photo: Steve Parish

Platypus Diary

New readers start here…

Pebbles the platypus lives in Ten Mile Creek in rural south-east Queensland near the NSW border. Every month she writes about her life in her burrow, her creek and how she copes with the changing seasons and conditions.

November

Goodness but those babies can eat! All they do is drink my milk and grow bigger and bigger. Platypus milk is very solid and full of iron - that must be why they grow so fast. My milk glands began to get bigger way back in the winter until they were shaped like fans and stretched to cover my whole stomach. Milk seeped through my fur as soon as the babies came out of the eggs and started sucking.

The babies look like real little platypuses now. Their eyes opened when they were four weeks old and they each have fur and a proper bill now. They both have spurs but I know the spurs on the girl will just disappear before she is a year old.

It's a full time job being a platypus mother. When I'm not in the burrow feeding the little ones, I'm out in the creek trying to find enough food to keep me alive. I have to look after the family and look after myself too.

I spend every spare moment searching for food now. I close my eyes and ears, dive, spend a minute or two under the water, then I swim back to the surface to chew and swallow my food and then dive down again. My front and back feet are webbed to help me swim around. Because I always swim with my eyes and ears shut, I have no problems searching for food at night or in cloudy water.

What happened in December in the adventures of Pebbles the Platypus...

Want to read the rest of the diary so far?

For more information on WPSQ's activities, contact the office by email or call + 61 7 3221 0194.

 

Wildlife Preservation Society of Queensland