| Animals
have various miraculous features and each one of them is a miracle of
creation. One of these animals is the koala. The koala feeding on eucalyptus
leaves has various splendid features that ensure a comfortable life for
it on trees.
The bodily design of the koala, a native of Australia, has flawless
details that it needs in the kind of environment it lives. For instance,
its limbs and claws ensure an easy climb to eucalyptus tress with wide
trunks. The two fingers in its forepaws are separate from its other three
fingers. When compared with the human hand, it can be said that the koala
has two thumbs. These thumbs, which are quite different from other fingers,
allows the koala to grip more securely.
Four of the limbs of the koala, with its claws that can stick into the
soft and smooth trunks of trees like a hook, grasp tree branches with
ease as if we grasp a stick, and render a comfortable climb for the koala.
However, the features, of the koala, are not limited to these. Here are
some of them:
A Miniature Bio-chemical Plant
Eucalyptus leaves have a very high fiber and low protein content. These
leaves are rich in strong odorous oil, phenolic combinations and materials
similar to cyanide that are inedible and even poisonous for many mammals.
These materials, which are poisonous for other animals, lose their poisonous
effect when it comes to the koala’s body, for the koala is equipped
with a digestive system having a very special anatomy and physiology.
Just as in the case of other herbivorous mammals, the koala cannot digest
cellulose, the major component of eucalyptus. However, this task is accomplished
by cellulose-digesting microorganisms in the cecum of the koala.
The koala’s cecum, which is quite long, opens to large intestine.
Indeed, the cecum makes up 20% of the total intestine. Its length is 1.3m
long. (Hume, I. D. (1999). Marsupial nutrition. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press)
The cecum is the most interesting part of the koala’s digestive
system. The access of the leaves to the digestive system is delayed right
at this point. Thanks to this delay, the microorganisms in the cecum transform
the cellulose into a structure from which the koala can benefit. With
this structure, the koala’s cecum can be likened to a bio-chemical
plant. While cellulose is being treated in this plant, oil and phenolic
combinations, which are poisonous chemicals, are rendered ineffective
in the liver.
As is known, the unique food of the koala is eucalyptus leaves. This
means, the animal meets its carbohydrate requirements entirely by cellulose
digested by microorganisms. In the absence of microorganisms, it is obvious
that the koala cannot survive. The One Who creates these two creatures
in perfect harmony is the All-Mighty Allah.
Allah is aware of all the needs of the living-beings. He creates them
perfectly. Such examples prove Allah’s infinite power to us. In
one of the verses in the Qur’an, Allah relates that those who can
use their intellect can understand this fact:
He said, “The Lord of the East and the West and everything between
them if you used your intellect.” (Surat ash-Shu‘ara’:
28)
The Koala and the Balance of Water
In the language of Aborigines, the Australian natives, the word “koala”
means “the one who does not drink water.” Indeed, the koala
does not drink water, for it feeds entirely on eucalyptus leaves.
The eucalyptus leaves has a water content of around 40% to 65%. This
ratio never drops below 40%. Because plants with less than 40% water content
dry up and die. Thanks to this feature, eucalyptus leaves provide the
necessary amount of water to the koala.
No doubt, this feature of the leaves is not sufficient alone. The koala’s
body structure utilizing the water in the eucalyptus leaves is extremely
important.
The system in the kidneys that checks water loss of the koala’s
body has a flawless design. Yet, what is more important is the fact that
the digestive system of the koala has the feature of holding water. This
way, only a small amount of the water is thrown out from the koala’s
body.
Thanks to the kind of digestive system that can hold water, the koala
can rely on excess amounts of leaves that do not contain high amounts
of water. If the digestive system of the koala lacked this feature, then
the animal had to be down on earth, being in a constant search for water.
This means, the animal, which lacks proper features to survive anywhere
except for trees, had to face many threats. However, thanks to its special
bodily structure, the koala never meets such difficulties.
The Koala’s Protective Fur
The main factor that determines the koala’s body temperature is
its fur. The fur is created in a way to ensure perfect heat insulation:
The intensity of feathers in the fur may reach around 55 feathers per
square millimeter. The fur in the back of the animal covers 77% of the
body surface. The feathers on the stomach, on the other hand, are only
half as intensive as the back fur, and it covers only 13% of the body
surface.
The length of feathers changes from season to season. In summertime,
the difference between long feathers and short ones become even more.
The thick fur on the back is darker than the loose ones on the stomach;
this way, the koala collects and insulates the sun’s heat. Despite
the loose stomach feathers, the koala can adjust the grade of insulation
by steepening them.
On windy days, the koalas on trees give only their middle-backs against
the wind, and they curl-up into the shape of a ball. As the intensity
of the wind increases, they bend their ears forward. This way, none of
their limbs becomes vulnerable to the air stream. The back fur of the
koala has the highest grade of insulation. It’s insulation is very
close to the grade of insulation of the animals living in the Northern
Pole.
The wind has only a weak effect upon this strong fur on the back of the
animal. Under heavy wind, the fur can maintain a constant body temperature.
Indeed, even on very cold days and under heavy winds, the fur’s
heat protection capacity drops only by 14%. Such data indicates that for
an animal living on the top branches of trees in forests, they are ensured
a perfect protection against cold.
The koala’s metabolism rate is also regulated in a way to complement
the heat insulation of the fur. The metabolism of the koala is quite slow;
it is only 74% of other animals’ metabolism rate. With such a slow
rate, the animal also has a low water loss.
The Koala is a Great Deadlock for Evolutionists…
Let’s remember the features of the koala:
- The koala has a body structure that helps it to easily climb trees
and live a comfortable life there.
- Thanks to the special design of its digestive system, the koala can
get enough food and water from the eucalyptus leaves they find in ample
amounts.
- It has a physiological system that eliminates the poisonous effects
of eucalyptus oils.
- It has a metabolism that ensures maximum use of water taken from leaves.
All of these features are required for the survival of an animal such
as the koala that lives on trees. Could it be that these features, which
are essential for the survival of the koala, have come into existence
by chance, as evolutionists assert?
A man of wisdom, who is able to think without prejudice and objectively,
has only one answer to this question.
No. It is the All-Mighty Allah Who has created the koala with its flawless
features. Allah reveals His infinite compassion and mercy through these
features He grants to all living beings. Our Lord informs us about the
miracles He creates in living beings as follows:
And in your creation and all the creatures He has
spread about there are Signs for people with certainty. (Surat al-Jathiyya:
4)
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