No. Koalas do not eat any animal proteins. They are purely herbivorous.
None, because koalas do not eat "everything". Koalas feed almost exclusively on gum (eucalyptus) leaves and flowers. No other animal can eat the gum leaves.
No. Koalas do not sleep with other animals. They have very little contact with other species.
Eat mainly near-toxic leaves as their main diet.
Koalas are social animals within their own species. The animals have few predators. Among the animals that will hunt and eat koalas are dingo's, owls, eaglets, and pythons.
Koalas are not particularly sociable, and do not tend to be friends with any other animals.
Gorillas do not eat koalas. Gorillas and koalas do not even occupy the same continent. Few animals eat the koala. Unsupervised dogs frequently kill koalas, but they do not eat them. Dingoes will eat koalas, and birds of prey may try to take koala joeys. Quolls may even attempt to eat a young joey if it is not secure in its mother's pouch.
Koalas are one of the few animals that can digest eucalyptus leaves.Koalas can quickly climb trees to escape predators, and balance comfortably in the forks of trees.Koalas can communicate with each other, using a range of vocalisations.Like other animals, koalas eat, climb, walk, run, sleep and reproduce.
Wild animals such as koalas do not eat "breakfast". They take the opportunity to eat whenever they feel like it. Koalas only ever eat certain types of eucalyptus leaves and flowers, and they often 'graze', eating continually for awhile.
Koalas need others of their own species for a population to thrive, not only for obvious reproductive reasons, but because they do require the company of other koalas.
No. Koalas are herbivorous, living entirely on gum leaves (eucalyptus).
Herbivores like Giraffes, koalas, cows etc.
Koalas eat a diet of eucalyptus leaves. Most animals are unable to do this because the leaves are poisonous. The back molars of Koalas are also different, in that they are shaped to permit cutting and sawing.