Phascolarctos cinereus (Goldfuss, 1817)
Koala Bear
Species recognized by The Integrated Taxonomic Information System
, T Orrell (custodian) in
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Overview
Biology
Both males and females reach sexual maturity at around two years old, but males are rarely large enough to compete for mating access until four years old. Females normally give birth to one young every year but in older females this may reduce to one every two years. The newborn 'joey' is underdeveloped and crawls rapidly through the mother's fur to her pouch, where it suckles for six months. During weaning, in addition to milk, the joey feeds on a substance called 'pap' which is a liquefied form of the mother's faeces and provides the joey's digestive system with the micro-organisms necessary for digesting the eucalyptus leaves (4). Having first left the pouch during this time, the joey rides on its mother's belly, and later rides on her back. It normally remains with its mother until the following year's joey has emerged from the pouch (3).

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