The koala is regarded as the epitome  cuddliness. However, animal lovers will be saddened to hear that this lovable marsupial has been moved to the endangered species list. The Australian Koala Foundation estimates there are somewhere  43,000-100,000 koalas left  the wild. Their numbers have been dwindling rapidly due to disease, loss  habitat, bushfires, being hit  cars, and other threats. Stuart Blanch  the World Wildlife Fund in Australia said: "Koalas have gone from no listing to vulnerable to endangered  a decade. That is a shockingly fast decline." He added that koalas risk "sliding  extinction" unless there are "stronger laws...to protect their forest homes".
The koala has huge cultural significance  Australia. Wikipedia writes: "The koala is well known worldwide and is a major draw  Australian zoos and wildlife parks. It has been featured  advertisements, games, cartoons, and as soft toys. It benefited the national tourism industry  over an estimated billion Australian dollars in 1998, a figure that has since grown." Despite this, efforts to protect the koala have been failing. Australia's Environment Minister Sussan Ley said there have been "many pressures  the koala," and that it is "vulnerable to climate change and to disease". She said the 2019-2020 bushfires, which killed  least 6,400 of the animals, were "a tipping point".