No. Koalas do not have long fingers. Their fingers are long enough and flexible enough to grasp hold of eucalyptus leaves, but they are not long.
Koalas have opposable fingers and their paws are specially adapted to grip tree branches. Female koalas have pouches in which they carry their babies and they have tough skin on the bottom of their feet to help with traction on tree branches.
None of the koala's fingers are fused together. The second and third toe of the koala's hind feet are fused together.
koalas long claws help them clam trees and to get eucalyptus to eat.
yes koalas are mostly nocturnal and can sleep as long as 18 hours a day
koalas sleep upto 20 hours a day
Koalas don't hibernate through Winter.
Bears do not have fingers, they have claws. People do have fingers, but the question is asking about animals! Monkeys, do have fingers. Some people say that pandas have fingers! Guinea pigs, hamsters, rats, etc all have claws that are sort of like claws.
14 years
Koalas stay with their mother for about a year, until the following year's breeding season.
No, it just makes it easier to have long, flexible fingers. Often, people who have played the piano for a long time have long fingers.
If the person with short fingers has one dominant allele for short fingers (S) and one recessive allele for long fingers (s), their genotype would be heterozygous (Ss). The person with long fingers has the genotype homozygous recessive (ss). When these two individuals have children, there is a 50% chance that the offspring will inherit the dominant allele for short fingers (Ss) and a 50% chance for long fingers (ss). Thus, there is a 50% chance of the children having short fingers and a 50% chance of having long fingers.
yes, they do have short legs.