After the young koala grows too big for its mother's pouch, it is still dependent upon its mother for several months, and not able to look after itself in the arboreal habitat in which it lives. It clings to its mother's back for security and while it is still learning how to survive on its own.
they hold on tight to the dense fur.
16 months
Baby jaguars stay with their moms about 2 years.
some jobs for stay at home moms would be doing data entry for a firm of some sort, baby sitting, stuffing envelopes, it really depends on your skill sets.
That's a well thought out question!
The career mothers and the stay at home moms.
As with all marsupials, koalas are born via the birth canal. They then crawl to the mother's backward-opening pouch by instinct, and lured by the smell of mothers' milk, where they stay for many months.
No. Koalas mate with different koalas each breeding season.
Koalas stay safe by remaining in trees. They are at their most vulnerable when they are on the ground, moving between their home trees.
They stay in your moms buttcrack
Well, if you know he's just visiting the child, then that's okay.
they stay up in the trees away from predators