The wombat has also been known to eat young eucalyptus leaves and shoots close to the ground.
No. Fish are one class of vertebrates and mammals are another. There are no "fish mammals".
Many birds and mammals make their homes in eucalyptus trees. They include koalas, ringtail possums, brushtail possums, sugar gliders, feathertail gliders, kookaburras, cockatoos, galahs, lorikeets, rosellas and magpies, just to name a few.
mammals have a greater chance of survival because they can adopt to changes in their environment.
Yes. Koalas are very efficient climbers. They have very sharp claws which enable them to climb tall, straight eucalyptus trees which have smooth bark, a feat matched by very few other mammals. Koalas are essentially arboreal, that is, tree-dwelling marsupials. They spend most of their time in eucalyptus trees, where they find their food, which is primarily eucalyptus leaves and blossoms.
Both are mammals and are related to one another
There is nothing in eucalyptus leaves that makes koalas sleepy. Eucalyptus leaves are low in proteins and almost indigestible. Koalas have a very low metabolic rate, which is needed to help them digest the leaves and ensure they get as much nutrition as they can from a diet on which other mammals cannot survive.
No,they are mammals. No. Rabbits are mammals, not reptiles. Another Rabbits are in the rodent family. Reptiles are snakes, lizards etc.
For mammals, anything greater than .9% is hypertonic.
warm blooded
EXAMPLE: Phytoplanton-->Zooplankton-->Small Fish-->Bigger Fish-->Mammals If confussed about mammals, here is another example.. stuck on mammals, think of like biiiiiig fish like WHALES! Those are mammals... EXAMPLE: Phytoplanton-->Zooplankton-->Small Fish-->Bigger Fish-->Mammals If confussed about mammals, here is another example.. stuck on mammals, think of like biiiiiig fish like WHALES! Those are mammals...
Their landmass, Australasia, must have separated from the greater landmasses before they felt the need to explore further
They are called Marsupials