Koalas are completely harmless. They do not kill people. They are herbivores as well.
It is possible that a cornered koala may scratch someone who approached it. Koalas are arboreal herbivorous marsupials. A koala will only attack if it's cornered and offered no chance of escape.
More damage is probably done when drivers try to swerve koalas crossing the road, or even when helpful drivers stop and wait for the koala. The car that stops or swerves is more likely to be hit by other cars.
Selfish people kill animals for their fur without any regard of the survival of the species. Further to this hunting, the habitat of koalas is limited. Some people don't actually want to kill the koalas and they don't realize they because when people cut down forests they're also cutting down their homes and food. Note: Koalas are not hunted for their fur any more. Koalas are now protected, and there is no legal trade in koala fur. The vast majority of people do not actively engage in killing koalas. Only those with no conscience might think killing koalas is good sport. Careless drivers also kill koalas when these creatures try crossing the road between trees in their home range.
For exactly the same reasons people from every other country in the world kill people.
centerpeds can kill people if they get their stingers in you and sting you or they squart their poison at you
Guns don't kill people; PEOPLE kill people. A person has to point the gun and pull the trigger. The problem with trying to control guns is that criminals do not follow those kinds of laws.However...Guns are a tool that can be used to kill more readily, or to threaten death. Other weapons require some skill, at least, to use.
people are wierd
Selfish people kill animals for their fur without any regard of the survival of the species. Further to this hunting, the habitat of koalas is limited. Some people don't actually want to kill the koalas and they don't realize they because when people cut down forests they're also cutting down their homes and food. Note: Koalas are not hunted for their fur any more. Koalas are now protected, and there is no legal trade in koala fur. The vast majority of people do not actively engage in killing koalas. Only those with no conscience might think killing koalas is good sport. Careless drivers also kill koalas when these creatures try crossing the road between trees in their home range.
A century ago, koalas were killed for their fur to satisfy the US and UK demand for koala fur. Koalas are now protected by law, and may not be hunted or killed. However, there are always people who kill animals to suit their own sadistic tendencies.
Koalas do not hurt people in any way. Koalas usually avoid people, except when the dire need for water in a bushfire or heatwaves sends them automatically seeking water from people. People, on the other hand, hurt koalas in many ways. They introduce non-native species to destroy the habitat; they clear known koala bushland; they allow their unsupervised dogs to kill koalas and their unsupervised children to shoot them with air gun pellets.
Not any more. Koalas were once killed for their fur, as koalas fur was in high demand overseas. Koalas are now protected by law, and it is illegal to hunt them for any reason.
Yes. The Australian Aborigines found that koalas were easy to catch and kill for food (despite the fact that Europeans did not even notice koalas for the first decade of colonisation).
Dogs in suburban areas of Australian cities, as well as wild dogs, are among the biggest threats to koalas. When people allow their dogs to run loose unsupervised, they can very quickly corner and kill a koala.
Not "anything", no. Koalas live exclusively on a diet of eucalyptus leaves and sometimes blossoms.
No. People do not keep pet koalas. This is prohibited, as they are a protected species. Some fauna sanctuaries keep koalas, and some people hold licences to care for injured wildlife (such as koalas) until they are ready to be released back into their natural environment.
People cut down the koalas' homes to make farms, logging, and urban houses. Urban sprawl leads to koalas killed on the road and attacked by pets. In the past, people hunted koalas and made them almost extinct; but laws were passed in the 1920s to protect koalas.
Koalas do not spend all of their time in trees. Koalas have a certain number of "home range" trees which they travel between. It is when they are on the ground that they are most vulnerable. People build houses in koala habitats, and they bring their pet dogs with them. As the koalas move along the ground between trees, the dogs' hunting instincts cut in, and they do what just comes naturally - chase and kill the koala. Compared to a dog, the koala is really quite defenceless. Not enough people train their dogs - and dogs can be trained to leave koalas and wildlife alone. Also, not enough people keep their dogs in their own backyards, or ensure that they are properly supervised. It is actions like this which lead to the death of koalas from domestic dogs.
No. Koalas have never been worshipped. Australia's indigenous people did not worship animals.
Not if you don't keep killing them. (Koalas are not bears. That's a pretty common mistake.) In the start of colonization in Australia, people did hunt koalas for their fur as it is a really soft hide. They were easy to kill as they were asleep as well. Later on though, the hunting of koalas became illegal. The problems facing them today is the land clearing of their natural habitat. People are cutting down the eucalyptus trees which they eat (the leaves), and they don't have as much food. At the moment, koala numbers are going slowly back up. If no more land clearing happens, koalas will once again, be abundant.