Koalas are not endangered.
Current population figures appear to be around 80,000.
Koalas are not endangered.
Koalas are not endangered anywhere.
There is no way to predict when, if ever, koalas will be officially classified as "endangered".
Koalas are not endangered.
No. Although koalas are not yet officially on the "endangered" list, there are numerous threats which mean their population is expected to continue to decline.
There is no such thing as an African koala. Koalas are endemic to Australia alone. No koalas anywhere are classified as endangered.
No. As of 2012, koalas are not endangered. Current population estimates by the Australian Koala Foundation put the figure at around 80,000, but the trend seems to be dropping. Although the koala is not endangered, on 30 April 2012, the federal government moved to include koalas on the list of threatened species. The 'threatened' designation only applied to the most at-risk populations in Queensland, NSW and the ACT.
Koalas are in danger. They are just not endangered.
Not as of 2013. Estimates for the current koala population range between 80,000 and 110,000.
Various population estimates range between 80,000 and 110,000, although loss of habitat remains a concern.
No. As of 2013, koalas are not classified as endangered in Australia. There has been considerable lobbying to list them as endangered, but only in April 2013 were they even listed as Vulnerable.
yes