
{
    "video": {
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        "description": "<p>What gives birth to a puggle? Covered in spines, Australia's echidna is one of the rarest animals in the world: It's one of only two known mammals that lay eggs.</p>", 
        "is_us_only": "false", 
        "title": "World Weirdest: Echidna", 
        "url": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/animals/mammals-animals/other-mammals/weirdest-echidna/", 
        "country_code_deny_list": [], 
        "allowUserEmbed": "True", 
        "related": {
            "link": []
        }, 
        "credit": "National Geographic", 
        "smil": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/data/xml/weirdest-echidna.smil", 
        "country_code_allow_list": [], 
        "HTML5src": "/video/player/media-mp4/weirdest-echidna/mp4/variant-playlist.m3u8", 
        "still": "http://video.nationalgeographic.com/exposure/core_media/ngphoto/image/61284_0_616x346.jpg", 
        "transcript": "<p>This walking, sniffing ball of spines is an echidna.</p><p>It's a mother on a mission.</p><p>She's hunting for ants and termites.</p><p>To find them underground or under wood, she uses her strong sense of smell and another weirder sense.</p><p>Studies suggest that special cells in her beak are sensitive to the electromagnetic signals emitted by all living things.</p><p>It's a sense usually found in sharks and rays, but the echidna may be the only land mammal that has the ability to search for food this way.</p><p>She's uncovered a colony of ants and uses her long sticky tongue to slurp them up.</p><p>She needs the nutrition.</p><p>She's already given birth...to an egg.</p><p>Echidnas, along with their cousin, the platypus, are the only egg-laying mammals in the world.</p><p>The egg incubates in a simple pouch under her belly.</p><p>Inside, a baby echidna, called a puggle, develops.</p><p>After about 10 days, the egg hatches.</p><p>The puggle stays inside the pouch, nursing from its mother's milk and packing on the ounces.</p><p>Two months later, the puggle starts to grow spines-that's its mother's cue to move it to a burrow, where she'll continue to take care of it for seven more months.</p><p>All that effort means a lot of food.</p><p>So her mission remains the same: find more to eat.</p>", 
        "id": "weirdest-echidna"
    }
}
