The temperature of a koala's biome varies according to the part of Australia in which the biome of eucalypt woodland and bushland is found.
Koalas are particular to Eastern Australia, and can be found along the eastern and south-eastern coastal regions. In Victoria, in the southeast of the mainland, summers can get very hot, with heatwaves sending temperatures soaring in excess of 40 degrees Celsius for weeks on end. (The heat record for this state currently stands at 48.8 degrees Celsius, recorded in 2009, but this was in the northwest of the state where koalas do not live.)
Koalas do not get hot because of their fur. On the contrary, the design of a koala's fur helps to keep it cool in summer and warm in winter.
koalas live in forest biomes. They live in eucalyptus trees which is also their main food source
very hot
the temperate grassland biome
it is hot
hot
if the climate is hot and dry then the biome will be a desert, if the climate is hot and wet, the biome will be a rainforest, if the climate is dry and cool it would probably be a coniferous forets, if cold and wet, deciudous forest.
A desert
A tropical rainforest
Koalas, which are not bears, live only in Australia. Australia is a hot country, particularly in summer. Koalas do not live in any other countries.
either hot or cold they do not like water
A desert. The Antarctic, for example, is a desert.
a hot biome would be irregularly warm warm would mean cool so its not a desert biome either a forest grassland or savana more of a humid place