No countries have koala bears, as such creatures do not exist.
Koalas are marsupials which are native to Australia alone. They are not remotely related to bears, and their name is not "koala bear".
Australia is the only country in which one can see koalas in their native habitat.
Koalas are native to just one country, and that is Australia.
Koalas are endemic to Australia. This means they are not found in the wild in any other country.
Yes. They need more hugs. If you ever see a koala approach it and offer yourself to the koala.
The Australian Koala Foundation (see the related link below) offers a variety of services and information about the koala. In addition, at this site one can find out what is being done by authorities to help the koala, and what the everyday person can do.
A koala corridor refers to an extended area of bushland where koalas are commonly found, usually running north to south. It is known koala habitat amid urbanised or semi-rural areas.
Usually all the time
usually the highestmountain in the world
Any country that wishes to use this English word may do so.
They are wild. However, they aren't usually aggressive and are quite docile.
No. A metaphor is when one object is stated as being another thing. A metaphor for the koala would be "the koalas was a ball of woolly fur".
You may not adopt a koala for the sake of keeping one as a pet. Koalas are protected native animals, and may not be kept as pets.However, there are several avenues for adopting koalas by sponsoring them in order to help the species.The Koalas Hospital at Port Macquarie has an adopt-a-koala program. See the related link below.Australia Zoo at Beerwah in Queensland has a program for adopting koalas. See the related link below, and go to "select an animal".The Australian Koala Foundation also offers programs for adopting and sponsoring koalas. More information can be found at the Koala Foundation link below.These are just a few of the many koala adoption programs available in Australia.
Yes, but because koalas sleep for most of the day and are chiefly nocturnal, you can usually only see them at night. They even have an albino koala, Onya-Birri (meang "ghost boy" in the language of the Aborigines") who is currently the world's only captive albino koala (but not the world's first; The San Diego Zoo used to have an albino koala named Goolara, who died of cancer; Goolara's grandfather, Kalba, was also an albino).
Koala = Koala (spelled کوآلا)
No. There is no king koala, and koalas are not bears. There is no such creature as a "koala bear". It is just "koala".