The
Spectacled Bear (
Tremarctos ornatus),
also known as the
Andean Bear and locally as
ukuko,
jukumari or
ucumari is the
closest living kin of the
short-faced bears
of the
Middle Pleistocene to
Late Pleistocene age.
The Spectacled Bear is a relatively small species of
bear native to
South
America. It has black fur with a distinctive beige-coloured
marking across its face and upper chest. Males are a third larger
than females. Males can weigh 130 – 200
kilograms (286 – 440
lb), and females 35 –82 kilograms (77 – 181
lb).
They
are found in several areas of northern and western South America,
including eastern Panama
, western
Venezuela
, Colombia
, Ecuador
, Peru
, western
Bolivia
, and northwestern Argentina
. Spectacled bears are the only surviving
species of bear native to South America, and the only surviving
member of the subfamily
Tremarctinae.
Their survival has depended mostly on their ability to climb even
the tallest trees of the
Andes.
Naming and etymology
Tremarctos ornatus is commonly referred to in English as
the "Spectacled Bear", a reference to the light colouring on its
chest, neck and face which may resemble
eyeglasses in some individuals, or the "Andean Bear"
for its distribution along the Andes.

Spectacled Bear at a zoo in
Venezuela
The root
trem- comes from a Greek word meaning "hole;"
arctos is the Greek word for "bear."
Tremarctos
is a reference to an unusual hole on the animal's
humerus.
Ornatus, Latin for "decorated", is
a reference to the markings that give the bear its common English
name.
Behavior and diet
Although the bears tend to isolate themselves from one another to
avoid competition, they are non-territorial. When encountered by
humans or other Spectacled Bears, they will react in a docile but
cautious manner, unless the intruder is seen as a threat or a
mother's cubs are endangered. Like other bears, mothers are very
protective in defense of their young and have attacked poachers.
However, no deaths have been recorded by South American state
governments. They usually attempt to retreat from humans, often by
climbing trees. Once up a tree, they often build a platform,
perhaps to aid in concealment, as well as to rest and store food
on.
Spectacled Bears are more vegetarian than other bears; normally
about 5% of their diet is meat, in the form of small mammals and
birds, arthropods and carrion. They are occasionally accused of
killing livestock and raiding corn fields.
Conservation

A spectacled bear at the Houston
Zoo.
The spectacled bear population is under threat for a number of
reasons.The bears are hunted by locals due to a belief they will
eat livestock (although spectacled bears do not eat large
quantities of meat). The gall bladders of spectacled bears are also
valued in
traditional
Chinese medicine and can fetch a high price on the
international market.Extensive logging and farming have led to a
loss of habitat for the bears.
In the documentary
Paddington Bear: The Early Years,
British actor
Stephen Fry encounters a
Spectacled bear called Yogi, who was kept in a small cage by Andean
villagers (see also
Paddington
Bear). Fry bartered with the villagers to have the bear
released and it was taken to an enclosure in Machu Picchu. Fry's
interest in the bears led to the follow up documentary,
Stephen
Fry and the Spectacled Bears, and he also wrote and published
his experiences in
Rescuing the Spectacled Bear: A Peruvian
Diary.
In the BBC television programme
Serious
Andes a team of eight teenagers build a pre-release enclosure
for two spectacled bears before returning them to the wild.
External Links
References
- Grizzly Bear.org: Spectacled Bear
- Bear Planet
- Spectacled, or Andean, Bear - National Zoo|
FONZ