the only living monotremes, or egg-laying mammals, left on the planet—it’s just them and four species of the [equally odd]( echidna, [or spiny anteater]( perhaps a remnant of their [ancestors’ affinity for water](. Like echidnas, they’re also venomous, one of 12 such mammals. Precious few humans have been poisoned by a platypus, and the results are resistant to morphine, [“long-lasting and excruciating”]( ([we’re talking weeks]( but not fatal. And it’s not just eggs that make these mammals so odd. They have a single duct for urine, feces, and reproduction, which is why they’re classified as monotremes (literally “single hole”), as well as legs on the sides rather than underneath the body, which are reptilian qualities. The [males also have internal testes]( another characteristic found in reptiles. [Read the Quartz Daily Obsession on living fossils]( giphy Membership The Trump administration’s aggressive investigations into scientists with China ties have had a chilling effect on research partnerships between the two countries. The [latest episode]( our member-exclusive video series, Because China, looks at the risks this poses, at a time when international scientific collaboration is more critical than ever. [Read now]( Quotable “I like the duck-billed platypus Because it is anomalous. I like the way it raises its family, Partly birdly, partly mammaly.” —[American poet Ogden Nash]( Giphy pop quiz Which cartoon show features a platypus? Phineas and FerbChowderTeen TitansFuturama Correct. The Disney children’s show includes a pet platypus by the name of Perry who moonlights as a secret Agent P fighting against the evil Dr. Heinz Doofenshmirtz. Incorrect. If your inbox doesn’t support this quiz, find the solution at bottom of email. Brief history [120 million years ago:]( Monotremes split from other mammals. [100,000 years ago:]( Date of the earliest modern platypus fossil. [1797:]( Captain John Hunter sees a platypus speared in Yarramundi Lagoon just north of Sydney, Australia, one of the first documented encounters with the mammal. [1799:]( George Shaw, keeper of the Department of Natural History of the Modern Curiosities of the British Museum, publishes the scientific name Platypus anatinus for the mammal in Naturalist’s Miscellany. [1800:]( Johann Blumenbach separately describes the platypus as Ornithorhynchus paradoxus in Abbildungen naturhistorischer Gegenstande. This becomes the official scientific name for the species. [1884:]( While on an expedition in Australia, William Hay Caldwell discovers that platypuses are oviparous—the female platypus lays eggs. [1937:]( The platypus is featured on the 9d Australian stamp, the first time (and nowhere near the last) it appears on a stamp. [1939:]( National Geographic publishes an article on the platypus. [1966:]( An embossed image of the platypus is featured on the Australian 20-cent coin, and where it still appears. [2000:]( The platypus is one of three mascots chosen for the Sydney Summer Olympics. [2005:]( Researchers at Australian National University discover platypuses have 10 sex chromosomes. [2008:]( In a close study of platypus DNA, scientists determine that it shares genes with reptiles, birds, and mammals. [2019:]( A pair of platypuses live in captivity at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, the only place outside of Australia where they have successfully lived. [2020:]( Researchers at the University of New South Wales share evidence that platypuses are at risk of becoming extinct, due to water resource development, land clearing, climate change, as well as severe drought periods causing wildfires. Have a friend who would enjoy our Obsession with Platypus? [ [Forward link to a friend](mailto:?subject=Thought you'd enjoy.&body=Read this Quartz Daily Obsession email – to the email – Fun fact! Platypuses have something like a [sixth sense in their bills]( which consists of thousands of cells that allow them to detect the electric fields generated by all living creatures. This electrolocation enables platypuses to hunt without using their eyes, ears, and nose. Watch this! Platypus expedition --------------------------------------------------------------- National Geographic follows researchers as they track down platypuses and extract their DNA to better understand their evolution and determine if there are genetic differences between the northern and southern platypuses in Australia, which would mean there could be a separate subspecies. How we 💊 now The platypus cure --------------------------------------------------------------- Female platypuses feed their young milk, but from sweat-like mammary glands instead of nipples. There is an [antibacterial protein in the milk to keep it]( safe for the offspring, even when it is exposed to potential contaminants. This protein has a unique structure that is being studied for its potential to help develop new antibiotics for humans (as is komodo-dragon blood). And it’s not just female platypuses that can provide critical medical aid for humans. The venomous spurs on the heels of males’ hind feet [have a poison that contains GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide-1)]( a hormone known to treat diabetes. GLP-1 is also found in humans and other mammals to promote insulin release, but is short-lived and degrades quickly, appearing to last longer in platypus venom. Giphy DIY The best thing since baby Yoda --------------------------------------------------------------- A too-cute-to-be true photo of a baby platypus broke the internet recently, first as it made the social media rounds and then when it was [revealed to be fake](. The figurine was made by Serbian fantasy artist Vladimir Matić-Kuriljov, who sculpts with the plastic-like polymer clay Super Sculpey. He’s made other animal sculptures, including [a miniature walrus](. take me down this 🐰 hole! Who are you calling convergent? --------------------------------------------------------------- Platypuses are pretty weird, right? They probably don’t think so, though. They are “in many ways [more akin to the original mammal blueprint]( than the rest of us,” writes Elsa Panciroli in The Guardian. Egg laying, venom, and cloaca may have all been features of the very earliest mammals. Monotremes went their own way before the placenta evolved, making them “[somewhere between a lizard]( and what we think of as a human-like placental mammal,” biologist Rebecca Young tells National Geographic. ([The placenta itself is pretty weird]( and no less amazing than a venomous, egg-laying mammal.) Platypus venom features 83 different toxin genes, “some of whose products closely resemble proteins from spiders, sea stars, anemones, snakes, fish, and lizards, as if someone cut and pasted genes from the entire diversity of venomous life into the platypus’s genome,” [Mindy Weisberger writes on Live Science](. It’s [believed to be]( an example of convergent evolution, a process where different animals evolve similar traits independently. Giphy poll The platypus is... [Click here to vote]( CuteCreepyAmazing 💬 let's talk! In last week’s poll about [french fries]( 51% of you said you love every kind of fry, 30% of you said that waffle fries reign supreme and 19% of you like curly fries the best. 🤔 [What did you think of today’s email?](mailto:obsession%2Bfeedback@qz.com?cc=&subject=Thoughts%20about%20platypus%20&body=) 💡 [What should we obsess over next?](mailto:obsession%2Bideas@qz.com?cc=&subject=Obsess%20over%20this%20next.&body=) [🎲]( [Show me a random Obsession]( Today’s email was written by [Stevie Borrello]( edited by [Whet Moser]( and produced by [Tori Smith](. [facebook]( The correct answer to the quiz is Phineas and Ferb. Enjoying the Quartz Daily Obsession? [Send this link]( to a friend! Want to advertise in the Quartz Daily Obsession? Send us an email at ads@qz.com. Not enjoying it? No worries. [Click here]( to unsubscribe. Quartz | 675 Avenue of the Americas, 4th Fl | New York, NY 10011 | United States

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