Yes. Koalas' fingerprint are individual to each koala, much as human fingerprints are different from everyone else's.
Not really. While koalas are the only known animal to have distinctive fingerprints, they can be distinguished from the fingerprints of a human. Like humans, their fingerprints comprise ridges in a variety of patterns.
Yes and no. According to the Australian Koala Foundation, koalas have fingerprints that are very distinct from each other, just as humans do. However, they are easily discernible from human fingerprints.
No. Koalas mate with different koalas each breeding season.
None of a child's fingerprints will match his or her mother's fingerprints. Each individual has different fingerprints. Even identical twins have different fingerprints.
No. Koalas mate with different koalas each breeding season.
No, each hand has a unique set of fingerprints. Even the fingerprints on each individual finger of the same hand are different. This uniqueness is what makes fingerprints a reliable form of identification.
No. Each person is unique. Even twins have different fingerprints.
Koalas and platypuses do not socialise with each other. They live in different areas, in different layers of the bush, and eat different foods.
Not at all. Male koalas will readily breed with numerous different females each season.
each one has different patterns
Your fingerprints are very unique. They are unique because no one else has the same fingerprints as you; you're the only one with it. Even though it may look the same as others, but there is a difference and each perosn has different fingerprints.
It depends on what you mean. You cannot have two different finger prints on the same finger, but you have a different print on your thumb than your index finger etc.