No. A newborn koala joey is completely pink and hairless.
First of all, the koala is not a bear: it is a marsupial. Koalas do not have white skin: they have ash-coloured grey type of skin tending to pink, beneath their thick fur.
Baby koalas are born with all their body parts, including sharp claws and an acutely sensitive nose. Apart from that, they are pink, blind and hairless, and utterly dependent upon their mother.
Koalas have brown eyes (not yellow as is sometimes reported). They are born with a slightly blue tinge, but this tends to fade as they get older. An exception to this is a joey born at one of Australia's theme parks, Dreamworld, named Logan, but nicknamed "Frankie" for his intense blue eyes.
There are no discernible differences between newborn koalas. At birth, they are all pink, hairless and about the size of a bean.
Adult koalas are simply called koalas.
Koalas are not primates. Koalas are marsupials.
There are no koalas in Germany. Koalas are endemic to eastern Australia.
No. There are no koalas in Ghana. Koalas are native to Australia alone.
Being born undeveloped, baby koalas are initially pink and hairless. As they begin to develop fur, they take on the colours of the adult. Koalas are usually either grey (the phascolarctos cinereus adustus subspecies and the phascolarctos cinereus victor subspecies) or greyish brown (phascolarctos cinereus cinereus).
yes koalas do have necks
do koalas have nest