Koalas were nearly exterminated in the early 20th century because they were extensively hunted for their warm, thick fur and their environments were destroyed by fires caused by humans.
Tag: Koala
The koala is a completely arboreal marsupial native to Australia. This folivorous herbivore has a specialized diet and relies on eucalyptus for its food and water requirements. Because of its poor diet, the koala is mostly sedentary and sleeps most of the day in trees.
Free-For-All: Koala
Sarah used digital media to depict an emotional scene of a mother koala and her baby. This beautifully haunting piece used muted colors to depict the suffocating smoke of the Australian bushfires and a pop of bright orange tones to enhance the vibrant light of the blaze. With a baby koala peering into the viewer’s eyes, the spectator feels challenged to act in order to help the koalas in their plight.
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At high population densities, koalas can defoliate preferred tree species, causing tree death and subsequent koala population crash and making the species difficult to manage.
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Climate change is expected to lead to an increased rate of koala population reduction over the next 20-30 years, and the impacts of other threats will magnify over this period.
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The koala's population size has declined about 30% over the last 18-24 years due to climate change and a severe decline in inland regions most exposed to recent drought.
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Koalas are currently threatened by habitat fragmentation and modification, bushfires, and disease, but their main threat is habitat destruction.
Koala Host Train
FaunaFocus raised $1,827.68 for the World Wildlife Fund-Australia (WWF)'s Keep Koala's Climbing Wild-Livestream event benefitting the vulnerable koala.
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The koala is evaluated as "Vulnerable" on the IUCN Red List due to its projected rate of decline as a result of climate change, habitat destruction, and disease.
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Young koalas weigh less than 0.5 g. when born and live in the mother's pouch for 5-7 months feeding on milk and predigested leaves.
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Although there is no national recovery plan for the koala, there's numerous captive breeding facilities internationally.
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Female koalas are seasonally polyestrous and usually breed once a year giving birth to 1-2 young in mid-summer after a gestation of 25-35 days.
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During the breeding season, male koalas use loud, bellowing calls and resonant, growling expirations to advertise their presence and warn off males.
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Koalas are polygynous and breed seasonally, but males don't usually mate until they reach 4 years old because competition for females requires a larger size.
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Koalas copulate in trees for less than two minutes at a time with the male grasping the back of the female's neck with his teeth.
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Koalas are sexually dimorphic as males are larger and 50% heavier than females and have broader faces, smaller ears, and a large chest gland rather than a pouch.
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Because the koala has no sweat glands, it cools itself by licking its arms and stretching out as it rests in the trees.
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The koala has adapted to its high-fiber, low-protein diet with reduced cheek teeth, highly cusped molars, cheek pouches, and a caecum that's 4 times its body size and can eat 500 grams daily.
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Koalas are mainly nocturnal and feed at night with adult males very active at night, moving constantly through their range, both ejecting male rivals and mating with any receptive females.
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Individual adult koalas occupy fixed home ranges that have extensive overlap with males occupying larger ranges that overlap those of females, sub-adults, and non-breeding males.
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Koalas inhabit temperate and subtropical/tropical dry forests and dry savanna habitats typically dominated by eucalyptus species.
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Koalas may live past 10 years in the wild, and there have been reports of lifespans over 20 years in captivity.
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Koalas from the southern end of the range are generally larger in size than their northern counterparts and have coats that are generally longer and darker.
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The koala's paws are large, and both fore and hind feet have five strongly clawed digits that enable the koala to grip branches as it climbs.
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Koalas are primarily solitary animals and live in loose-knit groups with only one individual per tree.
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Because koalas don't drink often due to the high water content of eucalyptus, their common name derives from the Dharug "gula", meaning "no water".
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Koalas are completely arboreal, only coming to the ground to move to another tree or to lick up soil or gravel which aids in digestion.
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Koalas have dense, wooly fur that varies with geographic location and ears fringed with long, white hairs.
Koala Host Train: Schedule
Throughout the month of December, FaunaFocus will be collaborating with WWF and hosting another 24-hour charity host train in order to keep koalas climbing!
View the 24-hour schedule featuring 13 different artists!
Koala
The leaves that koalas feast on are highly toxic, but koalas have a flora of bacteria in their stomachs that metabolize the toxins of the leaves.
Koala Trivia
Do you think you know the koala? Test your knowledge of koala FaunaFacts with this trivia quiz!
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Koalas have a vestigial tail.
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Because of their low-quality diet, koalas conserve energy by their relatively sedentary behavior, moving slowly and sleeping up to 18 hours a day.
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Although koalas are commonly called "koala bears," they are not bears, but instead marsupials in the Diprotodontia order.