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80 Interesting Facts about Bears

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The largest mammalian carnivore that ever lived on land was the giant short-faced bear.
Twice the size of the biggest modern bear, it was 6' 5" tall at the shoulder when standing
on all fours. Scientists believe it had very long legs and chased antelope on the North
American prairies. It died around 12,000 years ago.[1]

The sloth bear has the shaggiest fur. The sun bear has the shortest fur so it can keep cool
in the hot forests of Southeast Asia.[3]

The most accurate way to determine the age of a bear is to count the rings in a cross
section of its tooth root under a microscope.[8]

Bears have two layers of fur. A short layer of fur keeps the bear warm. And a long layer
keeps water away from the skin and short fur.[8]

Bears are very smart and have been known to roll rocks into bear traps to set off the trap
and eat the bait in safety.[4]

Bears live as long as 30 years in the wild. One captive brown bear lived to the age of 47.[4]

Bears are bowlegged. This gives them better grip and balance.[4]
Bears can run twice as fast as humans can

Bears can run up to 40 miles per hour, fast enough to catch a running horse. The fastest
known human alive today is Usain Bolt, who can run 27mph.[4]

Only the polar bear is a true carnivore. All other bears are omnivores, or animals that eat
both plants and meat.[2]

Sun bears have the longest claws of any bear. They also have the longest tongues, which
can reach 9.8" long.[1]

A bears normal heartbeat is 40 beats per minute. A hibernating bears heart rate drops to
8 bpm.[3]

The bear that a person living in North America is most likely to run into is the black bear.
They live in wooded areas in every Canadian province, many U.S. states, and parts of
Mexico.[2]

Black bears are not always black. They come in a rainbow of colors from black to reddish
brown (cinnamon bears) to light brown to white.[8]

Unlike many mammals, bears can see in color.[4]

The worlds most widely distributed bear is the brown bear. However, the American
black bear is the world's most common bear species.[3]

When bears mate, the eggs within the females body are fertilized but do not implant in
her uterus and begin developing for several months.[4]
A swimming polar bear can jump 8 ft. (2.4 m) out of the water to surprise a seal.[3]

A polar bears stomach can hold 150 lbs. (68 kg) of meat.[3]

Panda bears have an extra thumb (which is actually an extra-large wrist bone) just for
holding onto bamboo stalks. A panda bear can eat over 45 lbs. (20.4 kg) of bamboo per
day.[3]

Koala bears are not bears at all and are not related to the bear family. They are
marsupials.[1]

It is incorrect to call them "Koala bears"; their correct name is simply "Koalas"

The giant panda has a large head for its body. Scientists believe this is because it needs a
strong jaw and neck muscles to eat bamboo, which makes up 99% of its diet. The
remaining 1% consists of insects on the bamboo and dead meat that the panda may find.[8]

Sloth bears favorite food is termites. These bears have no front teeth, so they easily suck
out insects from their nests like a vacuum cleaner. They can also seal their nostrils for
better suction.[4]
Bears have been known to eat almost anything, including snowmobile seats, engine oil,
and rubber boots.[5]

Lumber companies felt they had no choice but to kill the black bears in Washington State
that were eating the bark from trees. However, once someone thought to put piles of food
in the forest, the bears stopped eating the trees, and were happy to eat the free food.
Because feeding the bears cost less than killing them, the lumber companies were happy,
too.[5]

About 98% of the grizzly bear population in the U.S. lives in Alaska.[5]

A polar bear can swim up to 100 miles without resting.[5]

Bears can see almost as well as humans, and they can hear a little better. But they can
smell much better. In fact, a bears sense of smell is around 100 times greater than a
humans. Polar bears can track down an odor from 20 miles (32 km) away. They can
smell a dead seal under 3 feet of solid ice.[3]

Brown bears have long claws that can be the length of a human finger

The shape of a bears claw differs according to the type of bear. Bears that climb, such as
black bears, have claws that are curved and strong to allow them to claw at tree bark.
Bears that dig, such as grizzly bears, have straight and long claws.[8]

In 2004, a black bear was found unconscious in a campground in Seattle, Washington. It


had broken into a cooler and used its claws and teeth to open dozens of beer cans.
Although it sampled other types of beer, it chose to drink all the cans of only one type of
beer. After its drinking binge, the bear passed out.[2]

A male bear is called a boar or a he-bear. A female bear is called a sow or a she-bear. A
group of bears is called a sleuth or sloth.[3]

Bear is an LGBT slang term used by homosexual men to describe hyper masculine men
who have hairy bodies and facial hair or who are heavy set.[7]
The word bear is an Old English word, derived from the Proto-Indo-European *bher-,
meaning bright brown.[1]

The symbol of the United Russia Party is a bear. In fact, bears have traditionally not only
been a symbol of pride and power in Russia, but have also been common images in fairy
tales and myth.[6]

The bear ancestor is an offshoot of the ancient Canidae family of dogs, wolves, foxes,
and coyotes.[3]

Polar bears are the only bear species that is a marine mammal.[5]

A polar bears fur ranges in color from ivory to pale tan. Underneath its fur coat, the
polar bears skin is black to help absorb heat from the sun.[8]

The name grizzly bear refers to the silver-tipped or grizzled hair of a brown bear.[1]

One variation of the black bear is a white bear called the Kermode, ghost, or spirit bear.
These bears are very rare. Native Americans believed these white bears had supernatural
power.[1]

The polar bear (Ursus maritimus) is the largest bear species. A male polar bear can
measure up to 10 feet long and weigh 1,500 lbs., which is about the weight of eight
human adults. Female polar bears are up to 50% smaller than the males.[5]
Polar bears are also the most carnivorous of the bear species

In 2008, a Canadian man was attacked by a grizzly bear. He survived the attack by
playing dead, even when the bear began to gnaw on his scalp. The bear eventually lost
interest and went away.[3]

For many years, scientists thought that the Giant Panda was not a bear at all but a relative
of the raccoon. Scientists have shown through DNA evidence that giant pandas are
indeed true bears.[3]

The Sun bear (Helarctos malayanus) is the smallest of the bears and is about the size of a
large dog. It gets its name from a blond chest patch of fur that looks like a setting sun.
Sun bears are also known as honey bears.[1]

Of the eight bear species, four live in the Southern Hemisphere and four in the Northern
Hemisphere.[3]

Spectacled bears are the only wild bears that live in South America.[8]
North America is home to three of the worlds eight bear species: brown, American
black, and polar bears. Almost two thirds of the bears in the world live in North
America.[8]

In many Native American cultures, bears were symbols of strength, hard work, and even great love

Because bears can walk short distances on their hind legs, some Native Americans called
them the beast that walks like a man.[3]

Polar bears live only north of the Equator, in the Arctic. Penguins live only south of the
Equator, in Antarctica. Approximately 21,000 to 28,000 polar bears live in the Arctic.[3]

Bears are descended from small, insect-eating mammals called miacids, which lived
during the time of the dinosaurs. The first true bears evolved from heavy bear-like dogs
around 27 million years ago. The oldest known bear, the Dawn Bear, lived about 20
million years ago and was the size of a small dog.[1]

Bears have never lived in Australia or Antarctica. Although bears do not currently live in
Africa, bear fossils have been found there. Scientists are unsure why bears do not live in
Africa today.[3]

Sloth bears are the only bears that are more active at night.[2]

Polar bears have a thick coat with 9,677 hairs per square inch.[4]

Most bears are born without fur. Only polar bears and giant pandas are born with thin
white fur.[3]

Bears have non-retractable claws like dogs and unlike cats.[1]

While most bears have bare feet, the paws of polar bears have fur on the bottoms and
between the toes. Bears lose most of their heat from their paws.[5]
Like people, all bears except pandas walk by putting their feet flat on the ground. This
kind of walking is called plantigrade. In contrast to bears, other large animals
including dogs, horses, and even elephantswalk on their toes.[3]

The claws on the front feet of bears are longer than the claws on the back feet. Some
large bears have claws almost 5" long.[8]

Bears are the only large predators that regularly eat both meat and plants. For this reason,
they have different teeth specifically used for meat eating and plant eating.[4]

The Ursa Major or Great Bear constellation is the third-largest constellation and
contains the Big Dipper.[2]

Ursa Major is well-known in most world cultures and is associated with many myths

During hibernation, a bear does not defecate. Its body can somehow recycle body waste
into proteina process scientists still do not understand.[3]
Not all bears hibernate. Asiatic black bears, American black bears, some brown bear
species, and pregnant polar bears hibernate. Sloth bears live in warm places with
abundant food, so they dont need to hibernate.[3]

A newly born Kodiak brown bear can weigh less than one pound. As it grows up, its
weight may increase as much as 1,000 times. If human babies grew this much, as adults
they would weigh over 6,000 lbs.[3]

Polar bears have the largest home ranges of any bear. One polar bear can hunt and live in
an area as big as Maine.[1]

Stone-age hunters worshipped and hunted bears at the same time. To show their respect,
they sang and danced and prayed that the bear would forgive them for killing it.[5]

In Asia, bear cubs are often taken from their mothers at an early age to be trained as
dancing bears. The ability of bears to stand up on their hind feet makes it possible for
them to shuffle in a way that looks somewhat like dancing.[4]

People in Asian cultures have traditionally used bear organs and secretions for medicinal
purposes. One author notes that there are fewer than one million bears on Earth and
more than one billion potential consumers of bear parts as medicine.[4]

In Asia in the early 1990s, bear gallbladders would sell from $1 to $210 a gram. A
gallbladder of an Asiatic black bear killed in South Korea sold at a public auction for
$64,000. On a price-per-gram basis, bear gallbladders often cost more than gold.[3]

Currently, approximately 8,000 bears are kept on bear farms in China. They are bred
and kept in captivity so that bile from the gallbladders can be extracted for medicinal use.
The bile is removed from the live animal through a catheter surgically implanted into the
gallbladder.[4]
Farmed bile bears are kept in small cages that often prevent the bears from standing or sitting upright, or from turning
around

All bears are good swimmers, but the polar bear is the most efficient swimmer. It can
swim up to 4-6 mph (6-10 km/hr) for 100 miles (161 km). One polar bear swam 200
miles without stopping. Polar bears can also swim very well under water.[3]

The only species of bear that does not move its ears to pick up sound is the giant panda.[3]

The Asiatic black bear has the largest ears of any species of bears.[1]

Because a giant pandas eye is a vertical slit, like many nocturnal animals it can see by
day and by night.[3]

Once bears breed, they go their separate ways. Male bears do not help the mother bear
raise the cubs. Depending on the breed, intercourse may last a few minutes (giant panda)
or half an hour (polar bear).[4]

When U.S. President Theodore (Teddy) Roosevelt refused to shoot a black bear cub on a
hunting trip, a cartoon featured the event, and soon stuffed toy manufacturers popularized
Teddys bear.[8]
Only about 1,000 giant pandas live in the wild today.[3]

The lips of bears are not attached to their gums, which make their lips look rubbery.[3]

The name "Baloo" is Hindi for "bear"

Baloo, from The Jungle Book, is a sloth bear.[1]

Most bears have 42 teeth, which is about 10 more than people have. A bears canines can
reach 1.5" long, while a humans are less than a half inch long.[3]

The giant panda has been described as a living fossil because it is such an ancient
animal.[2]

Polar bears are the largest land predators on earth. They can stand more than 11' high and
weigh more than 1,700 lbs.[2]

Black bears are typically smaller than grizzly bears, have a smaller shoulder hump, less
shaggy fur, longer ears, and a less concave facial profile. Black bear claws are also
smaller and more curved to better climb trees.[2]

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