Yes. Koalas are true mammals. Like other mammals, koalas give birth to live young, they feed their young with milk, and they are warmblooded, all defining features of Mammals.
Koalas, specifically, are an order of mammals known as marsupialia, or marsupials. They are mammals in every sense of the word, but they also have a pouch in which most of the development of the young joey occurs.
The koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) is an Australian, marsupial, mammal.
No. A koala is a mammal. Specifically, it is a marsupial, which is a pouched mammal.
A Koala is a marsupial mammal, not a habitat.
a koala is a marsupial mammal.
Australian, arboreal, herbivorous, marsupial, and mammal would all work.
The koala is not a bear or a rodent, it is a marsupial mammal.
yes
The koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) is an Australian, marsupial, mammal.
A koala, which has no relation at all to the bear family, is a marsupial, that is, a pouched mammal.
A koala is a marsupial mammal, therefore it is multicellular.
A koala is a marsupial mammal, therefore it is multicellular.
koala bear