Yes. Chinese Koalas are larger and more aggressive than their Australian cousins.
While the Australian Koala will eat only eucalyptus leaves (and drink only beer brewed in Tasmania or South Australia) the Chinese Koala is far less selective.
Chinese Koalas are seldom kept in captivity as they are prone to depression and problem gambling. There are no recorded cases of Chinese Koalas successfully breeding in captivity.
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No.
Koalas cannot live in the rainforest. Rainforests do not support the eucalyptus trees which koalas favour for their food.
Koalas also tend to be found in warm-temperate to sub-tropical zones, not tropical.
Koalas are not bears. Koalas would not live in a rain forest because the type of eucalypt trees they live in and eat do not grow in rain forests.
The koala is an arboreal herbivorous marsupial native to Australia, so you would not find it is an Amazon rain forest. The main diet of a koala is the leaves of the eucalyptus tree.