Koalas stay with their mother for about a year, until the following year's breeding season.
Koalas do not put their babies anywhere. The young joey crawls there on its own immediately after birth, and remains there for at least six to seven months.
No.
Koalas need others of their own species for a population to thrive, not only for obvious reproductive reasons, but because they do require the company of other koalas.
Koalas can really only survive independently of their mothers at about twelve months old.
The young lynxes will stay with the mother until they are 9-10 months old before setting out on their own.
Koalas are social animals within their own species. The animals have few predators. Among the animals that will hunt and eat koalas are dingo's, owls, eaglets, and pythons.
The babies may hang with the mother in her den for a day or two after birth before setting out on their own. However, they receive no care from the mother and are, basically, on their own from birth.
It is illegal to own pet koalas, though it is possible to volunteer to foster one. In that case, you basically can care for the koala in whole.
Koalas are generally solitary animals and do not live in family groups like some other species. Adult males and females typically maintain their own home ranges and come together only for mating. However, a mother koala will care for her young, staying with them until they are independent, but this is a temporary family unit. Overall, koalas are more independent and territorial rather than social animals.
In a way, both. Sometimes, a young pharaoh died unexpectedly, and his tomb was planned and built by someone else. Some pharaoh's designed - and had built - their own tombs long before they died.
as long as u feel like it
No time at all. A young snake is on its own from the beginning.