The
brown bear (
Ursus
arctos) is a large
bear
distributed across much of northern
Eurasia
and
North America. It weighs and its
largest subspecies, the
Kodiak Bear,
rivals the
polar bear as the largest
member of the bear family, and as the largest land based
predator.
While the brown bear's range has shrunk, and it has faced local
extinctions, it remains listed as a
least
concern species by the
IUCN, with a total
population of approximately 200,000.
Its principal range
countries are Russia
, the
United
States
(especially Alaska
), Canada
, the
Carpathian
region (especially Romania
), and
Finland
where it is the national animal.
Naming and etymology
It is sometimes referred to as the
bruin, from
Middle English, based on the name of the bear
in
History of Reynard the
Fox, translated by
William
Caxton, from
Middle Dutch
bruun or
bruyn, meaning
brown. During the
old
west, the grizzly was termed "Old Ephraim" and sometimes as
"Moccasin Joe".
Taxonomy and evolution
Brown bears are thought to have evolved from
Ursus
etruscus. The oldest fossils occur in China from about 0.5
million years ago. They entered Europe
about 0.25 million years ago, and North Africa shortly after.
Brown bear
remains from the Pleistocene period are common in the British Isles
, where it is thought they outcompeted cave bears. The species entered Alaska
100,000 years ago, though they did not move south until 13,000
years ago. It is thought that brown bears were unable to migrate
south until the extinction of the much larger
Arctodus simus. Several paleontologists
suggest the possibility of two separate brown bear migrations:
grizzlies are thought to stem from narrow-skulled bears which
migrated from northern Siberia to central Alaska and the rest of
the continent, while Kodiak bears descend from broad-skulled bears
from Kamchatka which colonised the Alaskan peninsula. Brown bear
fossils discovered in Ontario, Ohio, Kentucky and Labrador show
that the species occurred farther east than indicated in historic
records.
Subspecies
There is little agreement on classification of brown bears. Some
systems have proposed as many as 90 sub-species, while recent DNA
analysis has identified as few as five clades. DNA analysis
recently revealed that the identified subspecies of brown bears,
both Eurasian and North American, are genetically quite
homogeneous, and that their genetic
phylogeography does not correspond to their
traditional taxonomy. As of 2005, 16 subspecies have been
recognised. The subspecies have been listed as follows:
Brown Bear Sub-species
| Sub-Species Name |
Distribution |
Description |
|
Ursus arctos arctos – Eurasian Brown Bear |
Europe, Caucasus, Siberia (except the east) and
Mongolia |
A predominantely dark coloured (rarely light
coloured), moderately sized subspecies with dark claws. Animals
occurring in Siberia are larger than their European counterparts,
as they are hunted less |
| Ursus arctos alascensis |
|
|
Ursus arctos beringianus – Kamchatka Brown Bear |
Kamchatka Peninsula and Paramushir Island |
A very large, dark coloured form. Light coloured
forms are encountered less than in European-Siberian subspecies.
Claws are dark. Thought to be the ancestor of U. a.
middendorffi. |
| Ursus arctos californicus – California
Golden Bear (extinct) |
|
|
Ursus arctos collaris – East Siberian Brown Bear |
East Siberia from the
Yenisei
River to the Altai Mountains . Also occurs in northern Mongolia |
A predominantly dark form intermediate in size
between U. a. arctos and U. a. beringianus, with
a proportionately larger skull |
| Ursus arctos crowtheri – Atlas Bear (extinct) |
|
|
| Ursus arctos dalli |
|
|
Ursus arctos horribilis – Grizzly Bear |
Canada and United States |
|
Ursus arctos isabellinus – Himalayan Brown Bear.jpg/180px-Ursus_arctos_isabellinus_(in_Perm_Zoo).jpg) |
Nepal , Pakistan , and Northern
India |
|
Ursus arctos lasiotus – Ussuri Brown Bear (or "Amur brown bear",
"black grizzly" or "horse bear") |
Russia : Southern
Kuril
Islands , Sakhalin , Maritime
territory, and the Ussuri/Amur river region south of the Stanovoy Range . China : Northeastern Heilongjiang . Japan : Hokkaidō |
Thought to be the ancestor of U. a.
Horribilis. |
Ursus arctos middendorffi – Kodiak Bear |
Kodiak, Afognak, Shuyak Islands (Alaska ) |
|
Ursus arctos pruinosus – Tibetan Blue Bear |
Western China and Tibet. |
A moderately sized subspecies with long and shaggy
fur. Both dark and light variants are encountered, with
intermediate colours predominating. The fur around the neck is
light, and forms a "collar". The skull is distinguished its
relatively flattened choanae, an arch-like curve of the molar row
and large teeth |
| Ursus arctos sitkensis |
|
Appears to be more closely related to the polar bear than to other brown bears. This
species is called "clade I" by Waits, et al., and is part of the
subspecies identified as U. a. sitkensis, by Hall and as
U. a. dalli by Kurtén. |
| Ursus arctos stikeenensis |
|
|
Ursus arctos syriacus – Syrian Brown Bear |
Occurs in the Trans-Caucasus, Palestine, Syria,
Iraq, Asia Minor, Iran, Afghanistan, western Himalayas and the
Pamir-Alai and Tien Shan mountains. |
A light coloured moderate to small sized
subspecies with light claws |
|
Hybrids
A grizzly–polar bear hybrid (known as a
Pizzly Bear or
Grolar bear) is a rare
ursid
hybrid resulting from a union of a brown bear and a polar bear.
It has occurred both in captivity and in the wild.
In 2006, the
occurrence of this hybrid in nature was confirmed by testing the
DNA of a strange-looking bear that had been shot
in the Canadian
arctic. Previously,
the hybrid had been produced in
zoos and was
considered a "
cryptid" (a hypothesized
animal for which there is no scientific proof of existence in the
wild).
Physical description

Brown bear claws are longer and less
curved than those of black bears

Illustration of a brown bear
skull
Brown bears are massively built and heavy bodied animals. They have
a large hump-like mass of muscle and fat on their shoulders which
coupled with their long claws, provide brown bears with a great
digging ability. Brown bears have very large and curved claws,
those present on the forelimbs being longer than those on the hind
limbs. They may reach and sometimes along the curve. They are never
less than in length. They are generally dark with a light tip, with
some forms having completely light claws. Brown bear claws are
longer and straighter than those of American black bears.
Adults have massive, heavily built
concave
skulls which are large in proportion to the body. The forehead is
high and rises steeply. The projections of the skull are well
developed when compared to those of
Asian black bears: the latter have
sagittal crests not exceeding more than
19-20% of the total length of the skull, while the former have
sagittal crests comprising up to 40-41% of the skull's length.
Skull projections are more weakly developed in female brown bears
than in males. The
braincase is relatively
small and elongated. There is a great deal of geographical
variation in the skull, and presents itself chiefly in dimensions.
Grizzlies, for example, tend to have flatter profiles than European
and coastal American brown bears. Skull lengths of Russian bears
tend to be for males, and for females. The width of the
zygomatic arches in males is , and in
females. Brown bears have very strong teeth: the
incisors are relatively big and the
canine teeth are large, the lower ones being
strongly curved. The first three molars of the upper jaw are
underdeveloped and single crowned with one root. The second upper
molar is smaller than the others, and is usually absent in adults.
It is usually lost at an early age, leaving no trace of the
alveolus in the jaw. The first three molars of the lower jaw are
very weak, and are often lost at an early age. Although they have
powerful jaws, brown bears are incapable of breaking large bones
with the ease of
spotted hyenas.
The dimensions of brown bears fluctuate very greatly according to
sex, age, individual, geographic variation and season. The body
length of large males from the
Russian
far east and northwestern North America reaches , and reach a
shoulder height of . A large brown bear can reach in height when
standing on its hind legs. These large bears can weigh . The
smallest subspecies have body lengths of and weigh . Large weights
are usually from old animals in nature reserves and under very
favourable conditions. Females weigh no more than 75% of the mass
attained by males and sometimes less. Diet is known to be an
important factor in geographical size variation. Coastal Alaskan
brown bears, with greater access to fish and lush vegetation, are
nearly twice the weight of their inland counterparts. The heaviest
recorded brown bear weighed over .
Brown bears have long, thick fur, with a moderately long mane at
the back of the neck. In India, brown bears can be reddish with
silver tips, while in China, brown bears are bi-coloured with a
yellow-brown or whitish cape across the shoulders. North American
grizzlies can be dark brown (almost black) to cream (almost white)
or yellowish brown. Black hairs usually have white tips. The winter
fur is very thick and long, especially in northern subspecies, and
can reach at the
withers. The winter hairs
are thin, yet rough to the touch. The summer fur is much shorter
and sparser, and its length and density varies
geographically.
Distribution and habitat

Brown Bear at Brooks Falls
There are about 200,000 brown bears in the world. The largest
populations are in Russia with 120,000, the United States with
32,500, and Canada with 21,750. 95% of the brown bear population in
the United States is in Alaska, though in the lower 48 states they
are repopulating slowly but steadily along the
Rockies and plains.
Although many people
hold on to the belief that some brown bears may be present in
Mexico and the Atlas Mountains of
Morocco
, both are almost certainly extinct. The last
Mexican brown bear was shot in 1960.
In Europe, there are
14,000 brown bears in ten fragmented populations, from Spain
in the west,
to Russia
in the east,
and from Scandinavia in the north to
Romania
, Bulgaria
, Slovakia
(with about 800–900 animals), and Greece
(with about
200 animals) in the south. They are extinct in the British Isles
, extremely threatened in France
and Spain,
and in trouble over most of Central Europe. The Carpathian
brown bear population is the largest in Europe outside Russia,
estimated at 4,500 to 5,000 bears.
Scandinavia is home to a large bear
population, with an estimated 2,500 (range 2,350–2,900) in Sweden
, 900-1300 in
Finland
, and 70 in
Norway
.
Another
large and relatively stable population of brown bears in Europe,
consisting of 2,500–3,000 individuals, is the Dinaric-Pindos
(Balkans) population, with contiguous distribution in North-East
Italy
, Slovenia
, Croatia
, Bosnia and Herzegovina
, Serbia
, Montenegro
, Macedonia
, Albania
, and Greece
.
Brown bears were once native to
Asia, the
Atlas Mountains in
Africa,
Europe, and
North America, but are now
extinct in some areas and their populations have
greatly decreased in other areas. They prefer semi-open country,
usually in mountainous areas.
Brown
bears live in Alaska
, east
through the Yukon
and
Northwest
Territories
, south through British Columbia
and through the western half of Alberta
. Small populations exist in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
of northwest Wyoming
(with about 600 animals), the Northern Continental
Divide Ecosystem of northwest Montana
(with about 400–500 animals), the Cabinet-Yaak
Ecosystem of northwest Montana and northeast Idaho
(with about
30–40 animals), the Selkirk Ecosystem of northeast Washington
and northwest Idaho (with about 40–50 animals), and
the North Cascades Ecosystem of north-central Washington (with
about 5–10 animals). These five ecosystems combine for a
total of roughly 1,200 wild grizzlies still persisting in the
contiguous United States. Unfortunately, these populations are
isolated from each other, inhibiting any genetic flow to occur
between ecosystems. This poses one of the greatest threats to the
future survival of the grizzly bear in the contiguous United
States.
The
population of brown bears in the Pyrenees
mountain range between France
and Spain
is so low,
estimated at 14 to 18 with a shortage of females, that bears,
mostly female, from Slovenia
were released in spring 2006 to reduce the
imbalance and preserve the species' presence in the area, despite
protests from French farmers.
A small population of brown bears (
Ursus arctos marsicanus) still lives
in central Italy (Apennine mountains, Abruzzo and Latium) with no
more than 70 individuals, protected by strong laws but endangered
by the human presence in the area.
In
Arctic areas, the potential habitat of the
brown bear is increasing. The
warming of
that region has allowed the species to move farther north into
what was once exclusively the domain of the
polar bear. In non-Arctic areas, habitat loss is
blamed as the leading cause of endangerment, followed by
hunting.
North American brown bears seem to prefer open landscapes, whereas
in Eurasia they inhabit mostly dense forests. It is thought that
the Eurasian bears which colonized America were
tundra-adapted.
This is indicated by brown bears in the
Chukotka
Peninsula
on the Asian side of Bering Strait, which are the
only Asian brown bears to live year-round in lowland tundra like
their American cousins.
Behavior
The brown bear is primarily
nocturnal. In
the summer it gains up to of
fat, on which it
relies to make it through winter, when it becomes very lethargic.
Although they are not full
hibernators,
and can be woken easily, both sexes like to
den in a protected spot such as a
cave, crevice, or hollow log during the winter months.
Brown bears are mostly solitary, although they may gather in large
numbers at major food sources and form social hierarchies based on
age and size.
Reproduction
The mating season is from late May to early July. Being serially
monogamous, brown bears remain with the
same mate from several days to a couple of weeks. Females mature
sexually between the age of 5 and 7 years, while males usually mate
a few years later when they are large and strong enough to
successfully compete with other males for mating rights.
Through the process of
delayed
implantation, a female's fertilized egg divides and floats free
in the uterus for six months. During winter dormancy, the fetus
attaches to the
uterine wall. The cubs are
born eight weeks later, while the mother sleeps. If the mother does
not gain enough weight to survive through the winter, the embryo
does not implant and is reabsorbed into the body. The average
litter has one to four cubs, usually two. There have been cases of
bears with five cubs, though sometimes females adopt strange cubs.
Older females tend to give birth to larger litters. The size of a
litter also depends on factors such as geographic location and food
supply. At birth, the cubs are blind, toothless, hairless, and
weigh less than . They feed on their mother's milk until spring or
even early summer depending on climate conditions. At this time,
the cubs weigh and have developed enough to follow her and begin to
forage for solid food.
Cubs remain with their mother from two to four years, during which
time they learn survival techniques, such as which foods have the
highest nutritional values and where to attain them; how to hunt,
fish, and defend themselves; and where to den. The cubs learn by
following and imitating their mother's actions during the period
they are with her. Brown bears practice
infanticide. An adult male bear may
kill the cubs of another bear either to make the female sexually
receptive or simply for consumption. Cubs flee up a tree when they
see a strange male bear, and the mother defends them even though
the male may be twice her size.
Dietary habits
They are
omnivores and feed on a variety of
plant products, including berries,
roots, and
sprout,
fungi as well as
meat products such as
fish,
insects, and small
mammals.
Despite their reputation, most brown bears are not highly
carnivorous as they derive up to 90% of their dietary
food energy from vegetable matter. Their jaw
structure has evolved to fit their dietary habits. Their diet
varies enormously throughout their differing areas based on
opportunity. For example, bears in Yellowstone eat an enormous
number of
moths during the summer, sometimes as
many as 40,000 in a day, and may derive up to half of their annual
food energy from these insects. In some areas of Russia and Alaska,
brown bears feed mostly on spawning
salmon,
whose nutrition and abundance explains the enormous size of the
bears in these areas. Brown bears also occasionally prey on large
mammals, such as
deer,
elk,
moose,
caribou, and
bison. When brown bears attack these animals,
they tend to choose the young ones as they are easier to catch.
When hunting, the bear pins it's prey to the ground and then tears
and eats it alive. On rare occasions, bears kill by hitting their
prey with their powerful forearms which can break the necks and
backs of large prey, such as bison. They also feed on
carrion and use their size to intimidate other
predators such as
wolves,
cougars,
tigers, and
black bears from their kills.
Interspecific predatory relationships
Brown bears often use their large size for intimidation when a kill
or a territory is in dispute with a large predator of another
species. Sometimes the conflict will escalate to the point of
violence, but usually threat displays are sufficient since most
animals try to avoid potential bodily harm. However, the massive
strength and size of the brown bear will usually result in it
winning violent conflicts. In situations where the interspecies
conflict turns deadly, brown bears may also eat the competitor
despite it not being the primary reason for attack.
Brown bears regularly intimidate
wolves away
from their kills.
In Yellowstone National Park
, brown bears pirate wolf kills so often that
Yellowstone's Wolf Project Director Doug Smith wrote: "It's not a
matter of if the bears will come calling after a kill, but
when." Though conflict over carcasses is common, on rare
occasions the two predators tolerate each other on the same kill.
Given the opportunity, both species prey on each other's
cubs.
Adult bears are generally immune from predatory attacks from
anything other than another bear. Some bears emerging from
hibernation will seek out tigers in order to steal their kills.
However, in the
Russian Far East
brown bears, along with smaller
Asiatic black bears constitute 5–8% of
the diet of
Siberian tigers. In
particular, the brown bear's input is estimated to be 1–1.5%. Tiger
attacks on bears tend to occur when ungulate populations decrease.
Large adult bears are generally immune to tiger attacks in summer
but have been killed in their dens in winter. There are records of
bears killing tigers, either in self defense, or in disputes over
kills or for consumption.
Brown bears usually dominate other bear species in areas where they
coexist. Due to their smaller size,
American Black Bears are at a
competitive disadvantage over brown bears in open, non-forested
areas. Although displacement of black bears by brown bears has been
documented, actual interspecific killing of black bears by brown
bears has only occasionally been reported. Confrontation is mostly
avoided thanks to the black bear's diurnal habit and preference for
heavily forested areas, as opposed to the brown bear's largely
nocturnal habit and preference for open spaces. Brown bears may
attack
Asian black bears, though
they will eat the fruit dropped by the latter species from trees,
as they themselves are too large and cumbersome to climb.
There has been a recent increase in interactions between brown
bears and
polar bears, theorized to be
caused by
climate change. Brown bears
have been seen moving increasingly northward into territories
formerly claimed by polar bears. Brown bears tend to dominate polar
bears in disputes over carcasses, and dead polar bear cubs have
been found in brown bear dens.
Relationship with humans

Rear paw imprint.
Bears become attracted to human-created food sources such as
garbage dumps, litter bins, and dumpsters; they venture into human
dwellings or
barns in search of food as humans
encroach into bear habitats. In the U.S., bears sometimes kill and
eat farm animals. When bears come to associate human activity with
a "food reward", they are likely to continue to become emboldened;
the likeliness of human-bear encounters increases, as they may
return to the same location despite relocation. The saying, "a fed
bear is a dead bear", has come into use to popularize the idea that
allowing bears to scavenge human garbage, such as trash cans and
campers' backpacks,
pet food, or other food
sources that draw the bear into contact with humans can result in a
bear's death.
Relocation of the bear has been used to separate the bear from the
human environment, but it does not address the problem of the
bear's newly learned association of humans with food or the
environmental situations which created the human habituated bear.
"Placing a bear in habitat used by other bears may lead to
competition and social conflict, and result in the injury or death
of the less dominant bear."
Yellowstone
National Park
, an enormous reserve located in the Western United
States, contains prime habitat for the Grizzly Bear (Ursus
arctos horribilis), and due to the enormous number of
visitors, human-bear encounters are common. The scenic
beauty of the area has led to an influx of people moving into the
area. In addition, because there are so many bear relocations to
the same remote areas of Yellowstone, and because male bears tend
to dominate the center of the relocation zone, female bears tend to
be pushed to the boundaries of the region and beyond. As a result,
a large proportion of repeat offenders, bears that are killed for
public safety, are females. This creates a further depressive
effect on an already endangered species. The grizzly bear is
officially described as
threatened in the U.S. Though the
problem is most significant with regard to grizzlies, these issues
affect the other types of brown bear as well.
In Europe, part of the problem lies with
shepherds; over the past two centuries, many sheep
and goat herders have gradually abandoned the more traditional
practice of using
dogs to guard flocks, which
have concurrently grown larger. Typically they allow the herds to
graze freely over sizeable tracts of land. As bears reclaim parts
of their range, they may eat livestock. In some cases, the
shepherds shoot the bear thinking that their livelihood is under
threat. Many are now better informed about the ample compensation
available and will make a claim when they lose livestock to a
bear.
Legal status
- The grizzly bear, sometimes called the silvertip bear,
is listed as threatened in the Contiguous United States. It is
slowly repopulating in areas where it was previously extirpated,
though it is still vulnerable.
- The
California golden bear (Ursus arctos californicus)
disappeared from the state of California
in 1922 when the last one was shot in Tulare
County
, but it is still on the state flag of California. The bear is alluded
to in the names of the sports teams of the University
of California, Berkeley
(the California
Golden Bears), and of the University
of California, Los Angeles
(the UCLA Bruins) and in
the mascot of University of California,
Riverside
(Scottie the Bear, dressed in a Highland kilt).
- The Mexican grizzly bear is listed as an endangered species, but it may be
extinct.
- In Canada, it is listed as vulnerable in Alberta, British
Columbia, Northwest Territories, and Yukon Territory. Prairie
populations of grizzly bear are listed as extirpated in Alberta,
Manitoba, and Saskatchewan.
- The brown bear is a European Protected Species, given
protection throughout the European
Union.
- The
brown bear is also the national animal of Finland
and Slovenia
.
- The brown bear is depicted on the reverse of the Croatian 5
kuna coin, minted since 1993.
Bear encounters
Attacks on humans
As a rule, brown bears seldomly attack humans on sight, and usually
avoid people. They are however unpredictable in temperament, and
will attack if they are surprised or feel threatened. Sows with
cubs account for the majority of injuries and fatalities in North
America.
Habituated or food conditioned
bears can also be dangerous, as their long-term exposure to humans
causes them to lose their natural shyness, and in some cases
asosciate humans with food. Small parties of one or two people are
more often attacked than large groups, with no attacks being
recorded against parties of six people or more. In contrast to
injuries caused by American black bears, which are usually minor,
brown bear attacks tend to result in serious injury and in some
cases death. In the majority of attacks resulting in injury, brown
bears precede the attack with a growl or huffing sound, and seem to
confront humans as they would when fighting other bears: they rise
up on their hind legs, and attempt to "disarm" their victims by
biting and holding on to the lower jaw to avoid being bitten in
turn. Such a bite can be as severe as that of a tiger, with some
human victims having had their heads completely crushed by a bear
bite. Most attacks occur in the months of July, August and
September, the time when the number of outdoor recreationalists,
such as hikers or hunters, is higher. People who assert their
presence through noises tend to be less vulnerable, as they alert
bears to their presence. In direct confrontations, people who run
are statistically more likely to be attacked than those who stand
their ground. Violent encounters with brown bears usually last only
a few minutes, though they can be prolongued if the victims fight
back.
Attacks on humans are considered extremely rare in the
former Soviet Union, though exceptions
exist in districts where they are not pursued by hunters. Siberian
bears for example tend to be much bolder toward humans than their
shyer, more persecuted European counterparts. In 2008, a
platinum mining compound in the Olyotorsky district
of northern Kamchatka was besieged by a group of 30 bears who
killed two guards and prevented workers from leaving their homes.
Ten people a year are killed by brown bears in Russia. In
Scandinavia, only three fatal attacks were recorded in the 20th
century.
Native American
tribes sympatric to brown bears often viewed them with a mixture of
awe and fear. North American brown bears were so feared by the
Natives that they were rarely hunted, especially alone. When
Natives hunted grizzlies, the act was done with the same
preparation and ceremoniality as intertribal warfare, and was never
done except with a company of 4-10 warriors. The tribe members who
dealt the killing blow were highly esteemed among their
compatriots. Californian Indians actively avoided prime bear
habitat, and would not allow their young men to hunt alone, for
fear of bear attacks. During the Spanish colonial period, some
tribes, instead of hunting grizzlies themselves, would seek aid
from European colonists to deal with problem bears. Many authors in
the American west wrote of Natives or voyagers were seen with
lacerated faces and missing noses or eyes due to attacks from
grizzlies. Within Yellowstone National Park, injuries caused by
grizzly attacks in developed areas averaged approximately 1 per
year during the 1930s through to the 1950s, though it increased to
4 per year during the 1960s. They then decreased to 1 injury every
2 years (0.5/year) during the 1970s. Between 1980-2002, there have
been only 2 grizzly bear-caused human injuries in a developed area.
However, although grizzly attacks were rare in the backcountry
before 1970, the number of attacks increased to an average of
approximately 1 per year during the 1970s, 1980's, and
1990's.
History of defense from bears
A study by Canadian and US researchers has found
pepper spray to be more effective at stopping
aggressive bear behavior than guns, working in 92% of studied
incidents vs 67% for guns. Carrying pepper spray is highly
recommended by many authorities when traveling in bear country,
however carrying two means of deterrent, one of which is a large
caliber gun, is also advised. Solid shotgun slugs, or three
buckshot rounds, or a semi-auto pistol of .45 caliber or more is
suggested if a heavy hunting rifle is not available. Guns remain a
viable, last resort option to be used in defense of life from
aggressive bears. Too often, people do not carry a proper caliber
weapon to neutralize the bear. According to the Alaska Science
Center, a
12 gauge shotgun with
slugs
has been the most effective weapon. There have been fewer injuries
as a result of only carrying lethal loads in the shotgun, as
opposed to deterrent rounds. State of Alaska Defense of Life or
Property (DLP) laws require you to report the kill to authorities,
and salvage the hide, skull, and claws.Campers are often told to
wear bright colored red ribbons and bells, and carry whistles to
ward off bears. They are told to look for grizzly scat in camping
areas, and be careful to carry the bells and whistles in those
areas. Grizzly scat is difficult to differentiate from black bear
scat, as diet is in a constant state of flux depending on the
availability of seasonal food items. If a bear is killed near camp,
the bear's carcass must be adequately disposed of, including
entrails and blood if possible. Failure to move the carcass has
often resulted in it attracting other bears and further
exacerbating a bad situation. Better still - move your camp
immediately.
In culture
Many Native American tribes both respected and feared the brown
bear even thinking of it as a god.
See also
References
- ( Overview page)
- American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth
Edition. 2000.
- Hunting the Grisly and other Sketches
- A REVIEW OF BEAR EVOLUTION BRUCEM CLELLANF,o rest
Sciences Research Branch,R evelstoke Forest District,R PO#3, Box
9158, Revelstoke, BC VOE3 KO DAVIDC . REINERU, .S. Fish and
WildlifeS ervice, NS 312, Universityo f Montana, Missoula,
MT
- Bear Anatomy and Physiology from Gary Brown's The
Great Bear Almanac, Lyons & Burford, Publishers, 1993
- Mammals of the Soviet Union Vol.II Part 1a, SIRENIA
AND CARNIVORA (Sea cows; Wolves and Bears), V.G Heptner and N.P
Naumov editors, Science Publishers, Inc. USA. 1998. ISBN
1886106819
- ENAMEL MICROSTRUCTURAL SPECIALIZATION IN THE
CANINE OF THE SPOTTED HYENA, CROCUTA CROCUTA, John M.
Rensberger, Dept. of Geological Sciences and Burke Museum, Univ. of
Washington, Box 353010, Seattle, Washington 98195 (Received for
publication July 8, 1996 and in revised form April 1,
1997)
- Bear Online Information System for Europe
- Animal Diversity Web - Ursus
arctos
- Mating Strategies in Relation to Sexually Selected
Infanticide in a Non-Social Carnivore: the Brown Bear
- Vratislav Mazak: Der Tiger. Nachdruck der 3. Auflage
von 1983. Westarp Wissenschaften Hohenwarsleben, 2004 ISBN
3894327596
-
http://www.panthera.org/documents/Miquelle_Quigley_1996_Food_habits_of_Amur_tigers.pdf
- Seryodkin, I. V., J. M. Goodrich, A. V. Kostyrya, B. O.
Schleyer, E. N. Smirnov, L. L. Kerley, and D. G. Miquelle. 2005.
Relationship between tigers, brown bears, and Himalayan black
bears. Pages 156-163 in D. G. Miquelle, E. N. Smirnov, and J. M.
Goodrich (eds.), Tigers of Sikhote-Alin Zapovednik: Ecology and
Conservation. Vladivostok, Russia: PSP.
- Notes
- Denning ecology of brown bears and Asiatic black
bears in the Russian Far East
- The Intellectual observer: review of natural history,
microscopic research, and recreative science, published by
Groombridge., 1865
- adn.com | front: Polar bears, grizzlies
increasingly gather on North Slope
- Bear Attacks: Their Causes and Avoidance by Stephen
Herrero, Hurtig Publishers Ltd./ Edmonton 1985
- The living animals of the world; a popular
natural history with one thousand illustrations Volume 1:
Mammals, by Cornish, C. J. (Charles John), 1858-1906; Selous,
Frederick Courteney, 1851-1917; Johnston, Harry Hamilton, Sir,
1858-1927; Maxwell, Herbert, Sir, published by New York, Dodd, Mead
and Company
- WOLVES, BEARS AND HUMAN ANTI-PREDATOR
ADAPTATIONS
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- Brown Bears of Russia
- Did Large Predators keep Humans out of North
America?
- Bear Caused Human Injuries and Deaths In
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- Native American Animal Symbols - The Bear
External links