Koalas typically give birth to one joey at a time, although twins can occur on rare occasions. After a gestation period of about 35 days, the tiny, underdeveloped joey crawls into its mother's pouch, where it will stay for several months as it continues to grow and develop. The joey will remain with its mother for up to a year, gradually transitioning to eating eucalyptus leaves.
the baby koala does not look funny but it is very cute =]
They reproduce koala babies
Usually all the time
how much can a koala weih when its full grown
No. Young koalas are called joeys, just like the young of all marsupials.The term 'cub' is reserved for bears, and koalas are notbears, despite the misnomer of "koala bear" often being applied.
The common name for a koala is "koala". The scientific name is Phascolarctos cinereus.
A koala is a small creature, so a grizzly bear is much heavier.
Aubrey Lang has written: 'Adventures of Baby Bear' 'Baby Ground Squirrel (Nature Babies)' 'Baby Koala (Nature Babies)' 'Baby Owl (Nature Babies)' 'Baby Elephant (Nature Babies)' 'Baby Grizzly Bear (Nature Babies)' 'Baby Penguin' 'Baby Seal (Nature Babies)'
Koalas usually have just one baby at a time, but twins are not unknown.
Koalas, which are not bears at all, usually have just one young (joey) per year.
First of all, the koala is not a bear: it is a marsupial. Koalas do not have white skin: they have ash-coloured grey type of skin tending to pink, beneath their thick fur.
An adult male southern koala may weigh up to 15 kg, or 33 pounds.