Koalas come into the world as live joeys, not eggs. Koalas are mammals and marsupials, and all marsupials give birth to live young. The only egg-laying mammals are the platypus and the echidna.
no
No. Koalas do not lay eggs, Koalas are mammals, specifically marsupials. Marsupials are pouched mammals, not egg-laying mammals. Mammals give birth to live young, with the exception of monotremes, i.e. platypuses and echidnas, which are also unique to Australia.
Quite simply, the egg-laying mammals are restricted to just the monotremes. Koalas are marsupials, not monotremes. The reproductive system of marsupials is made for giving live birth, not for laying eggs. The only egg-laying mammals are echidnas and platypuses.
yes I live in it. WE live in little oval egg cars
The koala is a marsupial. Monotremes are egg-laying mammals, and koalas do not lay eggs, but give birth to live young.
Mother Koalas naturally leave and say a final goodbye to the young Koala joeys as soon as they reach the age of around 8 to 10 months.
No. They are mammals, so they are born live.
Koalas do not lay eggs. They are not monotremes (egg-laying mammals) but marsupials, and all marsupials give birth to live young, just like placental mammals do.
Yes they do. Coral snakes are egg-layers as opposed to live-bearers.
No a deer does not hatch from an egg. It is mammal so it is born live, from its mother deer.
No they are on their own from the moment they come out of the egg.
The female can only produce 1 egg at a time