A koala is not a bear, and they do not live in Africa.
A polar bear cannot kill a koala because they live on opposite sides of the world, in opposite climates.
they live in perez
No. firstly, alas are not decomposers. They are consumers. Secondly, koalas do not live in the desert, or the savannah. They can only live in sclerophyll forest composed primarily of certain types of eucalyptus trees. Thirdly, a koala is not a bear. It is a marsupial. To refer to it as a "koala bear" is wrong.
None at all. The koala is not a bear; nor does it live in Africa; nor can it survive in grasslands.See the related question for what adaptations a koala has.
The koala is not a bear, and it does not live in the taiga. Taiga is essentially coniferous forest. Koalas rely on eucalyptus trees for food and shelter, not conifers, and eucalyptus trees are found in native Australian bushland.
Maori live in New Zealand. Koalas are native to Australia. There is no native maori word for the koala.
Any animal can really live in a tree, but 1 is a koala bear.
Koalas live in the Southern Hemisphere. There is no such creature as a 'koala bear'.
No. Black Bears are proper bears that live in North America, Europe, and Asia. Koalas are marsupials (not proper bears) and live exclusively in Australia.
Birds, Squirrels, and miceSloths, monkeys, squirrels
There is no such thing as a savanna koala bear. Koalas are not bears, and they do not live in the savannah. Koalas are marsupials, and they only live in eucalyptus bushland, including bushland found within suburban areas. Savannah does not support the koala's food source.