Koalas do not actually live alone. They are not solitary animals, but live in communities where the social structure is quite complex. Koalas are territorial, but each koala within the social group has its own specific range for feeding, which may or may not overlap the range of its neighbour. There is always one dominant male in each social group, but he is by no means the only male.
Koalas do feed alone and travel alone, but they understand their own social structure. When one of their community dies, another does not immediately move in and take its place. It takes about a year for the scent of the previous occupant to fade, and only then will another koala move in to its range.
No. Koalas are endemic to Australia alone.
Koalas do not live in Florida at all. They are native to Australia alone.
Koalas do not live in Africa. They are endemic to Australia alone.
No. Koalas are endemic to Australia alone. Australia is not in Asia.
No Koalas are found in Australia. They are not bears.
No. Koalas do not live in North America at all. They are native to Australia alone, and are not found nywhere outside of Australia.
Hyenas do, but koalas do not. Koalas are endemic to Australia alone. They are found in the wild in the eastern states. Koalas also cannot live in grasslands, as grasslands do not support the eucalyptus trees on which koalas depend for food and shelter.
Yes. Koalas are generally solitary animals, though they live in complex colonies with overlapping territories.
No. There are no koalas in Ghana. Koalas are native to Australia alone.
It usally is already old anough to live alone and the koalas are trained already.
Koalas live alone. They are solitary animals that live neither in groups nor in families. Joeys stay with their mothers until the new breeding season, but that is all.
No, koalas do not live in the deserts of Australia. They need eucalyptus trees for food and they do not grow in the deserts.