Koalas have strong teeth which are able to chew tough gum leaves.
Yes, koalas have teeth. Teeth are needed to break down the tough gum leaves on which koalas feed. Koalas have sharp front teeth for nipping off the eucalyptus leaves, and flat, grinding molars towards the back.
yes it is
Koalas have incisors to cut the gum leaves off the tree and molars to grind the leaves. The front teeth of a koala are small and sharp in order to nip off the eucalyptus leaves which form the main component of their diet. The back teeth are larger and specially shaped to break down the tough eucalyptus leaves further.
Dolphins have around 200 teeth obviously more than a koala can hold in its mouth :)
Koalas have flat molars to grind the eucalyptus leaves they eat. However, they also have sharp incisors which they use to nip off the leaves before chewing them.
Koalas have sharp claws that they scratch with if threatened, and also they may bite, although their teeth are rather rounded. Mostly, though, they avoid predators by spending their lives in trees.
Koalas aren't usually aggressive but they have strong, sharp claws and teeth to defend themselves.
Koalas don't eat any bamboo. Koalas eat leaves of Eucalytus trees.
koalas weight is 19.8 pounds
Koalas do have teeth and claws, and will fight when there's no other option. It's quite rare though, and mostly only male koalas fight other male koalas over breeding rights. Not many predators can get to them up in the trees, not many other plant eaters have any interest in the eucalyptus leaves that make up their main diet.
They don't. Koalas feed almost exclusively on eucalyptus leaves and flowers. They do not, and cannot, eat bamboo, which requires different types of teeth and a different digestive system from what the koala has.