Koalas are able to adapt to a variety of temperatures. They are found in cold, sub-alpine climates right up to hot and humid sub-tropical temperatures in northern Queensland.
No. Koalas do not eat fat. They are herbivores.
Koalas are northern animals and thrive at a temperature of anywhere from 10 to 37.7 degrees centigrade. Anything much over that pushes their limits and can be very harmful to their species.
Koalas are mammals and, like all mammals, they exhale air.
Koalas, like many mammals, bathe by licking themselves.
Australia does not have extreme temperature variations in the areas where koalas live. The worst that happens is that koalas' habitat may be subjected to extreme heat and dryness for a prolonged period of time. During these heatwaves, koalas will actively seek out water, even though during normal times they do not tend to drink, instead obtaining all their moisture needs from the leaves they eat. Bushfires can certainly kill koalas.
Not at all. Koalas are native to Australia, and Australia is free of rabies.
A koalas skin is covered with fur. Koalas have a woolly light to dark grey fur with brown and white patches and a cream belly.
Koalas do not fly. The only truly flying mammal is the bat. Koalas do not even have gliding membranes like the various gliding possum species have.
Previous answers have stated "koalas", but koalas are not bears.
Koalas are used to a variety of sounds in their habitat. Whether or not they like the noise is something man will never know.
Eucalyptus leaves!
Koalas prefer the hot climate too a cold one.