Cockspur Vine vs koala

Pisonia aculeata compared with Phascolarctos cinereus

Key Differences

  • Cockspur Vine is Least Concern while koala is Vulnerable.

Taxonomic Classification

Rank Cockspur Vine koala
Kingdom Plantae (Plants) Animalia (Animals)
Phylum Magnoliophyta (Flowering Plants) Chordata (Chordates)
Class Magnoliopsida (Dicots) Mammalia (Mammals)
Order Caryophyllales (Caryophyllales) Diprotodontia (Marsupials)
Family Nyctaginaceae Phascolarctidae (Koalas)
Genus Pisonia Phascolarctos (Koalas)
Species Pisonia aculeata Phascolarctos cinereus

Conservation Status

Cockspur Vine

LC — Least Concern

koala

VU — Vulnerable

Population: ~100.0K

Trend: Decreasing ↓

Physical Characteristics

Attribute Cockspur Vine koala
Diet Herbivore
Average Lifespan 15 years
Average Length 75 cm
Average Weight 10.0 kg

Habitat & Geographic Range

Cockspur Vine

Habitat

Inhabits flooded grasslands and savannas within the Afrotropic biogeographic realm.

Range

Distributed across Brazil, Colombia, Mozambique, and Taiwan.

koala

Habitat

Typically found in grasslands, forests, and vegetated habitats.

Range

Found in Australia. Currently classified as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List, this species faces significant conservation challenges across its range.

Cockspur Vine

The cockspur vine (Pisonia aculeata) is a scrambling, often aggressively spiny liana or shrub in the family Nyctaginaceae — the four o'clock family — distributed pantropically in coastal and lowland thickets, forest edges, mangrove margins, and disturbed vegetation across the Americas, Africa, and Asia-Pacific, with documented occurrences in Brazil, Colombia, Mozambique, and Taiwan among many other countries. The plant is named for its hooked spines, which anchor it to neighbouring vegetation and enable it to climb and sprawl across host shrubs and trees, sometimes smothering them. Leaves are simple and opposite; flowers are small, inconspicuous, and unisexual, produced in branched clusters. The sticky fruits of the related genus Pisonia — particularly P. grandis and P. brunoniana — are notorious for entrapping and killing small seabirds in nesting colonies, but P. aculeata's fruits are less dramatically adhesive. The plant colonises disturbed coastal vegetation, roadsides, and secondary growth readily, and can become invasive in some regions outside its native range. It tolerates salt spray and is characteristic of coastal scrub and tropical dry forest ecotones. Some traditional uses have been recorded for leaf preparations. Pisonia aculeata is classified as Least Concern by the IUCN, reflecting its wide pantropical distribution and tolerance of disturbed habitats, though it is seldom abundant and its ecological role in intact native communities is that of a minor woody climber.

koala

Iconic marsupial of eastern and southeastern Australia, koalas weigh up to 15 kg and spend up to 22 hours daily sleeping to conserve energy from their low-calorie eucalyptus leaf diet. Highly specialized to process toxic eucalyptus compounds that would kill most other mammals, they have gut microbiomes uniquely adapted for detoxification. Listed as Endangered in 2022, with populations decimated by chlamydia disease, habitat clearing, and climate change.

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