Someone adept at handling wild koalas for purposes such as medical treatment or research. Wild koalas will generally put up with humans coming quite close (compared with other wild animals), but if they need to be transported, they must be held in a particular way or transferred to a canvas bag to protect both the koala and handler from injury. Koala have very sharp non-contractable claws and strong front incisors for clipping off leaf; so scratches and bites are very likely if koalas are not handled properly. The kind of koalas they let you hold/pat at wildlife sancturies/parks are humanised, ie used to human contact (probably due to being orphaned as joeys and/or raised by humans for a number of years), so require less specialised handling. See "Diary of a Koalawrangler" at www.koalawrangler.com.
No. There is no king koala, and koalas are not bears. There is no such creature as a "koala bear". It is just "koala".
A koala bear is called 'koala' in French.
A koala scat simply refers to the droppings of a koala.
The Farsi word for Koala is "کوالا" which is pronounced as "kuwala".
A koala is not a bear but a marsupial.The koala's species is Phascolarctus cinereus.
It is incorrect to refer to a koala as a koala bear for the simple reason that the koala is not a member of the bear family. The koala is a marsupial, while the bear is a placental mammal. There are no native bears in Australia.
Koala
Koala, koala, please come down from the tree.
Adventures of the Little Koala was created in 1984.
The koala is a member of the phylum chordata.The koala is also not a bear.
koala
No. "Koala" is a noun, not an adjective.