Most koalas are taken when they are on the ground, moving between their home trees. This is when they are vulnerable to dingoes, dogs and foxes.
Yes. Koalas have a range of trees within a radius of up to a square kilometre, which are their "home trees". They regularly move from tree to tree along the ground, which is when they are at their most vulnerable from dogs and being hit by cars.
Koalas can climb straight up eucalyptus trees that extend for 30 to 60 metres in height.
The main strategy the koala uses for survival is climbing trees quickly and efficiently. Koalas are one of the few mammals able to climb a tall, straight eucalyptus tree and thereby evade ground-dwelling predators.
There is no set number of trees in a koala's territory. There may be dozens; there may be hundreds. A koala's territory covers up to a square kilometre, so it depends on the individual koala.
they can't climb trees
climb up trees I doubt that monkeys would want to stay away from prey. They are more likely to be wary of predators.
Diabetes?
Tests have not been carried out on the speed with which a koala climbs a tree. Suffice to say that a koala is not as quick as some of the smaller marsupials, such as possums and gliders, but they can muster up enough speed to get out of the way of a predator.
High
he can climb up trees
no
yes they do they have claws