Post by Admin on Sept 1, 2013 1:47:28 GMT
www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/episodes/bears-of-the-last-frontier/hour-one-city-of-bears/brown-bear-fact-sheet/6522/
All brown bears are of a single species which can be divided into numerous sub-species.
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Ursidae
Genus: Ursus
Species: arctos
Is it a brown bear or a grizzly? The answer is that all grizzlies are brown bears, but not all brown bears are grizzlies. The grizzly is a North American subspecies of brown bear with the Latin name Ursus arctos horribilis. The correct scientific name for a grizzly is “brown bear,” but only coastal bears in Alaska and Canada are generally referred to as such, while inland and Arctic bears and those found in the lower 48 States are called grizzly bears.
Size and Weight: Walking on all fours, brown bears have a height of about 3.5 feet (just over 1 meter). They can reach heights of 6-7 feet (1.5-2.5 meters) when standing on their hind legs. There are regional size differences among bears; brown bears are generally larger in the north—likely due to the colder climates. The largest of the brown bears, is the Kodiak bear (Ursus arctos middendorffi), is found only in the Kodiak archipelago islands along the southeastern coast of Alaska. Kodiaks can stand more than 10 feet (3 meters) tall on their hind legs and 5 feet (1.5 meters) tall when on all fours.
Brown bears exhibit sexual dimorphism, with males being significantly larger than females. This size difference is a result of larger males having better mating success than smaller males.
Male bears are close to 2 times heavier than females. A typical adult male weighs between 300-850 pounds (130-390 kilograms), while the adult female weighs between 200-450 pounds (90-200 kilograms). Kodiak bears, the largest of the species, can weigh over 1,000 pounds (450 kilograms), as can those brown bears on the Alaska Peninsula as featured in episode 1 of Bears of the Last Frontier.
Fur: The coloring of brown bears differs according to environmental conditions, such as diet and temperature, which are specific to the geographical area in which they live. Their fur can be whitish, blond, red, or black, in addition to the typical dark brown.
Diet: Brown bears are apex predators, meaning they are at the top of the food chain.
Though brown bears are often perceived as carnivores, they are actually omnivorous. Depending on season, habitat, and region, they can eat grasses, berries, sedges, fungi, mosses, roots, nuts, fruits, honey, insects, birds, and fish (trout, bass, and particularly adult salmon returning to rivers to spawn). In some regions, 80-90% of their diet consists of vegetation. Bears will also hunt mammals such as rodents, mountain sheep, caribou, elk, moose, and will eat carrion, as well.
To prepare for hibernation, in the summer months bears can consume up to 90 pounds (40 kilograms) of food a day, and gain up to 3 pounds (1.3 kilograms) per day. It’s especially important that pregnant females build up their fat reserves so that they are able to nurse their young inside the den.
Habitat: Brown bears live in a variety of habitats, including forests, woodlands, alpine and subalpine meadows, and even the Arctic tundra. Following the food, they relocate depending on the seasons—living at lower elevations in the spring and higher elevations in wintertime.
Geography: Brown bears are the most widely distributed bears in the world. They are found in North America, Europe, and Asia. Two subspecies of brown bear are native to North America: the grizzly bear (U. a. horribilis) and the Kodiak bear (U. a. middendorffi). Grizzlies were once widespread throughout North America, inhabiting the Great Plains region with north/south ranges from Alaska to Mexico, and west/east ranges from California to Ohio. Now, they are found only in four U.S. mainland states: Washington, Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming where fewer than 2000 remain. Brown bears are far more numerous in the state of Alaska where there are an estimated 30,000 bears—about 95% of the entire population in the United States.
Lifespan: Brown bears typically live 20 to 25 years in the wild.
Breeding: Brown bears reach sexual maturity at an average age of 5 years. The bears locate potential mates primarily by scent, with mating season generally lasting from early May through mid-July. A female usually mates once every 2 to 4 years, and males vigorously compete for the chance to mate with her. In addition, because females mate with several males throughout the season, a male may attempt to guard a female from other males for a period of 1 to 3 weeks after mating. Unlike most mammals, female bears have delayed implantation— the fertilized egg will float in her uterus for approximately five months before implanting. Then, after a gestation period of 180-270 days, the mother gives birth in the den, usually while still hibernating. Cubs are born blind and toothless sometime between December and March, and weigh only about a pound. The sleeping mother nurses the cubs until April or May, when the hibernation period ends. Females can give birth to up to four cubs, but typically have two cubs. Cubs remain with their mothers for 2 to 4 years, during which time the mother usually does not mate. If the mother does mate, the cubs may leave to avoid any aggression from the adult male.
Hibernation: Brown bears hibernate for 5-8 months each year, beginning in the fall months. However, unlike many other hibernating mammals, brown bears do not enter true hibernation; they can wake if disturbed.
Bears hibernate in dens they dig in hillsides, choosing northward-facing slopes to ensure optimal snow cover. While hibernating, bears experience a drop in temperature and a decrease in both heart rate and metabolism. They do not excrete any waste during this time.
Social Structure: Brown bears live primarily solitary lives with the exceptions of breeding and cub rearing. Individuals typically stake out a home range. Males have areas of about 200-500 square miles (500-1300 square kilometers), though some have ranges of up to 1615 square miles (4180 square kilometers) in size. Females generally have smaller home ranges, averaging 50-300 square miles (130-780 square kilometers) in size. Though brown bears are territorial, their home ranges often overlap, and boundaries are not always enforced. They mark their range with their scent, stamping urine into the ground or rubbing their bodies against trees to leave valuable information for other bears about their size and presence.
Though social interactions are relatively rare, there is a social hierarchy in bear society; adult males are dominant, and females with cubs are dominant over young males and females without cubs.
Brown bears communicate through sound, movement, and smell. They can express emotions through a series of different vocalizations such as grunts, moans, and growls.
Conservation Status: In 1975, the Endangered Species Act listed the brown bear as a threatened species in the lower 48 States.
Threats: Logging, mining, and urban expansion results in habitat loss and a decrease in food sources. Habitat destruction also pushes brown bears into more developed areas, making conflicts with humans more likely. Human-caused mortality is the number one cause of bear population decline. Illegal hunting can be a particular problem – especially for small bear populations like those in the lower 48. The reproductive rate of brown bears is very slow, so their populations are unable to “bounce back” easily after they have been depleted.
Additional Facts:
Brown bears have a bulky muscle mass located above the shoulders. This hump is designed to power the forelimbs and makes them exceptionally powerful diggers. This is one of the features that distinguishes them from the more common North American black bear which lacks such a shoulder hump.
Brown bears have long claws that can be the length of a human finger. They are used for digging plant roots and excavating dens.
Compared to black bears, brown bears have rounder, shorter ears and longer, less curved claws.
Brown bears have keen senses of hearing, smell,and eye site.
They can run up to 35 miles per hour (or 55 km/h).
Brown bears are very good swimmers. As cubs, they can climb trees, but as they grow larger that becomes less of an option.
They can be active during either day or night.
Brown bears can lose up to 40% of their body weight during hibernation.
Brown bears are often regarded as one of the more aggressive species of bear.
Brown bears have recently been encroaching on polar bear habitats, perhaps due to climate change.
The grizzly’s name comes from the white-tipped, grayish, or “grizzly” furs in the bear’s coat. However, the naturalist George Ord mistook this word for “grisly,” influenced by Lewis and Clark’s description of their terrifying personal encounter with a bear, and named the subspecies horribilis.
Polar bears are thought to have evolved from brown bears approximately 150,000 years ago.
Reproduction: Brown bears mate in early summer, but the embryo (blastocyst) does not implant and start to grow until the mother enters the den in late fall. Successful implantation depends on the female gaining enough body weight to sustain pregnancy. The cubs are born in January or February while the mother is sleeping. They usually weigh about one pound at birth, and their litters range between one and five, with two on average, and survival rates are low. The cubs are born blind and helpless, but by drinking their mother’s rich milk they gain weight quickly. By late April or early May, the cubs are ready to leave the den and explore with their mothers. Mother bears are renowned for their ferocity when defending their young, especially against the threats of other bears and humans. Cubs usually stay with their mothers until they are 2 – 3 years old. In higher quality habitat where food is abundant, cubs may disperse earlier than in sparser habitat, where they have a lot more to learn to survive.
People and Brown Bears: People have been fearful of brown bears for as long as we have shared habitat. Many brown bears have been killed because of this fear, while others have been killed for food and the fur trade. Vehicle and train collisions account for a large percentage of human-related bear mortality. Today, most brown bears only survive in protected or remote areas. Because grizzlies in the lower 48 states are considered a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act, wildlife managers are trying to actively protect grizzly populations and their critical habitat. A threatened species is one that is likely to become endangered if protection measures are not implemented. Hopefully, with careful management and a solid recovery plan, grizzly populations will increase and will no longer need Endangered Species Act protection, but it is up to us to conserve and connect their habitats, and to behave responsibly so that humans and bears can coexist. For adequate recovery, humans need to stop harassing, pursuing, hunting, feeding, getting too close to, and killing grizzly bears. Their habitat needs much better protection from human development and roads. People sometimes leave garbage and food in places where bears can easily find it. Once corrupted with food scraps, or even food containers or wrappers, bears can quickly develop a taste for garbage and then go looking for it. When bears are human food-conditioned, they get into trouble because they scare and anger people with the damage they cause to property and the danger they represent. When a bear becomes a problem it may be relocated, but it often returns to its home range, or gets into trouble in its new home, resulting in the bear’s death. Grizzlies are an important top carnivore in the ecosystem, and they are animals that can teach us a lot about living responsibly with wildlife and respecting the wilderness and habitat where they make their homes. Because of large and diverse habitat requirements, conserving for grizzly bears results in conservation of many other species that share the same habitat.
All brown bears are of a single species which can be divided into numerous sub-species.
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Ursidae
Genus: Ursus
Species: arctos
Is it a brown bear or a grizzly? The answer is that all grizzlies are brown bears, but not all brown bears are grizzlies. The grizzly is a North American subspecies of brown bear with the Latin name Ursus arctos horribilis. The correct scientific name for a grizzly is “brown bear,” but only coastal bears in Alaska and Canada are generally referred to as such, while inland and Arctic bears and those found in the lower 48 States are called grizzly bears.
Size and Weight: Walking on all fours, brown bears have a height of about 3.5 feet (just over 1 meter). They can reach heights of 6-7 feet (1.5-2.5 meters) when standing on their hind legs. There are regional size differences among bears; brown bears are generally larger in the north—likely due to the colder climates. The largest of the brown bears, is the Kodiak bear (Ursus arctos middendorffi), is found only in the Kodiak archipelago islands along the southeastern coast of Alaska. Kodiaks can stand more than 10 feet (3 meters) tall on their hind legs and 5 feet (1.5 meters) tall when on all fours.
Brown bears exhibit sexual dimorphism, with males being significantly larger than females. This size difference is a result of larger males having better mating success than smaller males.
Male bears are close to 2 times heavier than females. A typical adult male weighs between 300-850 pounds (130-390 kilograms), while the adult female weighs between 200-450 pounds (90-200 kilograms). Kodiak bears, the largest of the species, can weigh over 1,000 pounds (450 kilograms), as can those brown bears on the Alaska Peninsula as featured in episode 1 of Bears of the Last Frontier.
Fur: The coloring of brown bears differs according to environmental conditions, such as diet and temperature, which are specific to the geographical area in which they live. Their fur can be whitish, blond, red, or black, in addition to the typical dark brown.
Diet: Brown bears are apex predators, meaning they are at the top of the food chain.
Though brown bears are often perceived as carnivores, they are actually omnivorous. Depending on season, habitat, and region, they can eat grasses, berries, sedges, fungi, mosses, roots, nuts, fruits, honey, insects, birds, and fish (trout, bass, and particularly adult salmon returning to rivers to spawn). In some regions, 80-90% of their diet consists of vegetation. Bears will also hunt mammals such as rodents, mountain sheep, caribou, elk, moose, and will eat carrion, as well.
To prepare for hibernation, in the summer months bears can consume up to 90 pounds (40 kilograms) of food a day, and gain up to 3 pounds (1.3 kilograms) per day. It’s especially important that pregnant females build up their fat reserves so that they are able to nurse their young inside the den.
Habitat: Brown bears live in a variety of habitats, including forests, woodlands, alpine and subalpine meadows, and even the Arctic tundra. Following the food, they relocate depending on the seasons—living at lower elevations in the spring and higher elevations in wintertime.
Geography: Brown bears are the most widely distributed bears in the world. They are found in North America, Europe, and Asia. Two subspecies of brown bear are native to North America: the grizzly bear (U. a. horribilis) and the Kodiak bear (U. a. middendorffi). Grizzlies were once widespread throughout North America, inhabiting the Great Plains region with north/south ranges from Alaska to Mexico, and west/east ranges from California to Ohio. Now, they are found only in four U.S. mainland states: Washington, Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming where fewer than 2000 remain. Brown bears are far more numerous in the state of Alaska where there are an estimated 30,000 bears—about 95% of the entire population in the United States.
Lifespan: Brown bears typically live 20 to 25 years in the wild.
Breeding: Brown bears reach sexual maturity at an average age of 5 years. The bears locate potential mates primarily by scent, with mating season generally lasting from early May through mid-July. A female usually mates once every 2 to 4 years, and males vigorously compete for the chance to mate with her. In addition, because females mate with several males throughout the season, a male may attempt to guard a female from other males for a period of 1 to 3 weeks after mating. Unlike most mammals, female bears have delayed implantation— the fertilized egg will float in her uterus for approximately five months before implanting. Then, after a gestation period of 180-270 days, the mother gives birth in the den, usually while still hibernating. Cubs are born blind and toothless sometime between December and March, and weigh only about a pound. The sleeping mother nurses the cubs until April or May, when the hibernation period ends. Females can give birth to up to four cubs, but typically have two cubs. Cubs remain with their mothers for 2 to 4 years, during which time the mother usually does not mate. If the mother does mate, the cubs may leave to avoid any aggression from the adult male.
Hibernation: Brown bears hibernate for 5-8 months each year, beginning in the fall months. However, unlike many other hibernating mammals, brown bears do not enter true hibernation; they can wake if disturbed.
Bears hibernate in dens they dig in hillsides, choosing northward-facing slopes to ensure optimal snow cover. While hibernating, bears experience a drop in temperature and a decrease in both heart rate and metabolism. They do not excrete any waste during this time.
Social Structure: Brown bears live primarily solitary lives with the exceptions of breeding and cub rearing. Individuals typically stake out a home range. Males have areas of about 200-500 square miles (500-1300 square kilometers), though some have ranges of up to 1615 square miles (4180 square kilometers) in size. Females generally have smaller home ranges, averaging 50-300 square miles (130-780 square kilometers) in size. Though brown bears are territorial, their home ranges often overlap, and boundaries are not always enforced. They mark their range with their scent, stamping urine into the ground or rubbing their bodies against trees to leave valuable information for other bears about their size and presence.
Though social interactions are relatively rare, there is a social hierarchy in bear society; adult males are dominant, and females with cubs are dominant over young males and females without cubs.
Brown bears communicate through sound, movement, and smell. They can express emotions through a series of different vocalizations such as grunts, moans, and growls.
Conservation Status: In 1975, the Endangered Species Act listed the brown bear as a threatened species in the lower 48 States.
Threats: Logging, mining, and urban expansion results in habitat loss and a decrease in food sources. Habitat destruction also pushes brown bears into more developed areas, making conflicts with humans more likely. Human-caused mortality is the number one cause of bear population decline. Illegal hunting can be a particular problem – especially for small bear populations like those in the lower 48. The reproductive rate of brown bears is very slow, so their populations are unable to “bounce back” easily after they have been depleted.
Additional Facts:
Brown bears have a bulky muscle mass located above the shoulders. This hump is designed to power the forelimbs and makes them exceptionally powerful diggers. This is one of the features that distinguishes them from the more common North American black bear which lacks such a shoulder hump.
Brown bears have long claws that can be the length of a human finger. They are used for digging plant roots and excavating dens.
Compared to black bears, brown bears have rounder, shorter ears and longer, less curved claws.
Brown bears have keen senses of hearing, smell,and eye site.
They can run up to 35 miles per hour (or 55 km/h).
Brown bears are very good swimmers. As cubs, they can climb trees, but as they grow larger that becomes less of an option.
They can be active during either day or night.
Brown bears can lose up to 40% of their body weight during hibernation.
Brown bears are often regarded as one of the more aggressive species of bear.
Brown bears have recently been encroaching on polar bear habitats, perhaps due to climate change.
The grizzly’s name comes from the white-tipped, grayish, or “grizzly” furs in the bear’s coat. However, the naturalist George Ord mistook this word for “grisly,” influenced by Lewis and Clark’s description of their terrifying personal encounter with a bear, and named the subspecies horribilis.
Polar bears are thought to have evolved from brown bears approximately 150,000 years ago.
Reproduction: Brown bears mate in early summer, but the embryo (blastocyst) does not implant and start to grow until the mother enters the den in late fall. Successful implantation depends on the female gaining enough body weight to sustain pregnancy. The cubs are born in January or February while the mother is sleeping. They usually weigh about one pound at birth, and their litters range between one and five, with two on average, and survival rates are low. The cubs are born blind and helpless, but by drinking their mother’s rich milk they gain weight quickly. By late April or early May, the cubs are ready to leave the den and explore with their mothers. Mother bears are renowned for their ferocity when defending their young, especially against the threats of other bears and humans. Cubs usually stay with their mothers until they are 2 – 3 years old. In higher quality habitat where food is abundant, cubs may disperse earlier than in sparser habitat, where they have a lot more to learn to survive.
People and Brown Bears: People have been fearful of brown bears for as long as we have shared habitat. Many brown bears have been killed because of this fear, while others have been killed for food and the fur trade. Vehicle and train collisions account for a large percentage of human-related bear mortality. Today, most brown bears only survive in protected or remote areas. Because grizzlies in the lower 48 states are considered a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act, wildlife managers are trying to actively protect grizzly populations and their critical habitat. A threatened species is one that is likely to become endangered if protection measures are not implemented. Hopefully, with careful management and a solid recovery plan, grizzly populations will increase and will no longer need Endangered Species Act protection, but it is up to us to conserve and connect their habitats, and to behave responsibly so that humans and bears can coexist. For adequate recovery, humans need to stop harassing, pursuing, hunting, feeding, getting too close to, and killing grizzly bears. Their habitat needs much better protection from human development and roads. People sometimes leave garbage and food in places where bears can easily find it. Once corrupted with food scraps, or even food containers or wrappers, bears can quickly develop a taste for garbage and then go looking for it. When bears are human food-conditioned, they get into trouble because they scare and anger people with the damage they cause to property and the danger they represent. When a bear becomes a problem it may be relocated, but it often returns to its home range, or gets into trouble in its new home, resulting in the bear’s death. Grizzlies are an important top carnivore in the ecosystem, and they are animals that can teach us a lot about living responsibly with wildlife and respecting the wilderness and habitat where they make their homes. Because of large and diverse habitat requirements, conserving for grizzly bears results in conservation of many other species that share the same habitat.