Australia
They natively grow in Australia.
you got all your information wrong you.
If you cut a Eucalyptus back to ground level in the spring it will grow as a shrub and show juvenile foliage, let it grow and it will quickly become a tree.
No.
The koala's environment is typically Australian eucalyptus bushland. The trees may grow close together, or there may be patches of eucalyptus trees near suburbia, where other trees have been knocked down. Australian gum trees grow tall and straight, with numerous branches and grey-green leaves. Their trunks vary from smooth and pale to rough, stringy and reddish brown.
Eucalyptus trees grow mainly in Australia. There are over 700 different species in Australia and only around 15 outside on the continent. Australia has a very small rainforest area, so it is true that eucalyptus trees do not grow mainly in rainforests.
Where a koala lives, which is its habitat, is typically Australian eucalyptus bushland. The trees may grow close together, or there may be patches of eucalyptus trees near suburbia, where other trees have been knocked down. Australian gum trees grow tall and straight, with numerous branches and grey-green leaves. Their trunks vary from smooth and pale to rough, stringy and reddish brown.
No. Eucalyptus trees grow in a variety of habitats, but the rainforest is not one of them. They are found in Australia's bushland, in dense and scrubby woodland, coastal areas, the desert and even Alpine areas.
It smells like menthol cough drops. Eucalyptus trees grow very fast and are resistant to disease, but not many sorts of wildlife live among them. They have been introduced to South America, were they cover many hectares and are considered by many an invasive species.
Hair grows back one way or another. Skin cells in the head will produce the material which sprouts out as hair. If the scalp was burnt and it was scarred your hair may not grow back though. The hair follicles would have been damaged. But if your hair just got burnt it will grow back.
The white box variety of the Eucalyptus plant can be found in Victoria, Queensland, and New South Wales. Its official name is Eucalyptus Albens.