No. Koalas are marsupials, and the only member of the family Phascolarctidae.
Sloths are placental mammals, and are divided into several families, none of which is Phascolarctidae.
The koala, which is not a bear, is of the family Phascolarctidae.
None. Koala are the only animal in their family, which is the Phascolarctidae family.
sloths belong to the monkey family
Koalas do not live in family groups.If the question means which family is the koala classified in, koalas are from the family Phascolarctidae. This family is in the order Diprotodontia. The Scientific Binomial name for a Koala is Phascolarctos cinereus.
they do not live in a family
The koala, which is not a bear, is of the family Phascolarctidae.
The koala is inAnimaliaChordataMammaliaDiprontodontiaPhascolarctidaePhascolarctusCinereus.
The class of the koala is Mammalia. Its infraclass is marsupialia.Marsupial is the common name for a mammal having a marsupium pouch in which the female carries her young.Note that koalas are not bears.
It is incorrect to refer to a koala as a koala bear for the simple reason that the koala is not a member of the bear family. The koala is a marsupial, while the bear is a placental mammal. There are no native bears in Australia.
The closest relative to the koala is the wombat.Koalas and wombats are both marsupials of the order Diprotodontia. The koala's family, Phascolarctidae, is closest to the wombat family, Vombatidae because they are both of the sub-order Vombatiformes.
The Koala
Only the koala, an Australian marsupial, is in the family Phascolarctidae.