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Grizzly bear

The grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis), also known as the North American brown bear or simply grizzly, is a population or subspecies[2] of the brown bear inhabiting North America.

Grizzly bear
Temporal range: PleistocenePresent

Vulnerable (IUCN 3.1)[1] (United States and Canada)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Ursidae
Genus: Ursus
Species:
Subspecies:
U. a. horribilis
Trinomial name
Ursus arctos horribilis
(Linnaeus, 1758)
Former subspecies now synonymised
Historic and present range

In addition to the mainland grizzly (Ursus arctos horribilis), other morphological forms of brown bear in North America are sometimes identified as grizzly bears. These include three living populations—the Kodiak bear (U. a. middendorffi), the Kamchatka bear (U. a. beringianus), and the peninsular grizzly (U. a. gyas)—as well as the extinct California grizzly (U. a. californicus†),[3][4] Mexican grizzly (formerly U. a. nelsoni†), and Ungava-Labrador grizzly (formerly U. a. ungavaesis†).[5][6] On average, grizzly bears near the coast tend to be larger while inland grizzlies tend to be smaller.

The Ussuri brown bear (U. a. lasiotus), inhabiting Russia, Northern China, Japan, and Korea,[4][7][8] is sometimes referred to as the "black grizzly", although it is no more closely related to North American brown bears than other subspecies of the brown bear around the world.

Classification

Meaning of "grizzly"

Meriwether Lewis and William Clark first described it as grisley, which could be interpreted as either "grizzly" (i.e., "grizzled"—that is, with grey-tipped or silver-tipped hair) or "grisly" ("fear-inspiring", now usually "gruesome").[9] The modern spelling supposes the former meaning; even so, naturalist George Ord formally classified it in 1815 as U. horribilis for its character.[10]

Evolution and genetics

Phylogenetics

Classification has been revised along genetic lines.[3] There are two morphological forms of Ursus arctos: the grizzly and the coastal brown bears, but these morphological forms do not have distinct mtDNA lineages.[11]

Ursus arctos

Brown bears originated in Eurasia and traveled to North America approximately 50,000 years ago,[12][13] spreading into the contiguous United States about 13,000 years ago.[14] The genome of the grizzly bear was sequenced in 2018 and found to be 2,328.64Mb (mega-basepairs) in length, and contain 30,387 genes.[15]

In the 19th century, the grizzly was classified as 86 distinct species. However, by 1928 only seven grizzly species remained,[4] and by 1953, only one species remained globally.[16] However, modern genetic testing reveals the grizzly to be a subspecies of the brown bear (Ursus arctos). Biologist R.L. Rausch found that North America has but one species of grizzly.[2] Therefore, everywhere it is the "brown bear"; in North America, it is the "grizzly", but these are all the same species, Ursus arctos.

Subspecies in North America

In 1963, Rausch reduced the number of North American subspecies to one, Ursus arctos middendorffi.[17]

Further testing of Y-chromosomes is required to yield an accurate new taxonomy with different subspecies.[3]

Coastal grizzlies, often referred to by the popular but geographically redundant synonym of "brown bear" or "Alaskan brown bear" are larger and darker than inland grizzlies, which is why they, too, were considered a different species from grizzlies. Kodiak Grizzly Bears were also at one time considered distinct. Therefore, at one time there were five different "species" of brown bear, including three in North America.[18]

Appearance

 
Grizzly pair at the Cleveland Zoo
 
Grizzly claws are longer than an American black bear's and adapted for digging

Most adult female grizzlies weigh 130–180 kg (290–400 lb), while adult males weigh on average 180–360 kg (400–790 lb). Average total length in this subspecies is between 198 cm (78 in) and 240 cm (94 in),[19] with an average shoulder height of 102 cm (40 in) and hindfoot length of 28 cm (11 in).[20] Newborn bears may weigh less than 500 g (18 oz). In the Yukon River area, mature female grizzlies can weigh as little as 100 kg (220 lb). For a female, these average weights would be 136 kg (300 lb) inland and 227 kg (500 lb) coastal, respectively.[21]

 
A grizzly roams in a wooded area near Jasper Townsite in Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada

Although variable in color from blond to nearly black, grizzly bear fur is typically brown with darker legs and commonly white or blond tipped fur on the flank and back.[22]

Characteristics

  • A pronounced muscular hump appears on adult grizzlies' shoulders; black bears do not have this hump.
  • Aside from the distinguishing hump a grizzly bear can be identified by a "dished in" profile of their face with short, rounded ears, whereas a black bear has a straight face profile and longer ears.[23]
  • A grizzly bear can also be identified by its rump, which is lower than its shoulders; a black bear's rump is higher than its shoulders.[23]
  • A grizzly bear's front claws measure about 51–102 mm (2–4 in) in length; a black bear's claws measure about 25–51 mm (1–2 in) in length.[23]

Range

 
Alaskan grizzly in Katmai National Park with partially eaten salmon – the heads, skin and subcutaneous tissue are eaten to obtain the most fat

In North America, grizzly bears previously ranged from Alaska down to Mexico and as far east as the western shores of Hudson Bay;[12] the species is now found in Alaska, south through much of western Canada, and into portions of the northwestern United States (including Washington, Idaho, Montana and Wyoming), extending as far south as Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks.[24] In Canada, there are approximately 25,000 grizzly bears occupying British Columbia, Alberta, the Yukon, the Northwest Territories, Nunavut, and the northern part of Manitoba.[12]

An article published in 1954 suggested they may be present in the tundra areas of the Ungava Peninsula and the northern tip of Labrador-Quebec.[25] In British Columbia, grizzly bears inhabit approximately 90% of their original territory. There were approximately 25,000 grizzly bears in British Columbia when the European settlers arrived.[12] However, population size has since significantly decreased due to hunting and habitat loss. In 2008, it was estimated there were 16,000 grizzly bears. A revised Grizzly bear count in 2012 for British Columbia was 15,075.[26] Population estimates for British Columbia are based on hair-snagging, DNA-based inventories, mark-and-recapture, and a refined multiple regression model.[27] In 2003, researchers from the University of Alberta spotted a grizzly on Melville Island in the high Arctic, which is the most northerly sighting ever documented.[28][29]

Populations

 
Family of bears in Glacier National Park, Montana, United States

Around 60,000 wild grizzly bears are located throughout North America, 30,000 of which are found in Alaska.[12] and up to 29,000 live in Canada. The Alaskan population of 30,000 individuals is the highest population of any province / state in North America. Populations in Alaska are densest along the coast, where food supplies such as salmon are more abundant.[30] The Admiralty Island National Monument protects the densest population: 1,600 bears on a 1,600 square-mile island.[31] The majority of Canada's grizzlies live in British Columbia.[32]

In the lower 48 United States, around 1,000 are found in the Northern Continental Divide in northwestern Montana.[33] About 1,000 more live in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem in the tri-state area of Wyoming, Idaho and Montana.[34] There are an estimated 70–100 grizzly bears living in northern and eastern Idaho. In September 2007, a hunter produced evidence of one bear in the Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness ecosystem, by killing a male grizzly bear there.[35]

In the North Cascades ecosystem of northern Washington, grizzly bear populations are estimated to be fewer than 20 bears, but there is a longterm management plan to reintroduce the bears to North Cascades National Park.[36]

Extirpated populations and recovery

The grizzly bear's original range included much of the Great Plains and the southwestern states, but it has been extirpated in most of those areas. Combining Canada and the United States, grizzly bears inhabit approximately half the area of their historical range.[12]

Although the once-abundant California grizzly bear appears prominently on the state flag of California and was the symbol of the Bear Flag Republic before the state of California's admission to the Union in 1850, the subspecies or population is currently extinct. The last known grizzlies in California were killed in the Sierra foothills east of Fresno in the early 1920s.[37]

The killing of the last grizzly bear in Arizona in 1936 at Escudilla Mountain is included in Aldo Leopold's Sand County Almanac.[38] There has been no confirmed sighting of a grizzly in Colorado since 1979.[39]

Other provinces and the United States may use a combination of methods for population estimates. Therefore, it is difficult to say precisely what methods were used to produce total population estimates for Canada and North America, as they were likely developed from a variety of studies. The grizzly bear currently has legal protection in Mexico, European countries, some areas of Canada, and in all of the United States. However, it is expected that repopulating its former range will be a slow process, due to various reasons, including the bear's slow reproductive habits and the effects of reintroducing such a large animal to areas prized for agriculture and livestock.

Biology

Hibernation

Grizzly bears hibernate for five to seven months each year[40] (except where the climate is warm—the California grizzly did not hibernate).[4] During this time, female grizzly bears give birth to their offspring, who then consume milk from their mother and gain strength for the remainder of the hibernation period.[41] To prepare for hibernation, grizzlies must prepare a den and consume an immense amount of food because they do not eat during hibernation. Grizzly bears also do not defecate or urinate throughout the entire hibernation period. The male grizzly bear's hibernation ends in early to mid-March, while females emerge in April or early May.[42]

In preparation for winter, bears can gain approximately 180 kg (400 lb), during a period of hyperphagia, before going into hibernation.[43] The bear often waits for a substantial snowstorm before it enters its den: such behavior lessens the chances that predators will find the den. The dens are typically at elevations above 1,800 meters (5,900 ft) on north-facing slopes.[44] There is some debate among professionals as to whether grizzly bears technically hibernate: much of this debate revolves around body temperature and the ability of the bears to move around during hibernation on occasion. Grizzly bears can "partially" recycle their body wastes during this period.[45] Although inland or Rocky Mountain grizzlies spend nearly half of their life in dens, coastal grizzlies with better access to food sources spend less time in dens. In some areas where food is very plentiful year round, grizzly bears skip hibernation altogether.[46]

Reproduction

 
Sow with two cubs in Kananaskis Country

Except for females with cubs,[47] grizzlies are normally solitary, active animals, but in coastal areas, grizzlies gather around streams, lakes, rivers, and ponds during the salmon spawn. Females (sows) produce one to four young (usually two) that are small and weigh only about 450 g (16 oz) at birth. A sow is protective of her offspring and will attack if she thinks she or her cubs are threatened.

Grizzly bears have one of the lowest reproductive rates of all terrestrial mammals in North America.[48] This is due to numerous ecological factors. Grizzly bears do not reach sexual maturity until they are at least five years old.[12][49] Once mated with a male in the summer, the female delays embryo implantation until hibernation, during which miscarriage can occur if the female does not receive the proper nutrients and caloric intake.[50] On average, females produce two cubs in a litter[49] and the mother cares for the cubs for up to two years, during which the mother will not mate.[12]

 
Mother grizzly with a cub

Once the young leave or are killed, females may not produce another litter for three or more years, depending on environmental conditions.[51] Male grizzly bears have large territories, up to 4,000 km2 (1,500 sq mi),[48] making finding a female scent difficult in such low population densities. Population fragmentation of grizzlies may destabilize the population from inbreeding depression. The gestation period for grizzly bears is approximately 180–250 days.

Litter size varies between one and four cubs, typically comprising twins or triplets. Cubs are always born in the mother's winter den while she is in hibernation. Female grizzlies are fiercely protective of their cubs, being able to fend off predators including larger male bears.[52] Cubs feed entirely on their mother's milk until summer comes, after which they still drink milk but begin to eat solid foods. Cubs gain weight rapidly during their time with the mother—their weight will have increased from 4.5 to 45 kg (9.9 to 99.2 lb) in the two years spent with the mother. Mothers may see their cubs in later years but both avoid each other.[53]

Lifespan

The average lifespan for a male is estimated at 22 years, with that of a female being slightly longer at 26.[54] Females live longer than males due to their less dangerous life; they do not engage in seasonal breeding fights as males do. The oldest known wild inland grizzly was about 34 years old in Alaska; the oldest known coastal bear was 39,[55] but most grizzlies die in their first year of life.[56] Captive grizzlies have lived as long as 44 years.[57]

Movement

They have a tendency to chase fleeing animals,[58] and although it has been said anecdotally that grizzly bears (Ursus arctos horribilis) can run at 56 km/h (35 mph), the maximum speed reliably recorded at Yellowstone is 48 km/h (30 mph).[59] In addition, they can climb trees.[58]

Wild grizzly bears at Brooks Falls, Alaska

Ecology

Diet

Although grizzlies are of the order Carnivora and have the digestive system of carnivores, they are normally omnivores: their diets consist of both plants and animals. They have been known to prey on large mammals, when available, such as moose, elk, caribou, white-tailed deer, mule deer, bighorn sheep, bison, and even black bears, though they are more likely to take calves and injured individuals rather than healthy adults. Grizzly bears feed on fish such as salmon, trout, and bass, and those with access to a more protein-enriched diet in coastal areas potentially grow larger than inland individuals. Grizzly bears also readily scavenge food or carrion left behind by other animals.[60] Grizzly bears will also eat birds and their eggs, and gather in large numbers at fishing sites to feed on spawning salmon. They frequently prey on baby deer left in the grass, and occasionally they raid the nests of raptors such as bald eagles.[61]

Coastal Canadian and Alaskan grizzlies are larger than those that reside in the Rocky Mountains. This is due, in part, to the richness of their diets. In Yellowstone National Park in the United States, the grizzly bear's diet consists mostly of whitebark pine nuts, tubers, grasses, various rodents, army cutworm moths, and scavenged carcasses.[62] None of these, however, match the fat content of the salmon available in Alaska and British Columbia. With the high fat content of salmon, it is not uncommon to encounter grizzlies in Alaska weighing 540 kg (1,200 lb).[63] Grizzlies in Alaska supplement their diet of salmon and clams with sedge grass and berries. In areas where salmon are forced to leap waterfalls, grizzlies gather at the base of the falls to feed on and catch the fish. Salmon are at a disadvantage when they leap waterfalls because they cluster together at their bases and are therefore easier targets for the grizzlies.[64] Grizzly bears are well-documented catching leaping salmon in their mouths at Brooks Falls in Katmai National Park and Preserve in Alaska. They are also very experienced in chasing the fish around and pinning them with their claws.[65] At such sites such as Brooks Falls and McNeil Falls in Alaska, big male grizzlies fight regularly for the best fishing spots.[66] Grizzly bears along the coast also forage for razor clams, and frequently dig into the sand to seek them.[67] During the spring and fall, directly before and after the salmon runs, berries and grass make up the mainstay of the diets of coastal grizzlies.[68]

 
Grizzly fishing for salmon at Brooks Falls, Alaska

Inland grizzlies may eat fish too, most notably in Yellowstone grizzlies eating Yellowstone cutthroat trout.[69] The relationship with cutthroat trout and grizzlies is unique because it is the only example where Rocky Mountain grizzlies feed on spawning salmonid fish.[69] However, grizzly bears themselves and invasive lake trout threaten the survival of the trout population and there is a slight chance that the trout will be eliminated.[70]

Grizzly bears occasionally prey on small mammals, such as marmots, ground squirrels, lemmings, and voles.[71] The most famous example of such predation is in Denali National Park and Preserve, where grizzlies chase, pounce on, and dig up Arctic ground squirrels to eat.[72] In some areas, grizzly bears prey on hoary marmots, overturning rocks to reach them, and in some cases preying on them when they are in hibernation.[73] Larger prey includes bison and moose, which are sometimes taken by bears in Yellowstone National Park. Because bison and moose are dangerous prey, grizzlies usually use cover to stalk them and/or pick off weak individuals or calves.[74][75] Grizzlies in Alaska also regularly prey on moose calves, which in Denali National Park may be their main source of meat. In fact, grizzly bears are such important predators of moose and elk calves in Alaska and Yellowstone that they may kill as many as 51 percent of elk or moose calves born that year. Grizzly bears have also been blamed in the decline of elk in Yellowstone National Park when the actual predators were thought to be gray wolves.[76][77][78][79][80] In northern Alaska, grizzlies are a significant predator of caribou, mostly taking sick or old individuals or calves.[81] Several studies show that grizzly bears may follow the caribou herds year-round in order to maintain their food supply.[82][83] In northern Alaska, grizzly bears often encounter muskox. Despite the fact that muskox do not usually occur in grizzly habitat and that they are bigger and more powerful than caribou, predation on muskox by grizzlies has been recorded.[84]

Grizzlies along the Alaskan coast also scavenge on dead or washed up whales.[85] Usually such incidents involve only one or two grizzlies at a carcass, but up to ten large males have been seen at a time eating a dead humpback whale. Dead seals and sea lions are also consumed.[citation needed]

Although the diets of grizzly bears vary extensively based on seasonal and regional changes, plants make up a large portion of them, with some estimates as high as 80–90%.[86] Various berries constitute an important food source when they are available. These can include blueberries, blackberries (Rubus fruticosus), salmon berries (Rubus spectabilis), cranberries (Vaccinium oxycoccos), buffalo berries (Shepherdia argentea), soapberries (Shepherdia canadensis), and huckleberries (Vaccinium parvifolium), depending on the environment. Insects such as ladybugs, ants, and bees are eaten if they are available in large quantities. In Yellowstone National Park, grizzly bears may obtain half of their yearly caloric needs by feeding on miller moths that congregate on mountain slopes.[87] When food is abundant, grizzly bears will feed in groups. For example, many grizzly bears will visit meadows right after an avalanche or glacier slide. This is due to an influx of legumes, such as Hedysarum, which the grizzlies consume in massive amounts.[88] When food sources become scarcer, however, they separate once again.

 
White-grey cub in Western Canada

Interspecific competition

The relationship between grizzly bears and other predators is mostly one-sided; grizzly bears will approach feeding predators to steal their kill. In general, the other species will leave the carcasses for the bear to avoid competition or predation. Any parts of the carcass left uneaten are scavenged by smaller animals.[89]

Grizzlies and wolves

With the reintroduction of gray wolves to Yellowstone, many visitors have witnessed a once common struggle between a keystone species, the grizzly bear, and its historic rival, the gray wolf. The interactions of grizzly bears with the wolves of Yellowstone have been under considerable study. Typically, the conflict will be in the defence of young or over a carcass, which is commonly an elk killed by wolves.[90]

The grizzly bear uses its keen sense of smell to locate the kill. As the wolves and grizzly compete for the kill, one wolf may try to distract the bear while the others feed. The bear then may retaliate by chasing the wolves. If the wolves become aggressive with the bear, it is normally in the form of quick nips at its hind legs. Thus, the bear will sit down and use its ability to protect itself in a full circle. Rarely do interactions such as these end in death or serious injury to either animal. One carcass simply is not usually worth the risk to the wolves (if the bear has the upper hand due to strength and size) or to the bear (if the wolves are too numerous or persistent).[91]

While wolves usually dominate grizzly bears during interactions at wolf dens, both grizzly and black bears have been reported killing wolves and their cubs at wolf dens even when the wolves were acting in defence.[92][93]

Grizzlies and big cats

Cougars generally give the bears a wide berth. Grizzlies have less competition with cougars than with other predators, such as coyotes, wolves, and other bears. When a grizzly descends on a cougar feeding on its kill, the cougar usually gives way to the bear. When a cougar does stand its ground, it will use its superior agility and its claws to harass the bear, yet stay out of its reach until one of them gives up. Grizzly bears occasionally kill cougars in disputes over kills.[94] There have been several anecdotes, primarily from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, of cougars and grizzly bears killing each other in fights to the death.[95]

The other big cat present in the United States which might pose a threat to bears is the jaguar;[96] however, both species have been extirpated in the regions of the Southwest where their former habitats overlapped, and grizzlies remain so far absent from the regions along the U.S.-Mexico border, where jaguars appear to be returning.

Grizzlies and black bears

 
Possible grizzly-black bear hybrid in Yukon Territory, Canada

Black bears generally stay out of grizzly territory, but grizzlies may occasionally enter black bear terrain to obtain food sources both bears enjoy, such as pine nuts, acorns, mushrooms, and berries. When a black bear sees a grizzly coming, it either turns tail and runs or climbs a tree.

Black bears are not strong competition for prey because they have a more herbivorous diet. Confrontations are rare because of the differences in size, habitats, and diets of the bear species. When this happens, it is usually with the grizzly being the aggressor. The black bear will only fight when it is a smaller grizzly such as a yearling or when the black bear has no other choice but to defend itself. There is at least one confirmed observation of a grizzly bear digging out, killing, and eating a black bear when the latter was in hibernation.[97]

The segregation of black bear and grizzly bear populations is possibly due to competitive exclusion. In certain areas, grizzly bears outcompete black bears for the same resources.[98] For example, many Pacific coastal islands off British Columbia and Alaska support either the black bear or the grizzly, but rarely both.[99]

In regions where both species coexist, they are divided by landscape gradients such as the age of forest, elevation, and land openness. Grizzly bears tend to favor old forests with high productivity, higher elevations and more open habitats compared with black bears.[98] However, a bear shot in autumn 1986 in Michigan was thought by some to be a grizzly×black bear hybrid, due to its unusually large size and its proportionately larger braincase and skull, but DNA testing was unable to determine whether it was a large American black bear or a grizzly bear.[100]

Grizzlies and various small predators

Coyotes, foxes, and wolverines are generally regarded merely as pests to grizzlies rather than competition, though they may compete for smaller prey, such as ground squirrels and rabbits. All three will try to scavenge whatever they can from the bears. Wolverines are aggressive enough to occasionally persist until the bear finishes eating, leaving more scraps than normal for the smaller animal.[89] Packs of coyotes have also displaced grizzly bears in disputes over kills.[101]

The removal of wolves and grizzlies in California may have greatly reduced the abundance of the endangered San Joaquin Kit Fox.[102]

Ecological role

The grizzly bear has several relationships with its ecosystem. One such relationship is a mutualistic relationship with fleshy-fruit bearing plants. After the grizzly consumes the fruit, the seeds are excreted and thereby dispersed in a germinable condition. Some studies have shown germination success is indeed increased as a result of seeds being deposited along with nutrients in feces.[103] This makes grizzly bears important seed distributors in their habitats.[104]

While foraging for tree roots, plant bulbs, or ground squirrels, bears stir up the soil. This process not only helps grizzlies access their food, but also increases species richness in alpine ecosystems.[105] An area that contains both bear digs and undisturbed land has greater plant diversity than an area that contains just undisturbed land.[105] Along with increasing species richness, soil disturbance causes nitrogen to be dug up from lower soil layers, and makes nitrogen more readily available in the environment. An area that has been dug by the grizzly bear has significantly more nitrogen than an undisturbed area.[106]

Nitrogen cycling is not only facilitated by grizzlies digging for food, it is also accomplished via their habit of carrying salmon carcasses into surrounding forests.[107] It has been found that spruce tree (Picea glauca) foliage within 500 m (1,600 ft) of the stream where the salmon have been obtained contains nitrogen originating from salmon on which the bears preyed.[108] These nitrogen influxes to the forest are directly related to the presence of grizzly bears and salmon.[109]

Grizzlies directly regulate prey populations and also help prevent overgrazing in forests by controlling the populations of other species in the food chain.[110] An experiment in Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming in the United States showed removal of wolves and grizzly bears caused populations of their herbivorous prey to increase.[111] This, in turn, changed the structure and density of plants in the area, which decreased the population sizes of migratory birds.[111] This provides evidence grizzly bears represent a keystone predator, having a major influence on the entire ecosystem they inhabit.[110]

When grizzly bears fish for salmon along the coasts of Alaska and British Columbia, they often only eat the skin, brain and roe of the fish. In doing so, they provide a food source for gulls, ravens, and foxes, all of which eat salmon as well; this benefits both the bear and the smaller predators.[112]

Interaction with humans

Relationship with Native Americans

 
Gorgonia, a Native American (Mescalero Apache) man. He holds a bear pelt and wears moccasin boots, a breechcloth, kilt, and vest

Native American tribes living among brown bears often view them with a mixture of awe and fear.[113] North American brown bears have at times been so feared by the Natives that they were rarely hunted by them, especially when alone. At traditional grizzly hunts in some western tribes such as the Gwichʼin, the expedition was conducted with the same preparation and ceremoniality as intertribal warfare and was never done except with a company of four to ten warriors. The tribe members who dealt the killing blow were highly esteemed among their compatriots.[114] Californian Natives 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 would seek aid from European colonists to deal with problem bears instead of hunting grizzlies themselves. Many authors in the American West wrote of Natives or voyageurs with lacerated faces and missing noses or eyes, due to attacks from grizzlies.[115][116]

Many Native American tribes both respect and fear the brown bear.[114][116][117] In Kwakiutl mythology, American black and brown bears became enemies when Grizzly Bear Woman killed Black Bear Woman for being lazy. Black Bear Woman's children, in turn, killed Grizzly Bear Woman's own cubs.[118] Sleeping Bear Dunes is named after an Ojibwe legend, where a female bear and her cubs swam across Lake Michigan. According to the legend, the two cubs drowned and became the Manitou islands. The mother bear eventually got to shore and slept, waiting patiently for her cubs to arrive. Over the years, the sand covered the mother bear up, creating a huge sand dune.

Conflicts with humans

 
Native Americans fighting two grizzly bears, 1844 painting by George Catlin
 
A rough and tumble with a grizzly by H. Bullock Webster, watercolor

Grizzlies are considered more aggressive compared to black bears when defending themselves and their offspring.[119] Unlike the smaller black bears, adult grizzlies do not climb trees well, and respond to danger by standing their ground and warding off their attackers.[120] Mothers defending cubs are the most prone to attacking, and are responsible for 70% of humans killed by grizzlies.[121]

Grizzly bears normally avoid contact with people. In spite of their obvious physical advantage they rarely actively hunt humans.[122] Most grizzly bear attacks result from a bear that has been surprised at very close range, especially if it has a supply of food to protect, or female grizzlies protecting their offspring.[123]

 
Hugh Glass being attacked by a grizzly bear, from an early newspaper illustration of unknown origin

Increased human–bear interaction has created "problem bears": bears adapted to human activities or habitat.[124] Exacerbating this is the fact that intensive human use of grizzly habitat coincides with the seasonal movement of grizzly bears.[123] Aversive conditioning using rubber bullets, foul-tasting chemicals, or acoustic deterrent devices attempt to condition bears to associate humans with unpleasantness, but is ineffective when the bears have already learned to positively associate humans with food.[125] Such bears are translocated or killed because they pose a threat to humans. The B.C. government kills approximately 50 problem bears each year[125] and overall spends more than one million dollars annually to address bear complaints, relocate bears or kill them.[125] A bear killing a human in a national park may be killed to prevent its attacking again.[126]

Bear awareness programs have been developed by communities in grizzly bear territory to help prevent conflicts with both black and grizzly bears. The main premise of these programs is to teach humans to manage foods that attract bears. Keeping garbage securely stored, harvesting fruit when ripe, securing livestock behind electric fences, and storing pet food indoors are all measures promoted by bear awareness programs.[127] Revelstoke, British Columbia, is a community that demonstrates the success of this approach. In the ten years preceding the development of a community education program in Revelstoke, 16 grizzlies were destroyed and a further 107 were relocated away from the town. An education program run by Revelstoke Bear Aware was put in place in 1996. Since the program began just four grizzlies have been eliminated and five have been relocated.[128]

For back-country campers, hanging food between trees at a height unreachable to bears is a common procedure, although some grizzlies can climb and reach hanging food in other ways. An alternative to hanging food is to use a bear canister.[129]

Traveling in groups of six or more can significantly reduce the chance of bear-related injuries while hiking in bear country.[130] Grizzly bears are especially dangerous because of the force of their bite, which has been measured at over 8 megapascals (1160 psi). It has been estimated that a bite from a grizzly could even crush a bowling ball.[131]

Bear-watching

 
Bear catches a salmon at Brooks Falls

In the past 20 years in Alaska, ecotourism has boomed. While many people come to Alaska to bear-hunt, the majority come to watch the bears and observe their habits. Some of the best bear viewing in the world occurs on coastal areas of the Alaska Peninsula, including in Lake Clark National Park and Preserve, Katmai National Park and Preserve, and the McNeil River State Game Sanctuary and Refuge. Here bears gather in large numbers to feast on concentrated food sources, including sedges in the salt marshes, clams in the nearby tidal flats, salmon in the estuary streams, and berries on the neighboring hillsides.

Katmai National Park and Preserve is one of the best spots to view brown bears. The bear population in Katmai is estimated at a healthy 2,100.[132] The park is located on the Alaskan Peninsula about 480 km (300 mi) southwest of the city of Anchorage. At Brooks Camp, a famous site exists where grizzlies can be seen catching salmon from atop a platform—it can be even viewed online from a cam.[133] In coastal areas of the park, such as Hallo Bay, Geographic Harbor, Swikshak Lagoon, American Creek, Big River, Kamishak River, Savonoski River, Moraine Creek, Funnel Creek, Battle Creek, Nantuk Creek,[134] Kukak Bay, and Kaflia Bay bears can be seen fishing alongside wolves, eagles, and river otters. Coastal areas host the highest population densities year round because there is a larger variety of food sources available, but Brooks Camp hosts the highest population (100 bears).[135]

The McNeil River State Game Sanctuary and Refuge, on the McNeil River, is home to the greatest concentration of brown bears in the world. An estimated 144 individual bears have been identified at the falls in a single summer with as many as 74 at one time;[136] 60 or more bears at the falls is a frequent sight, and it is not uncommon to see 100 bears at the falls throughout a single day.[137] The McNeil River State Game Refuge, containing Chenik Lake and a smaller number of grizzly bears, has been closed to grizzly hunting since 1995.[138] All of the Katmai-McNeil area is closed to hunting except for Katmai National Preserve, where regulated legal hunting takes place.[139] In all, the Katmai-McNeil area has an estimated 2,500 grizzly bears.[140]

Admiralty Island, in southeast Alaska, was known to early natives as Xootsnoowú, meaning "fortress of bears," and is home to the densest grizzly population in North America. An estimated 1600 grizzlies live on the island, which itself is only 140 km (90 mi) long.[141] One place to view grizzly bears in the island is probably Pack Creek, in the Stan Price State Wildlife Sanctuary. 20 to 30 grizzlies can be observed at the creek at one time and like Brooks Camp, visitors can watch bears from an above platform.[142] Kodiak Island, hence its name, is another place to view bears. An estimated 3,500 Kodiak grizzly bears inhabit the island, 2,300 of these in the Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge.[143][144] The O'Malley River is considered the best place on Kodiak Island to view grizzly bears.[145]

Protection

 

The grizzly bear is listed as threatened in the contiguous United States and endangered in parts of Canada. In May 2002, the Canadian Species at Risk Act listed the Prairie population (Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba range) of grizzly bears as extirpated in Canada.[146] As of 2002, grizzly bears were listed as special concern under the COSEWIC registry[147] and considered threatened under the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.[148]

Within the United States, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service concentrates its effort to restore grizzly bears in six recovery areas. These are Northern Continental Divide (Montana), Yellowstone (Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho), Cabinet-Yaak (Montana and Idaho), Selway-Bitterroot (Montana and Idaho), Selkirk (Idaho and Washington), and North Cascades (Washington). The grizzly population in these areas is estimated at 750 in the Northern Continental Divide, 550 in Yellowstone, 40 in the Yaak portion of the Cabinet-Yaak, and 15 in the Cabinet portion (in northwestern Montana), 105 in Selkirk region of Idaho, 10–20 in the North Cascades, and none currently in Selway-Bitterroots, although there have been sightings.[149] These are estimates because bears move in and out of these areas. In the recovery areas that adjoin Canada, bears also move back and forth across the international boundary.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service claims the Cabinet-Yaak and Selkirk areas are linked through British Columbia, a claim that is disputed.[150] U.S. and Canadian national parks, such as Banff National Park, Yellowstone and Grand Teton, and Theodore Roosevelt National Park are subject to laws and regulations designed to protect the bears.

 
A sign at a BC Park warns campers to hang food, garbage, and toiletries out of reach of bears, or to use a secure bear cache

On 9 January 2006, the US Fish and Wildlife Service proposed to remove Yellowstone grizzlies from the list of threatened and protected species.[151] In March 2007, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service "de-listed" the population,[152] effectively removing Endangered Species Act protections for grizzlies in the Yellowstone National Park area. Several environmental organizations, including the NRDC, brought a lawsuit against the federal government to relist the grizzly bear. On 22 September 2009, U.S. District Judge Donald W. Molloy reinstated protection due to the decline of whitebark pine tree, whose nuts are an important source of food for the bears.[153] In early March 2016, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed to withdraw Endangered Species Act protections from grizzly bears in and around Yellowstone National Park. The population has risen from 136 bears in 1975 to an estimated 700 in 2017, and was "delisted" in June 2017.[154][155][156] It was argued that the population had sufficiently recovered from the threat of extinction, however numerous conservation and tribal organizations argued that the grizzly population remained genetically vulnerable. They successfully sued the administration (Crow Tribe et al v. Zinke) and on July 30, 2019, the Yellowstone grizzly was officially returned to federal protection.[157][158]

Farther north, in Alberta, Canada, intense DNA hair-snagging studies in 2000 showed the grizzly population to be increasing faster than what it was formerly believed to be, and Alberta Sustainable Resource Development calculated a population of 841 bears.[159] In 2002, the Endangered Species Conservation Committee recommended that the Alberta grizzly bear population be designated as threatened due to recent estimates of grizzly bear mortality rates that indicated the population was in decline. A recovery plan released by the provincial government in March 2008 indicated the grizzly population is lower than previously believed.[160] In 2010, the provincial government formally listed its population of about 700 grizzlies as "Threatened".[161]

Environment Canada consider the grizzly bear to a "special concern" species, as it is particularly sensitive to human activities and natural threats. In Alberta and British Columbia, the species is considered to be at risk.[162] In 2008, it was estimated there were 16,014 grizzly bears in the British Columbia population, which was lower than previously estimated due to refinements in the population model.[163]

Conservation efforts

 
Drum or barrel trap, used to safely relocate bears, adjacent to a building in Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming, United States
 
Taxidermied specimens at the American Museum of Natural History

Conservation efforts have become an increasingly vital investment over recent decades, as population numbers have dramatically declined. Establishment of parks and protected areas are one of the main focuses currently being tackled to help reestablish the low grizzly bear population in British Columbia. One example of these efforts is the Khutzeymateen Grizzly Bear Sanctuary located along the north coast of British Columbia; at 44,300 ha (109,000 acres) in size, it is composed of key habitat for this threatened species. Regulations such as limited public access, as well as a strict no hunting policy, have enabled this location to be a safe haven for local grizzlies in the area.[164] When choosing the location of a park focused on grizzly bear conservation, factors such as habitat quality and connectivity to other habitat patches are considered.

The Refuge for Endangered Wildlife located on Grouse Mountain in Vancouver is an example of a different type of conservation effort for the diminishing grizzly bear population. The refuge is a five-acre terrain which has functioned as a home for two orphaned grizzly bears since 2001.[165] The purpose of this refuge is to provide awareness and education to the public about grizzly bears, as well as providing an area for research and observation of this secluded species.

Another factor currently being taken into consideration when designing conservation plans for future generations are anthropogenic barriers in the form of urban development and roads. These elements are acting as obstacles, causing fragmentation of the remaining grizzly bear population habitat and prevention of gene flow between subpopulations (for example, Banff National Park). This, in turn, is creating a decline in genetic diversity, and therefore the overall fitness of the general population is lowered.[166] In light of these issues, conservation plans often include migration corridors by way of long strips of "park forest" to connect less developed areas, or by way of tunnels and overpasses over busy roads.[167] Using GPS collar tracking, scientists can study whether or not these efforts are actually making a positive contribution towards resolving the problem.[168] To date, most corridors are found to be infrequently used, and thus genetic isolation is currently occurring, which can result in inbreeding and therefore an increased frequency of deleterious genes through genetic drift.[169] Current data suggest female grizzly bears are disproportionately less likely than males to use these corridors, which can prevent mate access and decrease the number of offspring.

In the United States, national efforts have been made since 1982 for the recovery plan of grizzly bears.[170] A lot of the efforts made have been through different organizations efforts to educate the public on grizzly bear safety, habits of grizzly bears and different ways to reduce human-bear conflict. The Interagency Grizzly Bear Recovery Committee is one of many organizations committed to the recovery of grizzly bears in the lower 48 states.[171] There are five recovery zones for grizzly bears in the lower 48 states including the North Cascades ecosystem in Washington state.[154] The National Park Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife initiated the process of an environmental impact statement that started in the fall of 2014 to begin the recovery process of grizzly bears to the North Cascades region.[154] A final plan and environmental impact statement was released in the spring of 2017 with a record of decision to follow.[154][156] In 2017, the Trump administration stripped parklands of previous regulations that protected wildlife living on the land, putting species such as the grizzly bear at risk.[172] Specifically, federal protections on the grizzly bear in Yellowstone National Parks were removed. Regulations that protected the bears against hunting methods with Park Service rules (specifically in park lands in Alaska) were revisited by the Department of Interior.[172][173] The National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) supports common sense opportunities for hunting in national preserves," but the state of Alaska’s wildlife management leads for the killing of more bears, which increases the population of moose and caribou.[172][173] The rise in moose and caribou works in favor of sport hunters. Theresa Pierno, President and CEO of National Parks Conservation Association stated, "The State of Alaska’s lawsuit against the Park Service and Fish and Wildlife Service seeks to overturn common sense regulations, which underwent a thorough and transparent public process. More than 70,000 Americans said ‘no’ to baiting bears with grease-soaked donuts in Denali National Park and Preserve. The public was right to want to stop sport hunters from crawling into bears’ dens and using flashlights to wake and kill mother bears and their cubs. The state’s attempt to dismantle the results of this public process jeopardizes the stewardship of federal public lands, which belong to all Americans."[172]

A press release on October 3, 2022 stated that a federal district court, based in Alaska, will be returning to look over a National Park Service rule relating to hunting practices, including baiting bears.[172] The Interior Department and Park Service’s decision permits the law to reside in place while conducting revisions.[172]

See also

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Further reading

  • Miller, Craig R.; Waits, Lisette P.; Joyce, Paul (December 2006), (PDF), Molecular Ecology, 15 (14): 4477–4485, doi:10.1111/j.1365-294X.2006.03097.x, PMID 17107477, S2CID 7336900, archived from the original (PDF) on 24 March 2012, retrieved 24 September 2011
  • "Ursus arctos horribilis". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 18 March 2006.
  • Banfield, A. W. F. (1987). The Mammals of Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • Committee On The Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) Assessment and Update Status Report on the Grizzly Bear (Ursus arctos) in Canada, 2002 2.1 MB PDF file.
  • Cronin, M. A.; et al. (1991). (PDF). Canadian Journal of Zoology. 69 (12): 2985–2992. doi:10.1139/z91-421. S2CID 54763647. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 February 2019.
  • Herrero, Stephen (1985). Bear Attacks. Piscataway, NJ: New Centuries Publishers. ISBN 978-0-8329-0377-9.
  • Waits, L. P.; et al. (1998). "Mitochondrial DNA phylogeography of the North American brown bear and implications for conservation". Conservation Biology. 12 (2): 408–417. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1739.1998.96351.x.
  • Snyder, Susan (2003). Bear in Mind: the California Grizzly. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9781890771706.
  • Mattson, J.; Merrill, Troy (2001). "Extirpations of Grizzly Bears in the Contiguous United States, 1850–2000". Conservation Biology. 16 (4): 1123–1136. doi:10.1046/j.1523-1739.2002.00414.x. S2CID 84050297.
  • Wielgus, R. B. (2002). "Minimum viable population and reserve sizes for naturally regulated grizzly bears in British Columbia". Biological Conservation. 106 (3): 381–388. doi:10.1016/S0006-3207(01)00265-8.
  • Groom, M. J.; Meffe, G. K.; Carroll, C. R. (2006). Principles of Conservation Biology (3rd ed.). Sunderland, MA: Sinauer Associates.
  • Lapinski, Mike (2006). Grizzlies and Grizzled Old Men: A Tribute to Those Who Fought to Save the Great Bear. Guilford, CT/Helena, MT: Globe Pequot Press – Falcon Imprint. ISBN 978-0-7627-3653-9.
  • Murie, Adolph (1985). The grizzlies of Mount McKinley. Seattle: University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-295-96204-7.
  • McCory, W.P.; Herrero, S.M.; Jones, G.W. & Mallam, E.D. (1990). "A Selection of Papers from the Eighth International Conference on Bear Research and Management, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. Bears: Their Biology and Management". 8: 11–16. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Proctor, M.F.; McLellan, B.N.; Strobeck, C. & Barclay, R.M.R. (2005). "Genetic analysis reveals demographic fragmentation of grizzly bears yielding vulnerably small populations". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 272 (1579): 2409–2416. doi:10.1098/rspb.2005.3246. PMC 1559960. PMID 16243699.

External links

  • Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History species account-Grizzly Bear

grizzly, bear, other, uses, disambiguation, grizzly, redirects, here, other, uses, grizzly, disambiguation, grizzly, bear, ursus, arctos, horribilis, also, known, north, american, brown, bear, simply, grizzly, population, subspecies, brown, bear, inhabiting, n. For other uses see Grizzly bear disambiguation Grizzly redirects here For other uses see Grizzly disambiguation The grizzly bear Ursus arctos horribilis also known as the North American brown bear or simply grizzly is a population or subspecies 2 of the brown bear inhabiting North America Grizzly bearTemporal range Pleistocene PresentConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Alaska Vulnerable IUCN 3 1 1 United States and Canada Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder CarnivoraFamily UrsidaeGenus UrsusSpecies U arctosSubspecies U a horribilisTrinomial nameUrsus arctos horribilis Linnaeus 1758 Former subspecies now synonymisedU a californicus U a dalli U a gyas U a ungavaesis U a middendorffi U a nelsoni U a sitkensis U a stikeenensisHistoric and present rangeIn addition to the mainland grizzly Ursus arctos horribilis other morphological forms of brown bear in North America are sometimes identified as grizzly bears These include three living populations the Kodiak bear U a middendorffi the Kamchatka bear U a beringianus and the peninsular grizzly U a gyas as well as the extinct California grizzly U a californicus 3 4 Mexican grizzly formerly U a nelsoni and Ungava Labrador grizzly formerly U a ungavaesis 5 6 On average grizzly bears near the coast tend to be larger while inland grizzlies tend to be smaller The Ussuri brown bear U a lasiotus inhabiting Russia Northern China Japan and Korea 4 7 8 is sometimes referred to as the black grizzly although it is no more closely related to North American brown bears than other subspecies of the brown bear around the world Contents 1 Classification 1 1 Meaning of grizzly 1 2 Evolution and genetics 1 2 1 Phylogenetics 1 2 2 Ursus arctos 1 2 3 Subspecies in North America 2 Appearance 2 1 Characteristics 3 Range 3 1 Populations 3 1 1 Extirpated populations and recovery 4 Biology 4 1 Hibernation 4 2 Reproduction 4 3 Lifespan 4 4 Movement 5 Ecology 5 1 Diet 5 2 Interspecific competition 5 2 1 Grizzlies and wolves 5 2 2 Grizzlies and big cats 5 2 3 Grizzlies and black bears 5 2 4 Grizzlies and various small predators 5 3 Ecological role 6 Interaction with humans 6 1 Relationship with Native Americans 6 2 Conflicts with humans 6 3 Bear watching 7 Protection 7 1 Conservation efforts 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksClassificationMeaning of grizzly Meriwether Lewis and William Clark first described it as grisley which could be interpreted as either grizzly i e grizzled that is with grey tipped or silver tipped hair or grisly fear inspiring now usually gruesome 9 The modern spelling supposes the former meaning even so naturalist George Ord formally classified it in 1815 as U horribilis for its character 10 Evolution and genetics Phylogenetics Classification has been revised along genetic lines 3 There are two morphological forms of Ursus arctos the grizzly and the coastal brown bears but these morphological forms do not have distinct mtDNA lineages 11 Ursus arctos Brown bears originated in Eurasia and traveled to North America approximately 50 000 years ago 12 13 spreading into the contiguous United States about 13 000 years ago 14 The genome of the grizzly bear was sequenced in 2018 and found to be 2 328 64Mb mega basepairs in length and contain 30 387 genes 15 In the 19th century the grizzly was classified as 86 distinct species However by 1928 only seven grizzly species remained 4 and by 1953 only one species remained globally 16 However modern genetic testing reveals the grizzly to be a subspecies of the brown bear Ursus arctos Biologist R L Rausch found that North America has but one species of grizzly 2 Therefore everywhere it is the brown bear in North America it is the grizzly but these are all the same species Ursus arctos Subspecies in North America In 1963 Rausch reduced the number of North American subspecies to one Ursus arctos middendorffi 17 Further testing of Y chromosomes is required to yield an accurate new taxonomy with different subspecies 3 Coastal grizzlies often referred to by the popular but geographically redundant synonym of brown bear or Alaskan brown bear are larger and darker than inland grizzlies which is why they too were considered a different species from grizzlies Kodiak Grizzly Bears were also at one time considered distinct Therefore at one time there were five different species of brown bear including three in North America 18 Appearance Grizzly pair at the Cleveland Zoo Grizzly claws are longer than an American black bear s and adapted for digging Most adult female grizzlies weigh 130 180 kg 290 400 lb while adult males weigh on average 180 360 kg 400 790 lb Average total length in this subspecies is between 198 cm 78 in and 240 cm 94 in 19 with an average shoulder height of 102 cm 40 in and hindfoot length of 28 cm 11 in 20 Newborn bears may weigh less than 500 g 18 oz In the Yukon River area mature female grizzlies can weigh as little as 100 kg 220 lb For a female these average weights would be 136 kg 300 lb inland and 227 kg 500 lb coastal respectively 21 A grizzly roams in a wooded area near Jasper Townsite in Jasper National Park Alberta Canada Although variable in color from blond to nearly black grizzly bear fur is typically brown with darker legs and commonly white or blond tipped fur on the flank and back 22 Characteristics A pronounced muscular hump appears on adult grizzlies shoulders black bears do not have this hump Aside from the distinguishing hump a grizzly bear can be identified by a dished in profile of their face with short rounded ears whereas a black bear has a straight face profile and longer ears 23 A grizzly bear can also be identified by its rump which is lower than its shoulders a black bear s rump is higher than its shoulders 23 A grizzly bear s front claws measure about 51 102 mm 2 4 in in length a black bear s claws measure about 25 51 mm 1 2 in in length 23 Range Alaskan grizzly in Katmai National Park with partially eaten salmon the heads skin and subcutaneous tissue are eaten to obtain the most fat In North America grizzly bears previously ranged from Alaska down to Mexico and as far east as the western shores of Hudson Bay 12 the species is now found in Alaska south through much of western Canada and into portions of the northwestern United States including Washington Idaho Montana and Wyoming extending as far south as Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks 24 In Canada there are approximately 25 000 grizzly bears occupying British Columbia Alberta the Yukon the Northwest Territories Nunavut and the northern part of Manitoba 12 An article published in 1954 suggested they may be present in the tundra areas of the Ungava Peninsula and the northern tip of Labrador Quebec 25 In British Columbia grizzly bears inhabit approximately 90 of their original territory There were approximately 25 000 grizzly bears in British Columbia when the European settlers arrived 12 However population size has since significantly decreased due to hunting and habitat loss In 2008 it was estimated there were 16 000 grizzly bears A revised Grizzly bear count in 2012 for British Columbia was 15 075 26 Population estimates for British Columbia are based on hair snagging DNA based inventories mark and recapture and a refined multiple regression model 27 In 2003 researchers from the University of Alberta spotted a grizzly on Melville Island in the high Arctic which is the most northerly sighting ever documented 28 29 Populations Family of bears in Glacier National Park Montana United States Around 60 000 wild grizzly bears are located throughout North America 30 000 of which are found in Alaska 12 and up to 29 000 live in Canada The Alaskan population of 30 000 individuals is the highest population of any province state in North America Populations in Alaska are densest along the coast where food supplies such as salmon are more abundant 30 The Admiralty Island National Monument protects the densest population 1 600 bears on a 1 600 square mile island 31 The majority of Canada s grizzlies live in British Columbia 32 In the lower 48 United States around 1 000 are found in the Northern Continental Divide in northwestern Montana 33 About 1 000 more live in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem in the tri state area of Wyoming Idaho and Montana 34 There are an estimated 70 100 grizzly bears living in northern and eastern Idaho In September 2007 a hunter produced evidence of one bear in the Selway Bitterroot Wilderness ecosystem by killing a male grizzly bear there 35 In the North Cascades ecosystem of northern Washington grizzly bear populations are estimated to be fewer than 20 bears but there is a longterm management plan to reintroduce the bears to North Cascades National Park 36 Extirpated populations and recovery The grizzly bear s original range included much of the Great Plains and the southwestern states but it has been extirpated in most of those areas Combining Canada and the United States grizzly bears inhabit approximately half the area of their historical range 12 Although the once abundant California grizzly bear appears prominently on the state flag of California and was the symbol of the Bear Flag Republic before the state of California s admission to the Union in 1850 the subspecies or population is currently extinct The last known grizzlies in California were killed in the Sierra foothills east of Fresno in the early 1920s 37 The killing of the last grizzly bear in Arizona in 1936 at Escudilla Mountain is included in Aldo Leopold s Sand County Almanac 38 There has been no confirmed sighting of a grizzly in Colorado since 1979 39 Other provinces and the United States may use a combination of methods for population estimates Therefore it is difficult to say precisely what methods were used to produce total population estimates for Canada and North America as they were likely developed from a variety of studies The grizzly bear currently has legal protection in Mexico European countries some areas of Canada and in all of the United States However it is expected that repopulating its former range will be a slow process due to various reasons including the bear s slow reproductive habits and the effects of reintroducing such a large animal to areas prized for agriculture and livestock BiologyHibernation Grizzly bears hibernate for five to seven months each year 40 except where the climate is warm the California grizzly did not hibernate 4 During this time female grizzly bears give birth to their offspring who then consume milk from their mother and gain strength for the remainder of the hibernation period 41 To prepare for hibernation grizzlies must prepare a den and consume an immense amount of food because they do not eat during hibernation Grizzly bears also do not defecate or urinate throughout the entire hibernation period The male grizzly bear s hibernation ends in early to mid March while females emerge in April or early May 42 In preparation for winter bears can gain approximately 180 kg 400 lb during a period of hyperphagia before going into hibernation 43 The bear often waits for a substantial snowstorm before it enters its den such behavior lessens the chances that predators will find the den The dens are typically at elevations above 1 800 meters 5 900 ft on north facing slopes 44 There is some debate among professionals as to whether grizzly bears technically hibernate much of this debate revolves around body temperature and the ability of the bears to move around during hibernation on occasion Grizzly bears can partially recycle their body wastes during this period 45 Although inland or Rocky Mountain grizzlies spend nearly half of their life in dens coastal grizzlies with better access to food sources spend less time in dens In some areas where food is very plentiful year round grizzly bears skip hibernation altogether 46 Reproduction Sow with two cubs in Kananaskis Country Except for females with cubs 47 grizzlies are normally solitary active animals but in coastal areas grizzlies gather around streams lakes rivers and ponds during the salmon spawn Females sows produce one to four young usually two that are small and weigh only about 450 g 16 oz at birth A sow is protective of her offspring and will attack if she thinks she or her cubs are threatened Grizzly bears have one of the lowest reproductive rates of all terrestrial mammals in North America 48 This is due to numerous ecological factors Grizzly bears do not reach sexual maturity until they are at least five years old 12 49 Once mated with a male in the summer the female delays embryo implantation until hibernation during which miscarriage can occur if the female does not receive the proper nutrients and caloric intake 50 On average females produce two cubs in a litter 49 and the mother cares for the cubs for up to two years during which the mother will not mate 12 Mother grizzly with a cub Once the young leave or are killed females may not produce another litter for three or more years depending on environmental conditions 51 Male grizzly bears have large territories up to 4 000 km2 1 500 sq mi 48 making finding a female scent difficult in such low population densities Population fragmentation of grizzlies may destabilize the population from inbreeding depression The gestation period for grizzly bears is approximately 180 250 days Litter size varies between one and four cubs typically comprising twins or triplets Cubs are always born in the mother s winter den while she is in hibernation Female grizzlies are fiercely protective of their cubs being able to fend off predators including larger male bears 52 Cubs feed entirely on their mother s milk until summer comes after which they still drink milk but begin to eat solid foods Cubs gain weight rapidly during their time with the mother their weight will have increased from 4 5 to 45 kg 9 9 to 99 2 lb in the two years spent with the mother Mothers may see their cubs in later years but both avoid each other 53 Lifespan The average lifespan for a male is estimated at 22 years with that of a female being slightly longer at 26 54 Females live longer than males due to their less dangerous life they do not engage in seasonal breeding fights as males do The oldest known wild inland grizzly was about 34 years old in Alaska the oldest known coastal bear was 39 55 but most grizzlies die in their first year of life 56 Captive grizzlies have lived as long as 44 years 57 Movement They have a tendency to chase fleeing animals 58 and although it has been said anecdotally that grizzly bears Ursus arctos horribilis can run at 56 km h 35 mph the maximum speed reliably recorded at Yellowstone is 48 km h 30 mph 59 In addition they can climb trees 58 source source source source source source source source Wild grizzly bears at Brooks Falls AlaskaEcologyDiet See also Hypocarnivore Although grizzlies are of the order Carnivora and have the digestive system of carnivores they are normally omnivores their diets consist of both plants and animals They have been known to prey on large mammals when available such as moose elk caribou white tailed deer mule deer bighorn sheep bison and even black bears though they are more likely to take calves and injured individuals rather than healthy adults Grizzly bears feed on fish such as salmon trout and bass and those with access to a more protein enriched diet in coastal areas potentially grow larger than inland individuals Grizzly bears also readily scavenge food or carrion left behind by other animals 60 Grizzly bears will also eat birds and their eggs and gather in large numbers at fishing sites to feed on spawning salmon They frequently prey on baby deer left in the grass and occasionally they raid the nests of raptors such as bald eagles 61 Coastal Canadian and Alaskan grizzlies are larger than those that reside in the Rocky Mountains This is due in part to the richness of their diets In Yellowstone National Park in the United States the grizzly bear s diet consists mostly of whitebark pine nuts tubers grasses various rodents army cutworm moths and scavenged carcasses 62 None of these however match the fat content of the salmon available in Alaska and British Columbia With the high fat content of salmon it is not uncommon to encounter grizzlies in Alaska weighing 540 kg 1 200 lb 63 Grizzlies in Alaska supplement their diet of salmon and clams with sedge grass and berries In areas where salmon are forced to leap waterfalls grizzlies gather at the base of the falls to feed on and catch the fish Salmon are at a disadvantage when they leap waterfalls because they cluster together at their bases and are therefore easier targets for the grizzlies 64 Grizzly bears are well documented catching leaping salmon in their mouths at Brooks Falls in Katmai National Park and Preserve in Alaska They are also very experienced in chasing the fish around and pinning them with their claws 65 At such sites such as Brooks Falls and McNeil Falls in Alaska big male grizzlies fight regularly for the best fishing spots 66 Grizzly bears along the coast also forage for razor clams and frequently dig into the sand to seek them 67 During the spring and fall directly before and after the salmon runs berries and grass make up the mainstay of the diets of coastal grizzlies 68 Grizzly fishing for salmon at Brooks Falls Alaska Inland grizzlies may eat fish too most notably in Yellowstone grizzlies eating Yellowstone cutthroat trout 69 The relationship with cutthroat trout and grizzlies is unique because it is the only example where Rocky Mountain grizzlies feed on spawning salmonid fish 69 However grizzly bears themselves and invasive lake trout threaten the survival of the trout population and there is a slight chance that the trout will be eliminated 70 Grizzly bears occasionally prey on small mammals such as marmots ground squirrels lemmings and voles 71 The most famous example of such predation is in Denali National Park and Preserve where grizzlies chase pounce on and dig up Arctic ground squirrels to eat 72 In some areas grizzly bears prey on hoary marmots overturning rocks to reach them and in some cases preying on them when they are in hibernation 73 Larger prey includes bison and moose which are sometimes taken by bears in Yellowstone National Park Because bison and moose are dangerous prey grizzlies usually use cover to stalk them and or pick off weak individuals or calves 74 75 Grizzlies in Alaska also regularly prey on moose calves which in Denali National Park may be their main source of meat In fact grizzly bears are such important predators of moose and elk calves in Alaska and Yellowstone that they may kill as many as 51 percent of elk or moose calves born that year Grizzly bears have also been blamed in the decline of elk in Yellowstone National Park when the actual predators were thought to be gray wolves 76 77 78 79 80 In northern Alaska grizzlies are a significant predator of caribou mostly taking sick or old individuals or calves 81 Several studies show that grizzly bears may follow the caribou herds year round in order to maintain their food supply 82 83 In northern Alaska grizzly bears often encounter muskox Despite the fact that muskox do not usually occur in grizzly habitat and that they are bigger and more powerful than caribou predation on muskox by grizzlies has been recorded 84 Grizzlies along the Alaskan coast also scavenge on dead or washed up whales 85 Usually such incidents involve only one or two grizzlies at a carcass but up to ten large males have been seen at a time eating a dead humpback whale Dead seals and sea lions are also consumed citation needed Although the diets of grizzly bears vary extensively based on seasonal and regional changes plants make up a large portion of them with some estimates as high as 80 90 86 Various berries constitute an important food source when they are available These can include blueberries blackberries Rubus fruticosus salmon berries Rubus spectabilis cranberries Vaccinium oxycoccos buffalo berries Shepherdia argentea soapberries Shepherdia canadensis and huckleberries Vaccinium parvifolium depending on the environment Insects such as ladybugs ants and bees are eaten if they are available in large quantities In Yellowstone National Park grizzly bears may obtain half of their yearly caloric needs by feeding on miller moths that congregate on mountain slopes 87 When food is abundant grizzly bears will feed in groups For example many grizzly bears will visit meadows right after an avalanche or glacier slide This is due to an influx of legumes such as Hedysarum which the grizzlies consume in massive amounts 88 When food sources become scarcer however they separate once again White grey cub in Western Canada Interspecific competition The relationship between grizzly bears and other predators is mostly one sided grizzly bears will approach feeding predators to steal their kill In general the other species will leave the carcasses for the bear to avoid competition or predation Any parts of the carcass left uneaten are scavenged by smaller animals 89 Grizzlies and wolves With the reintroduction of gray wolves to Yellowstone many visitors have witnessed a once common struggle between a keystone species the grizzly bear and its historic rival the gray wolf The interactions of grizzly bears with the wolves of Yellowstone have been under considerable study Typically the conflict will be in the defence of young or over a carcass which is commonly an elk killed by wolves 90 The grizzly bear uses its keen sense of smell to locate the kill As the wolves and grizzly compete for the kill one wolf may try to distract the bear while the others feed The bear then may retaliate by chasing the wolves If the wolves become aggressive with the bear it is normally in the form of quick nips at its hind legs Thus the bear will sit down and use its ability to protect itself in a full circle Rarely do interactions such as these end in death or serious injury to either animal One carcass simply is not usually worth the risk to the wolves if the bear has the upper hand due to strength and size or to the bear if the wolves are too numerous or persistent 91 While wolves usually dominate grizzly bears during interactions at wolf dens both grizzly and black bears have been reported killing wolves and their cubs at wolf dens even when the wolves were acting in defence 92 93 Grizzlies and big cats Cougars generally give the bears a wide berth Grizzlies have less competition with cougars than with other predators such as coyotes wolves and other bears When a grizzly descends on a cougar feeding on its kill the cougar usually gives way to the bear When a cougar does stand its ground it will use its superior agility and its claws to harass the bear yet stay out of its reach until one of them gives up Grizzly bears occasionally kill cougars in disputes over kills 94 There have been several anecdotes primarily from the late 19th and early 20th centuries of cougars and grizzly bears killing each other in fights to the death 95 The other big cat present in the United States which might pose a threat to bears is the jaguar 96 however both species have been extirpated in the regions of the Southwest where their former habitats overlapped and grizzlies remain so far absent from the regions along the U S Mexico border where jaguars appear to be returning Grizzlies and black bears Possible grizzly black bear hybrid in Yukon Territory Canada Black bears generally stay out of grizzly territory but grizzlies may occasionally enter black bear terrain to obtain food sources both bears enjoy such as pine nuts acorns mushrooms and berries When a black bear sees a grizzly coming it either turns tail and runs or climbs a tree Black bears are not strong competition for prey because they have a more herbivorous diet Confrontations are rare because of the differences in size habitats and diets of the bear species When this happens it is usually with the grizzly being the aggressor The black bear will only fight when it is a smaller grizzly such as a yearling or when the black bear has no other choice but to defend itself There is at least one confirmed observation of a grizzly bear digging out killing and eating a black bear when the latter was in hibernation 97 The segregation of black bear and grizzly bear populations is possibly due to competitive exclusion In certain areas grizzly bears outcompete black bears for the same resources 98 For example many Pacific coastal islands off British Columbia and Alaska support either the black bear or the grizzly but rarely both 99 In regions where both species coexist they are divided by landscape gradients such as the age of forest elevation and land openness Grizzly bears tend to favor old forests with high productivity higher elevations and more open habitats compared with black bears 98 However a bear shot in autumn 1986 in Michigan was thought by some to be a grizzly black bear hybrid due to its unusually large size and its proportionately larger braincase and skull but DNA testing was unable to determine whether it was a large American black bear or a grizzly bear 100 Grizzlies and various small predators Coyotes foxes and wolverines are generally regarded merely as pests to grizzlies rather than competition though they may compete for smaller prey such as ground squirrels and rabbits All three will try to scavenge whatever they can from the bears Wolverines are aggressive enough to occasionally persist until the bear finishes eating leaving more scraps than normal for the smaller animal 89 Packs of coyotes have also displaced grizzly bears in disputes over kills 101 The removal of wolves and grizzlies in California may have greatly reduced the abundance of the endangered San Joaquin Kit Fox 102 Ecological role The grizzly bear has several relationships with its ecosystem One such relationship is a mutualistic relationship with fleshy fruit bearing plants After the grizzly consumes the fruit the seeds are excreted and thereby dispersed in a germinable condition Some studies have shown germination success is indeed increased as a result of seeds being deposited along with nutrients in feces 103 This makes grizzly bears important seed distributors in their habitats 104 While foraging for tree roots plant bulbs or ground squirrels bears stir up the soil This process not only helps grizzlies access their food but also increases species richness in alpine ecosystems 105 An area that contains both bear digs and undisturbed land has greater plant diversity than an area that contains just undisturbed land 105 Along with increasing species richness soil disturbance causes nitrogen to be dug up from lower soil layers and makes nitrogen more readily available in the environment An area that has been dug by the grizzly bear has significantly more nitrogen than an undisturbed area 106 Nitrogen cycling is not only facilitated by grizzlies digging for food it is also accomplished via their habit of carrying salmon carcasses into surrounding forests 107 It has been found that spruce tree Picea glauca foliage within 500 m 1 600 ft of the stream where the salmon have been obtained contains nitrogen originating from salmon on which the bears preyed 108 These nitrogen influxes to the forest are directly related to the presence of grizzly bears and salmon 109 Grizzlies directly regulate prey populations and also help prevent overgrazing in forests by controlling the populations of other species in the food chain 110 An experiment in Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming in the United States showed removal of wolves and grizzly bears caused populations of their herbivorous prey to increase 111 This in turn changed the structure and density of plants in the area which decreased the population sizes of migratory birds 111 This provides evidence grizzly bears represent a keystone predator having a major influence on the entire ecosystem they inhabit 110 When grizzly bears fish for salmon along the coasts of Alaska and British Columbia they often only eat the skin brain and roe of the fish In doing so they provide a food source for gulls ravens and foxes all of which eat salmon as well this benefits both the bear and the smaller predators 112 Interaction with humansRelationship with Native Americans Gorgonia a Native American Mescalero Apache man He holds a bear pelt and wears moccasin boots a breechcloth kilt and vest Native American tribes living among brown bears often view them with a mixture of awe and fear 113 North American brown bears have at times been so feared by the Natives that they were rarely hunted by them especially when alone At traditional grizzly hunts in some western tribes such as the Gwichʼin the expedition was conducted with the same preparation and ceremoniality as intertribal warfare and was never done except with a company of four to ten warriors The tribe members who dealt the killing blow were highly esteemed among their compatriots 114 Californian Natives 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 would seek aid from European colonists to deal with problem bears instead of hunting grizzlies themselves Many authors in the American West wrote of Natives or voyageurs with lacerated faces and missing noses or eyes due to attacks from grizzlies 115 116 Many Native American tribes both respect and fear the brown bear 114 116 117 In Kwakiutl mythology American black and brown bears became enemies when Grizzly Bear Woman killed Black Bear Woman for being lazy Black Bear Woman s children in turn killed Grizzly Bear Woman s own cubs 118 Sleeping Bear Dunes is named after an Ojibwe legend where a female bear and her cubs swam across Lake Michigan According to the legend the two cubs drowned and became the Manitou islands The mother bear eventually got to shore and slept waiting patiently for her cubs to arrive Over the years the sand covered the mother bear up creating a huge sand dune Conflicts with humans See also Bear attack and List of fatal bear attacks in North America Native Americans fighting two grizzly bears 1844 painting by George Catlin A rough and tumble with a grizzly by H Bullock Webster watercolor Grizzlies are considered more aggressive compared to black bears when defending themselves and their offspring 119 Unlike the smaller black bears adult grizzlies do not climb trees well and respond to danger by standing their ground and warding off their attackers 120 Mothers defending cubs are the most prone to attacking and are responsible for 70 of humans killed by grizzlies 121 Grizzly bears normally avoid contact with people In spite of their obvious physical advantage they rarely actively hunt humans 122 Most grizzly bear attacks result from a bear that has been surprised at very close range especially if it has a supply of food to protect or female grizzlies protecting their offspring 123 Hugh Glass being attacked by a grizzly bear from an early newspaper illustration of unknown origin Increased human bear interaction has created problem bears bears adapted to human activities or habitat 124 Exacerbating this is the fact that intensive human use of grizzly habitat coincides with the seasonal movement of grizzly bears 123 Aversive conditioning using rubber bullets foul tasting chemicals or acoustic deterrent devices attempt to condition bears to associate humans with unpleasantness but is ineffective when the bears have already learned to positively associate humans with food 125 Such bears are translocated or killed because they pose a threat to humans The B C government kills approximately 50 problem bears each year 125 and overall spends more than one million dollars annually to address bear complaints relocate bears or kill them 125 A bear killing a human in a national park may be killed to prevent its attacking again 126 Bear awareness programs have been developed by communities in grizzly bear territory to help prevent conflicts with both black and grizzly bears The main premise of these programs is to teach humans to manage foods that attract bears Keeping garbage securely stored harvesting fruit when ripe securing livestock behind electric fences and storing pet food indoors are all measures promoted by bear awareness programs 127 Revelstoke British Columbia is a community that demonstrates the success of this approach In the ten years preceding the development of a community education program in Revelstoke 16 grizzlies were destroyed and a further 107 were relocated away from the town An education program run by Revelstoke Bear Aware was put in place in 1996 Since the program began just four grizzlies have been eliminated and five have been relocated 128 For back country campers hanging food between trees at a height unreachable to bears is a common procedure although some grizzlies can climb and reach hanging food in other ways An alternative to hanging food is to use a bear canister 129 Traveling in groups of six or more can significantly reduce the chance of bear related injuries while hiking in bear country 130 Grizzly bears are especially dangerous because of the force of their bite which has been measured at over 8 megapascals 1160 psi It has been estimated that a bite from a grizzly could even crush a bowling ball 131 Bear watching Bear catches a salmon at Brooks Falls In the past 20 years in Alaska ecotourism has boomed While many people come to Alaska to bear hunt the majority come to watch the bears and observe their habits Some of the best bear viewing in the world occurs on coastal areas of the Alaska Peninsula including in Lake Clark National Park and Preserve Katmai National Park and Preserve and the McNeil River State Game Sanctuary and Refuge Here bears gather in large numbers to feast on concentrated food sources including sedges in the salt marshes clams in the nearby tidal flats salmon in the estuary streams and berries on the neighboring hillsides Katmai National Park and Preserve is one of the best spots to view brown bears The bear population in Katmai is estimated at a healthy 2 100 132 The park is located on the Alaskan Peninsula about 480 km 300 mi southwest of the city of Anchorage At Brooks Camp a famous site exists where grizzlies can be seen catching salmon from atop a platform it can be even viewed online from a cam 133 In coastal areas of the park such as Hallo Bay Geographic Harbor Swikshak Lagoon American Creek Big River Kamishak River Savonoski River Moraine Creek Funnel Creek Battle Creek Nantuk Creek 134 Kukak Bay and Kaflia Bay bears can be seen fishing alongside wolves eagles and river otters Coastal areas host the highest population densities year round because there is a larger variety of food sources available but Brooks Camp hosts the highest population 100 bears 135 The McNeil River State Game Sanctuary and Refuge on the McNeil River is home to the greatest concentration of brown bears in the world An estimated 144 individual bears have been identified at the falls in a single summer with as many as 74 at one time 136 60 or more bears at the falls is a frequent sight and it is not uncommon to see 100 bears at the falls throughout a single day 137 The McNeil River State Game Refuge containing Chenik Lake and a smaller number of grizzly bears has been closed to grizzly hunting since 1995 138 All of the Katmai McNeil area is closed to hunting except for Katmai National Preserve where regulated legal hunting takes place 139 In all the Katmai McNeil area has an estimated 2 500 grizzly bears 140 Admiralty Island in southeast Alaska was known to early natives as Xootsnoowu meaning fortress of bears and is home to the densest grizzly population in North America An estimated 1600 grizzlies live on the island which itself is only 140 km 90 mi long 141 One place to view grizzly bears in the island is probably Pack Creek in the Stan Price State Wildlife Sanctuary 20 to 30 grizzlies can be observed at the creek at one time and like Brooks Camp visitors can watch bears from an above platform 142 Kodiak Island hence its name is another place to view bears An estimated 3 500 Kodiak grizzly bears inhabit the island 2 300 of these in the Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge 143 144 The O Malley River is considered the best place on Kodiak Island to view grizzly bears 145 Protection A grizzly in Denali National Park The grizzly bear is listed as threatened in the contiguous United States and endangered in parts of Canada In May 2002 the Canadian Species at Risk Act listed the Prairie population Alberta Saskatchewan and Manitoba range of grizzly bears as extirpated in Canada 146 As of 2002 grizzly bears were listed as special concern under the COSEWIC registry 147 and considered threatened under the U S Fish and Wildlife Service 148 Within the United States the U S Fish and Wildlife Service concentrates its effort to restore grizzly bears in six recovery areas These are Northern Continental Divide Montana Yellowstone Montana Wyoming and Idaho Cabinet Yaak Montana and Idaho Selway Bitterroot Montana and Idaho Selkirk Idaho and Washington and North Cascades Washington The grizzly population in these areas is estimated at 750 in the Northern Continental Divide 550 in Yellowstone 40 in the Yaak portion of the Cabinet Yaak and 15 in the Cabinet portion in northwestern Montana 105 in Selkirk region of Idaho 10 20 in the North Cascades and none currently in Selway Bitterroots although there have been sightings 149 These are estimates because bears move in and out of these areas In the recovery areas that adjoin Canada bears also move back and forth across the international boundary The U S Fish and Wildlife Service claims the Cabinet Yaak and Selkirk areas are linked through British Columbia a claim that is disputed 150 U S and Canadian national parks such as Banff National Park Yellowstone and Grand Teton and Theodore Roosevelt National Park are subject to laws and regulations designed to protect the bears A sign at a BC Park warns campers to hang food garbage and toiletries out of reach of bears or to use a secure bear cache On 9 January 2006 the US Fish and Wildlife Service proposed to remove Yellowstone grizzlies from the list of threatened and protected species 151 In March 2007 the U S Fish and Wildlife Service de listed the population 152 effectively removing Endangered Species Act protections for grizzlies in the Yellowstone National Park area Several environmental organizations including the NRDC brought a lawsuit against the federal government to relist the grizzly bear On 22 September 2009 U S District Judge Donald W Molloy reinstated protection due to the decline of whitebark pine tree whose nuts are an important source of food for the bears 153 In early March 2016 the U S Fish and Wildlife Service proposed to withdraw Endangered Species Act protections from grizzly bears in and around Yellowstone National Park The population has risen from 136 bears in 1975 to an estimated 700 in 2017 and was delisted in June 2017 154 155 156 It was argued that the population had sufficiently recovered from the threat of extinction however numerous conservation and tribal organizations argued that the grizzly population remained genetically vulnerable They successfully sued the administration Crow Tribe et al v Zinke and on July 30 2019 the Yellowstone grizzly was officially returned to federal protection 157 158 Farther north in Alberta Canada intense DNA hair snagging studies in 2000 showed the grizzly population to be increasing faster than what it was formerly believed to be and Alberta Sustainable Resource Development calculated a population of 841 bears 159 In 2002 the Endangered Species Conservation Committee recommended that the Alberta grizzly bear population be designated as threatened due to recent estimates of grizzly bear mortality rates that indicated the population was in decline A recovery plan released by the provincial government in March 2008 indicated the grizzly population is lower than previously believed 160 In 2010 the provincial government formally listed its population of about 700 grizzlies as Threatened 161 Environment Canada consider the grizzly bear to a special concern species as it is particularly sensitive to human activities and natural threats In Alberta and British Columbia the species is considered to be at risk 162 In 2008 it was estimated there were 16 014 grizzly bears in the British Columbia population which was lower than previously estimated due to refinements in the population model 163 Conservation efforts Drum or barrel trap used to safely relocate bears adjacent to a building in Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming United States Taxidermied specimens at the American Museum of Natural History Conservation efforts have become an increasingly vital investment over recent decades as population numbers have dramatically declined Establishment of parks and protected areas are one of the main focuses currently being tackled to help reestablish the low grizzly bear population in British Columbia One example of these efforts is the Khutzeymateen Grizzly Bear Sanctuary located along the north coast of British Columbia at 44 300 ha 109 000 acres in size it is composed of key habitat for this threatened species Regulations such as limited public access as well as a strict no hunting policy have enabled this location to be a safe haven for local grizzlies in the area 164 When choosing the location of a park focused on grizzly bear conservation factors such as habitat quality and connectivity to other habitat patches are considered The Refuge for Endangered Wildlife located on Grouse Mountain in Vancouver is an example of a different type of conservation effort for the diminishing grizzly bear population The refuge is a five acre terrain which has functioned as a home for two orphaned grizzly bears since 2001 165 The purpose of this refuge is to provide awareness and education to the public about grizzly bears as well as providing an area for research and observation of this secluded species Another factor currently being taken into consideration when designing conservation plans for future generations are anthropogenic barriers in the form of urban development and roads These elements are acting as obstacles causing fragmentation of the remaining grizzly bear population habitat and prevention of gene flow between subpopulations for example Banff National Park This in turn is creating a decline in genetic diversity and therefore the overall fitness of the general population is lowered 166 In light of these issues conservation plans often include migration corridors by way of long strips of park forest to connect less developed areas or by way of tunnels and overpasses over busy roads 167 Using GPS collar tracking scientists can study whether or not these efforts are actually making a positive contribution towards resolving the problem 168 To date most corridors are found to be infrequently used and thus genetic isolation is currently occurring which can result in inbreeding and therefore an increased frequency of deleterious genes through genetic drift 169 Current data suggest female grizzly bears are disproportionately less likely than males to use these corridors which can prevent mate access and decrease the number of offspring In the United States national efforts have been made since 1982 for the recovery plan of grizzly bears 170 A lot of the efforts made have been through different organizations efforts to educate the public on grizzly bear safety habits of grizzly bears and different ways to reduce human bear conflict The Interagency Grizzly Bear Recovery Committee is one of many organizations committed to the recovery of grizzly bears in the lower 48 states 171 There are five recovery zones for grizzly bears in the lower 48 states including the North Cascades ecosystem in Washington state 154 The National Park Service and U S Fish and Wildlife initiated the process of an environmental impact statement that started in the fall of 2014 to begin the recovery process of grizzly bears to the North Cascades region 154 A final plan and environmental impact statement was released in the spring of 2017 with a record of decision to follow 154 156 In 2017 the Trump administration stripped parklands of previous regulations that protected wildlife living on the land putting species such as the grizzly bear at risk 172 Specifically federal protections on the grizzly bear in Yellowstone National Parks were removed Regulations that protected the bears against hunting methods with Park Service rules specifically in park lands in Alaska were revisited by the Department of Interior 172 173 The National Parks Conservation Association NPCA supports common sense opportunities for hunting in national preserves but the state of Alaska s wildlife management leads for the killing of more bears which increases the population of moose and caribou 172 173 The rise in moose and caribou works in favor of sport hunters Theresa Pierno President and CEO of National Parks Conservation Association stated The State of Alaska s lawsuit against the Park Service and Fish and Wildlife Service seeks to overturn common sense regulations which underwent a thorough and transparent public process More than 70 000 Americans said no to baiting bears with grease soaked donuts in Denali National Park and Preserve The public was right to want to stop sport hunters from crawling into bears dens and using flashlights to wake and kill mother bears and their cubs The state s attempt to dismantle the results of this public process jeopardizes the stewardship of federal public lands which belong to all Americans 172 A press release on October 3 2022 stated that a federal district court based in Alaska will be returning to look over a National Park Service rule relating to hunting practices including baiting bears 172 The Interior Department and Park Service s decision permits the law to reside in place while conducting revisions 172 See alsoBear baiting Etsowish simmegee itshin Grizzly Bear Standing Kalispel chief Grizzly 399 Grizzly Peak Berkeley Hills Grizzly polar bear hybrid Timothy Treadwell a k a Grizzly ManReferences a b IUCN Brown Bear subspecies status Retrieved 29 August 2022 a b Rausch Robert 1953 On the status of some arctic animals Arctic 6 2 91 148 doi 10 14430 arctic3870 a b c Schwartz C C Miller S D Haroldson M A 2003 Grizzly bear PDF In Feldhamer G A Thompson B C Chapman J A eds Wild Mammals of North America Biology Management and Conservation Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press pp 556 586 Archived from 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Retrieved 28 October 2009 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Berger J Stacey P Bellis L amp Johnson M 2001 A Mammalian Predator Prey Imbalance Grizzly Bear and Wolf Extinction Affect Avian Neo Tropical Migrants Ecological Applications 11 4 947 960 doi 10 2307 3061004 JSTOR 3061004 Grizzly Bear Eating Salmon The Grizzly Bear Blog 21 July 2010 Retrieved 21 July 2010 Kellert S R Black M Rush C R Bath A J 1996 Human Culture and Large Carnivore Conservation in North America Conservation Biology 10 4 977 doi 10 1046 j 1523 1739 1996 10040977 x a b Hallowell A I 1926 Bear Ceremonialism in the Northern Hemisphere American Anthropologist 28 1 doi 10 1525 aa 1926 28 1 02a00020 Geist Valerius 1989 Did Large Predators keep Humans out of North America PDF in Clutton Brock Juliet ed The Walking larder patterns of domestication pastoralism and predation Unwin Hyman pp 282 294 ISBN 0 0444 5013 3 archived from the original 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Recovery and Delisting of Yellowstone Grizzly Bear www fws gov Retrieved 6 July 2017 Brulliard Karin Court restores federal protections for Yellowstone area grizzly bears The Washington Post Retrieved 2 August 2019 Online staff Rep Cheney Accuses Tribes of Destroying Our Western Way of Life Over Sacred Grizzly Protections Native News Online Retrieved 2 August 2019 Wildlife Status Grizzly bear Population size and trends Fish and Wildlife Division of Alberta Sustainable Resource Development Archived from the original on 26 December 2008 Retrieved 6 April 2008 Alberta Grizzly Bear Recovery Team Alberta Grizzly Bear Recovery Plan 2008 2013 Alberta Species at Risk Recovery Plan No 15 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 29 May 2008 Retrieved 6 April 2008 Alberta designates grizzly bears a threatened species Alberta ca 2010 06 03 Retrieved 5 August 2013 Species at Risk Grizzly Bear Northwestern population Environment Canada 8 May 2006 Archived from the original on 12 June 2013 Retrieved 6 April 2008 Hamilton A N Grizzly Bear Population Estimate for British Columbia In Ministry of Environment 2008 PDF Khutzeymateen Grizzly Bear Sanctuary env gov bc ca Wildlife and Education Refuge for Endangered Wildlife Grouse Mountain The Peak of Vancouver 2009 Archived from the original on 6 February 2010 Retrieved 11 November 2009 Krebs C J 2009 Ecology The Experimental Analysis of Distribution and Abundance 6th ed San Francisco Benjamin Cummings ISBN 978 0 321 50743 3 Clevenger A P Waltho N 2005 Performance indices to identify attributes of highway crossing structures facilitating movement of large mammals Biological Conservation 121 3 453 464 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2004 04 025 Edwards M A Nagy J A Derocher A E 2008 Using Subpopulation structure for barren ground grizzly bear management Ursus 19 2 91 104 doi 10 2192 1537 6176 19 2 91 S2CID 59062736 Michael F P Bruce N M amp Curtis S 2002 Population Fragmentation of Grizzly Bears in Southeastern British Columbia Canada PDF Ursus 8 153 160 JSTOR 3873196 North Cascades Ecosystem Grizzly Bear Restoration Plan Environmental Impact Statement Conservation Northwest National Park Service and US Fish and Wildlife Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 15 March 2015 Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee Retrieved 15 March 2015 a b c d e f Pierno Theresa One Year Later 5 Major Issues for National Parks in 2018 National Parks Conservation Association National Parks Conservation Association Retrieved 12 October 2022 a b UnBearable Alaska Aims to Weaken Bear Hunting Regulations National Parks Conservation Association National Parks Conservation Association Retrieved 12 October 2022 Further readingMiller Craig R Waits Lisette P Joyce Paul December 2006 Phylogeography and mitochondrial diversity of extirpated brown bear Ursus arctos populations in the contiguous United States and Mexico PDF Molecular Ecology 15 14 4477 4485 doi 10 1111 j 1365 294X 2006 03097 x PMID 17107477 S2CID 7336900 archived from the original PDF on 24 March 2012 retrieved 24 September 2011 Ursus arctos horribilis Integrated Taxonomic Information System Retrieved 18 March 2006 Banfield A W F 1987 The Mammals of Canada Toronto University of Toronto Press Committee On The Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada COSEWIC Assessment and Update Status Report on the Grizzly Bear Ursus arctos in Canada 2002 2 1 MB PDF file Cronin M A et al 1991 Interspecific and specific mitochondrial DNA variation in North American bears Ursus PDF Canadian Journal of Zoology 69 12 2985 2992 doi 10 1139 z91 421 S2CID 54763647 Archived from the original PDF on 28 February 2019 Herrero Stephen 1985 Bear Attacks Piscataway NJ New Centuries Publishers ISBN 978 0 8329 0377 9 Waits L P et al 1998 Mitochondrial DNA phylogeography of the North American brown bear and implications for conservation Conservation Biology 12 2 408 417 doi 10 1046 j 1523 1739 1998 96351 x Snyder Susan 2003 Bear in Mind the California Grizzly Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9781890771706 Mattson J Merrill Troy 2001 Extirpations of Grizzly Bears in the Contiguous United States 1850 2000 Conservation Biology 16 4 1123 1136 doi 10 1046 j 1523 1739 2002 00414 x S2CID 84050297 Wielgus R B 2002 Minimum viable population and reserve sizes for naturally regulated grizzly bears in British Columbia Biological Conservation 106 3 381 388 doi 10 1016 S0006 3207 01 00265 8 Groom M J Meffe G K Carroll C R 2006 Principles of Conservation Biology 3rd ed Sunderland MA Sinauer Associates Lapinski Mike 2006 Grizzlies and Grizzled Old Men A Tribute to Those Who Fought to Save the Great Bear Guilford CT Helena MT Globe Pequot Press Falcon Imprint ISBN 978 0 7627 3653 9 Murie Adolph 1985 The grizzlies of Mount McKinley Seattle University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 96204 7 McCory W P Herrero S M Jones G W amp Mallam E D 1990 A Selection of Papers from the Eighth International Conference on Bear Research and Management Victoria British Columbia Canada Bears Their Biology and Management 8 11 16 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Proctor M F McLellan B N Strobeck C amp Barclay R M R 2005 Genetic analysis reveals demographic fragmentation of grizzly bears yielding vulnerably small populations Proceedings of the Royal Society B 272 1579 2409 2416 doi 10 1098 rspb 2005 3246 PMC 1559960 PMID 16243699 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ursus arctos horribilis category Wikispecies has information related to Ursus arctos horribilis Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History species account Grizzly Bear Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grizzly bear amp oldid 1141472442, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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