• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Watch Usually Solitary Wild Koalas Captured On Film Snuggling Socially For First Time

February 15, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Three male koalas have been filmed grooming each other in a manner only reported once before. Although stroking a koala is near the top of most tourists to Australia’s wishlist, this is only the second reported example of males doing it to each other and the first time it’s been caught on film.

ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE

In popular imagination, koalas’ reputation has gone up and down. Although their button eyes and ridiculously furry ears made them an early favorite in children’s literature, one Australian minister for tourism denounced them as “Flea-ridden, piddling, stinking, scratching, rotten little things.” Documentaries showing them mating convinced many Australians he was right, although when an environment group conducted a search for Australia’s most beloved species by dressing up fundraisers in different costumes, those in koala onesies raised the most.

However much people may love or hate koalas, zoologists have been confident they don’t like each other much, mothers and joeys aside. To the extent they interact rather than ignore each other, fights over territory are the norm, aside from some bonding among females in captivity, and one isolated report.

Consequently, Deakin University PhD student Darcy Watchorn, now at Zoos Victoria, was very surprised when he saw three subadult males sitting companionably on a branch, with two engaging in grooming and sniffing each other’s genitals. Subsequently, the third koala joined in while one and then the other of the original pair took a break. Nor was this just a brief encounter, Watchorn witnessed the interactions continue for two hours, although one of the trio left after about an hour. Two of the three were seen behaving similarly the following day.



Koalas are endangered over most of their range, thanks to habitat loss, dog attacks, and chlamydia. However, Watchorn was working in the Otway Ranges, where a few years before koala populations had boomed so much that they killed most of their food trees by overharvesting. Since then, the population has been maintained through contraceptives, but the isolation of the area and boom-bust cycle has led to very low genetic diversity.

Overcrowding often leads to aggression rather than affection, but Watchorn told IFLScience, “It depends on the context and the species. I saw quite a lot of fairly violent behaviors among older males, and these were more frequent than among lower-density populations.”

Watchorn wrote up the observation precisely because it was so unusual. The only previous account came from French Island, on the other side of Melbourne, another area with a dense koala population with low genetic diversity. Watchorn thinks it is possible that similar genetics contributed to the unusual friendliness of the koalas he watched, something known as the “kin recognition hypothesis.”

These young male koalas sitting together on a tree branch were witnessed behaving in an unusually friendly manner. All wore tracking collars, which sometimes caught the camera's flash.

These young male koalas were witnessed behaving in an unusually friendly manner. All wore tracking collars, which sometimes caught the camera’s flash.

Image courtesy of Darcy Watchorn

The fact all three individuals were not fully mature (3.5-5.5 years old based on how worn their teeth are), as were those on French Island, was probably also a factor. Female koalas have been observed grooming and interacting sexually, (described as stress release) but only in captivity.

Watchorn’s work isn’t all good news for koalas’ reputations. He also witnessed a joey fall out of a tree as a male brushed it aside when it attempted to mate with its mother, something Watchorn wrote up in a previous observation.

The joey survived the fall, thanks to landing in soft grass and a general robustness of the species, but Watchorn says he thought it was too young to return to safety on its own, having only recently left the pouch. Watchorn chose to violate biologists’ usual non-intervention, and returned the joey to its mother, rather than risking it being killed by a fox. It appeared healthy over subsequent months. Without that action, Walchorn told IFLScience, this could have been the first recorded case of “accidental infanticide” resulting from male koala’s aggressive approach to mating.

Walchorn’s observations of the friendly subadults is published open access in Australian Mammalogy, while the report of the falling joey is published in the same journal. 

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Google Workspace opens up spaces for all users
  2. Stable raises $46.5M in Greycroft-led round to help businesses manage ‘volatile’ commodity prices
  3. Universe 25: How A Mouse “Utopia” Experiment Ended In A Nightmare
  4. Maps Show Antarctic Is Turning Green With Plant Life – A Troubling Sign For The Planet

Source Link: Watch Usually Solitary Wild Koalas Captured On Film Snuggling Socially For First Time

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • The Greatest Prank Ever Pulled In Space Really Fooled NASA’s Mission Control
  • Why Does Seafood Glow In The Dark? This Curious Phenomenon Has A Teeny Tiny Explanation
  • In 1973, A Handful Of People Witnessed A Whopping 74-Minute Total Eclipse
  • Does Putting A Metal Spoon In Champagne Really Keep It Fizzy?
  • Why Scientists Are Going Over A Kilometer Underground In The Search For Alien Life
  • The Deadliest Animal In The US Isn’t What You’d Expect
  • Humpback Whale Flippers Let Them Move “Like Underwater Fighter Pilots” To Make Unique Bubble Nets
  • The Only Place On Earth Where You (Yes, You) Can Search For Diamonds – And Keep What You Find
  • Bizarre Gravitational Collisions Reveal Hints Of First Black Hole Throuple
  • Newly Discovered Dinosaur’s “Sail-Like” Structure Along Its Back May Have Attracted Mates
  • What Are Lagrange Points, And Why Are They Important?
  • Fish Left The Ocean 10 Million Years Earlier Than Thought, JWST Spots Tiny New Moon Just Outside Uranus’s Rings, And Much More This Week
  • IFLScience We Have Questions: Do Humans Have Pheromones?
  • The Least Visited Place On Earth Is Disappearing Quickly – And May Be Reborn Online
  • Climate Models Have Predicted Sea Level Rise Almost Perfectly For 30 Years
  • Atlantic Great White Sharks Are Creeping Up The East Coast Of The US And Canada
  • New World Screwworm: What Is It, And Why Is It Hitting The Headlines?
  • Australia Has Its Very Own “Area 51”
  • Think You Know What A Bald Eagle Sounds Like? Think Again
  • GLP-1s: Your No-Nonsense Guide To The Latest Science Behind The “Skinny Jabs”
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version