its called downunders natural shampoo!
no
Almost without exception, a koala will not take your bottle in the first place. In recent years, as burnoffs and bushfires have in increased in intensity, there have been occasional stories of firefighters, wildlife volunteers or even just hikers being able to give a distressed and exhausted koala water from a bottle. These stories are very rare. The koala must be offered the bottle, and due to the shape of its own pads and claws, it is unable to hold the bottle independently anyway.
Google images
Koala bears are marsupials native to Australia. To learn more about their skeletal system, visit a library a pick up a book about them.
Koala's habitat is eucalyptus bushland. This type of forest can be thick or a little more sparse. Besides eucalyptus trees, there tend to be callistemon (bottle brush), melaleuca and wattle trees.
hgokfu6df green koala
According to some websites, koala means "no drink" in Aboriginal language. According to Wikipedia, this is incorrect. If you look up the word koala in the Online Etymological Dictionary, it says "1808, from the Aboriginal name of the animal, variously given as koola, kulla, kula." However, it is true that koalas rarely drink water. They usually get enough water from their food. There was a picture recently (2009) in the news of a koala rescued from a wildfire in Australia that was given water from a bottle and accepted it, but the fire would have made the koala thirsty and in need of water.
green koala
wild hamster the purple koala and the green elf
Koalas make loud bellows, snore-like grunts, wails and screams. To hear the sound a koala makes, go to the related link below and click on the koala picture.
The Farsi word for Koala is "کوالا" which is pronounced as "kuwala".
No. There is no king koala, and koalas are not bears. There is no such creature as a "koala bear". It is just "koala".