Koalas are slow breeders. A female koala produces a single joey once a year, or sometimes once every two years. Twins are exceedingly rare.
Koalas have a single joey each year. Twins have been recorded, but they are very rare.
Koalas stay with their mother for about a year, until the following year's breeding season.
Koalas, which are not bears at all, usually have just one young (joey) per year.
While it is impossible to tell exactly how many koalas die each year, the Australian Koala Foundation estimates that about 4000 koalas are killed each year by cars or dogs, largely the result of habitat loss and increased housing and industrial developments.
on average about twice but somtimes less
Yes - koalas have joeys once a year, usually during the summer months. And yes - koala young are called joeys, just like other marsupial young.
About a year. 6 months in the pouch, 6 months on her back
While it is impossible to tell exactly how many koalas die each year, let alone specifically by cars, the Australian Koala Foundation estimates that about 4000 koalas are killed each year by cars or dogs, largely the result of habitat loss and increased housing and industrial developments.
To begin with, koalas do not have kids. Goats have kids; koalas have joeys. Secondly, a female koala usually has one single joey each year, although twins have been known on rare occasions.
mammals lay live young
Koalas produce a single offspring, just once a year. On rare occasions, they may produce twins.
Koalas produce a single offspring, once a year. On very rare occasions, they may produce twins.