The koala's Latin name is Phascolarctos, meaning pouched bear. Woolly,
snub-nosed and round-eared, its bear-like appearance is deceptive.
In fact, the koala is a unique marsupial. (A marsupial is characterized
as an animal which bears young still in an embryonic state, rearing them
for long periods of time in a pouch on its abdomen.
Other members
of the family include kangaroos and wallabies, rat kangaroos, wombats and
opossums.) An adult male koala grows to about two-and-a-half feet
tall and weighs about 30 pounds.
Diet: The koala,
a nocturnal eater, exists by feeding solely on the oily leaves of certain
species of smooth-barked Eucalyptus trees. A unique digestive system
allows it to consume leaves which are poisonous to other animals (except
for very young leaves--the poison in them is so concentrated, even koalas
cannot tolerate it). They consume up to two-and-a-half pounds of
eucalyptus per night.
Reproduction:
The koala has a low birth rate. After a gestation period of 32 to
35 days, most females bear one baby every other year. The cub is
born in a hairless, embryonic state and its first journey is from the birth
canal to its mother's pouch, where-in lie the mother's nipples. For
the next six months, development continues outside the mother's body, but
within her pouch; then, for the following three months, the baby explores
the larger world outside the pouch, staying close to its mother, often
riding on her back.
The pouch itself is unique
among the marsupials as it is backward-directed, seemingly inappropriate
in an animal that is normally oriented head-up on a tree trunk. However,
the babies do not fall to the ground because they instinctively hold on
tight with their mouths and are supported by maternal muscles which rim
the door to the pouch.
Once a koala cub is weaned,
it seldom--if ever--needs to drink again: koala means "no drink"
in the Aboriginal language.
Status: The
extensive logging, trapping and epidemics which accompanied colonial settlement
of Australia once threatened koalas with near extinction in the 1930s.
Today, conservationists, recognizing the appeal and rare qualities of the
koala, have established a number of reserves for koalas and other unique
wildlife throughout Australia. The most concentrated populations
are now in eastern Queensland. Along with the kangaroo, the koala
has become a national Australian symbol.
However, their highly specialized,
single-plant diet makes them extremely vulnerable--especially if the pressures
of civilization threaten the sole source of nourishment in their natural
habitats. Also, their delicately-balanced body chemistry makes them
unusually susceptible to the viruses and bacteria which European peoples
and animals brought with them in colonial days.
In recent years, a strong
venereal disease has been threatening the koala's reproductive capability.
Babies have been born dead, deformed, have survived only briefly, or the
affected females have become barren. Scientists are continuing to
seek a cure for this disease as well as endeavoring to locate and isolate
healthy animals to establish sounder breeding groups.
World Wildlife Fund is endeavoring
to put a stop to the illegal traffic in endangered species as well as to
create and maintain reserves to protect them.