American black bear: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|Species of bear}} |
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{{Taxobox |
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{{pp-move}} |
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| color = pink |
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{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2015}} |
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| name = American Black Bear |
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{{speciesbox |
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| status = LR/lc |
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| name = American black bear |
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| image = Black_bear_large.jpg |
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| fossil_range = {{Fossil range|2.6|0}}<small>Late [[Pliocene]]–[[Holocene]]</small> |
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| image_width = 240px |
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| |
| status = LC |
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| status_system = IUCN3.1 |
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| phylum = [[Chordate|Chordata]] |
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| status_ref = <ref name="iucn" /> |
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| classis = [[mammal|Mammalia]] |
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| status2 = CITES_A2 |
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| ordo = [[Carnivora]] |
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| status2_system = CITES |
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| familia = [[Ursidae]] |
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| status2_ref = <ref>{{Cite web|title=Appendices {{!}} CITES|url=https://cites.org/eng/app/appendices.php|access-date=2022-01-14|website=cites.org|archive-date=February 3, 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070203100154/http://www.cites.org/eng/app/appendices.shtml|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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| genus = ''[[Ursus (biology)|Ursus]]'' |
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| image = 01 Schwarzbär.jpg |
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| species = '''''americanus''''' |
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| image_caption = An American black bear in [[Manitoba]]'s [[Riding Mountain National Park]] |
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| binomial = ''Ursus americanus'' |
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| genus = Ursus |
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| binomial_authority = [[Peter Simon Pallas|Pallas]], 1780 |
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| species = americanus |
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| authority = [[Peter Simon Pallas|Pallas]], 1780 |
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| range_map = Ursus americanus IUCN range map extant and extirpated.png |
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| range_map_caption = American black bear range<ref name="iucn" /> |
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{{leftlegend|#f07568|Present-day range}} |
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{{leftlegend|#efd7d5|[[Local extinction|Extirpated]]}} |
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| synonyms = ''Euarctos americanus'' |
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| subdivision_ranks = Subspecies |
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| subdivision = 16, see [[#Subspecies|text]] |
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}} |
}} |
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The '''American black bear''' ('''''Ursus americanus'''''), or simply '''black bear''', is a [[species]] of medium-sized [[bear]] [[Endemism|endemic]] to [[North America]]. It is the continent's smallest and most widely distributed bear species. It is an [[omnivore]], with a diet varying greatly depending on season and location. It typically lives in largely forested areas but will leave forests in search of food and is sometimes attracted to human communities due to the immediate availability of food. |
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The [[International Union for Conservation of Nature]] (IUCN) lists the American black bear as a [[least-concern species]] because of its widespread distribution and a large population, estimated to be twice that of all other bear species combined. Along with the [[brown bear]] (''Ursus arctos''), it is one of only two modern bear species not considered by the IUCN to be globally threatened with extinction. |
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:''' ''Black Bear''' redirects here. For the Eurasian Black Bear, see [[Asiatic Black Bear]]''. |
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The '''American Black Bear''' (''Ursus americanus'') is the most common [[bear]] [[species]] native to [[North America]]. |
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== Taxonomy and evolution == |
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It lives throughout much of the continent, from northern [[Canada]] and [[Alaska]] south into [[Mexico]], from the [[Atlantic Ocean|Atlantic]] to the [[Pacific Ocean|Pacific]]. This includes 40 of the 50 [[U.S. state]]s and all [[Canadian provinces and territories|Canadian provinces]] except [[Prince Edward Island]]. Populations in the east-central and [[southern United States]] remain in the protected mountains and woodlands of parks and preserves, though bears will occasionally wander outside the parks' boundaries and have set up new territories, in some cases on the margins of urban environments in recent years as their populations increase. Although there were probably once as many as two million black bears in North America long before European colonization, the population declined to a low of 200,000 as a result of habitat destruction and unrestricted hunting culls. By current estimates, more than 800,000 are living today on the continent [http://biology.usgs.gov/s+t/noframe/c286.htm]. |
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The American black bear is not closely related to the [[brown bear]] or [[polar bear]], though all three species are found in [[North America]]; genetic studies reveal that they split from a common ancestor 5.05 million years ago (mya).<ref name="krause">{{Cite journal |author1=Krause, J. |author2=Unger, T. |author3=Noçon, A. |author4=Malaspinas, A. |author5=Kolokotronis, S. |author6=Stiller, M. |author7=Soibelzon, L. |author8=Spriggs, H. |author9=Dear, P. H. |author10=Briggs, A. W. |author11=Bray, S. C. E. |author12=O'Brien, S. J. |author13=Rabeder, G. |author14=Matheus, P. |author15=Cooper, A. |author16=Slatkin, M. |author17=Pääbo, S. |author18=Hofreiter, M. | title = Mitochondrial genomes reveal an explosive radiation of extinct and extant bears near the Miocene-Pliocene boundary | journal = BMC Evolutionary Biology | volume = 8 | issue = #220 | page = 220 | pmid = 18662376 | pmc = 2518930| doi = 10.1186/1471-2148-8-220 | year = 2008 |bibcode=2008BMCEE...8..220K |doi-access=free }}</ref> American and [[Asian black bear]]s are considered [[sister taxa]] and are more closely related to each other than to the other modern species of bears.<ref name="krause" /><ref name="world">Craighead, Lance (2003). ''Bears of the World'', Voyageur Press, {{ISBN|0-89658-008-3}}</ref> According to recent studies, the [[sun bear]] is also a relatively recent split from this lineage.<ref name="Hunter">Hunter, Luke (2011). ''Carnivores of the World'', Princeton University Press, {{ISBN|978-0-691-15228-8}}</ref>{{page needed|date=May 2020}} |
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A small primitive bear called ''Ursus abstrusus'' is the oldest known North American [[fossil]] member of the genus ''Ursus'', dated to 4.95 mya.<ref>{{cite book| author=Woodburne, Michael O.| title=Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic Mammals of North America: Biostratigraphy and Geochronology| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=73ZaLf_LL9cC&pg=PA252| year=2004| publisher=Columbia University Press| isbn=978-0-231-13040-0| pages=178, 252| access-date=November 22, 2015| archive-date=March 3, 2024| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240303091255/https://books.google.com/books?id=73ZaLf_LL9cC&pg=PA252| url-status=live}}</ref> This suggests that ''U. abstrusus'' may be the direct ancestor of the American black bear, which evolved in North America.<ref name="krause" /><ref name="kurten">Kurten, B., and E. Anderson (1980). ''Pleistocene mammals of North America''. Columbia University Press, New York, {{ISBN|0-231-51696-7}}.</ref> Although Wolverton and Lyman still consider ''U. vitabilis'' an "apparent precursor to modern black bears",<ref name="Wolverton">{{cite journal| doi=10.1006/qres.1998.1964| author1=Wolverton, S. |author2=Lyman, R. L. | s2cid=13028298 |year= 1998 |title= Measuring late Quaternary Ursid diminution in the Midwest |journal= Quaternary Research |volume=49 |issue=3|pages=322–329|bibcode=1998QuRes..49..322W }}</ref> it has also been placed within ''U. americanus''.<ref name="kurten" /> |
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==Physical description== |
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The American Black Bear is about 1.8 m (6 feet) long. Females weigh between 40 and 180 kg (90 and 400 pounds); males weigh between 68 and 225 kg (150 and 500 pounds). Cubs usually weigh 200 to 450 g (between seven ounces and one pound) at birth. The adult has small eyes, rounded ears, a long snout, a large body, and a short tail. It has an excellent sense of smell. Though they generally have shaggy black hair, the coat can vary in color depending on the subspecies, from white through chocolate-brown, cinnamon-brown and blonde, found mostly west of the [[Mississippi River]], to black in the east (the same is generally true in [[Canada]], the border being between [[Manitoba]] and [[Ontario]]). Further adding to the confusion, they occasionally have a slight white chest blaze on either side of the river. |
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The ancestors of American black bears and Asian black bears diverged from sun bears 4.58 mya. The American black bear then split from the Asian black bear 4.08 mya.<ref name="krause" /><ref name="genetics">Lisette Waits, David Paetkau, and Curtis Strobeck, "Overview" from ''Genetics of the Bears of the World''. Chapter 3 of ''Bears: Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan'', compiled by Christopher Servheen, [[Stephen Herrero]] and Bernard Peyton, IUCN/SSC Bear Specialist Group</ref> The earliest American black bear fossils, which were located in [[Port Kennedy, Pennsylvania]], greatly resemble the Asian species,<ref name="etruscan">{{cite web |author=Herrero, Stephen |url=http://www.bearbiology.com/fileadmin/tpl/Downloads/URSUS/Vol_2/Herrero.pdf |title=Aspects of Evolution and Adaptation in American Black Bears (''Ursus americanus Pallas'') and Brown and Grizzly Bears (''U. arctos Linne.'') of North America |work=Environmental Sciences Centre (Kananaskis) |access-date=February 21, 2011 |archive-date=December 3, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101203133113/http://www.bearbiology.com/fileadmin/tpl/Downloads/URSUS/Vol_2/Herrero.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> though later specimens grew to sizes comparable to [[grizzly bear]]s.<ref name="evo">{{cite web |url=http://www.grizzlybear.org/bearbook/american_black_bear.htm |title=The American Black Bear |publisher=Grizzlybear.org |access-date=February 21, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100315004043/http://www.grizzlybear.org/bearbook/american_black_bear.htm |archive-date=March 15, 2010 }}</ref> From the [[Holocene]] to the present, American black bears seem to have shrunk in size,<ref name="krause" /> but this has been disputed because of problems with dating these fossil specimens.<ref name="Wolverton" /> |
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Although they are able to stand and walk on their hind legs, they usually stand or walk on all four legs; when they do stand, it is usually to get a better scent or look at something. Their characteristic shuffling gait results from walking [[flat feet|flat-footed]] (called plantigrade), with the hind [[Leg (anatomy)|legs]] slightly longer than the front legs. Another reason for the apparent shuffle is that they commonly walk with a pacing gait. Unlike many [[quadrupeds]], the legs on one side move together instead of alternating, much like a pacer horse. Each [[paw]] has five strong claws used for tearing, digging, and climbing. One blow from a powerful front paw can kill an adult [[Elk (Cervus canadensis)|elk]]. |
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The American black bear lived during the same period as the giant and lesser [[Arctodus|short-faced bear]]s (''Arctodus simus'' and ''A. pristinus'', respectively) and the Florida spectacled bear (''[[Tremarctos floridanus]]''). These [[Tremarctinae|tremarctine]] bears evolved from bears that had emigrated from Asia to the Americas 7–8 mya.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Qiu, Z. |year=2003 |title=Dispersals of Neogene Carnivorans between Asia and North America |pages=18–31 |journal=Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History |url=http://www.catsg.org/catsglib/recordetail.php?recordid=5322 |volume=279 |doi=10.1206/0003-0090(2003)279<0018:C>2.0.CO;2 |s2cid=88183435 |doi-access=free |access-date=June 25, 2012 |archive-date=January 23, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220123072249/http://www.catsg.org/catsglib/recordetail.php?recordid=5322 |url-status=live }}</ref> The giant and lesser short-faced bears are thought to have been heavily carnivorous and the Florida spectacled bear more herbivorous,<ref>{{cite journal | doi = 10.1666/09-113.1 | last1 = Schubert | first1 = B. W. | last2 = Hulbert | first2 = R. C. Jr. | last3 = MacFadden | first3 = B. J. | last4 = Searle | first4 = M. | last5 = Searle | first5 = S. | s2cid = 131532424 | year = 2010 | title = Giant short-faced bears (''Arctodus simus'') in Pleistocene Florida USA, a substantial range expansion | journal = Journal of Paleontology | volume = 84 | issue = 1 | pages = 79–87 | bibcode = 2010JPal...84...79S }}</ref> while the American black bears remained arboreal omnivores, like their Asian ancestors. |
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== Habitat and behavior == |
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[[Image:Black Bear.jpg|thumb|right|Black Bear Pocosin Lakes National Wildlife Refuge]] |
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[[Image:Bear print 5661.JPG|thumb|right|American Black Bear track, Hemingway, SC]] |
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They prefer forested and shrubby areas, but use wet [[meadow]]s, high tidelands, ridgetops, burned areas, riparian areas, agricultural fields, and avalanche chutes. They also frequent swampy hardwood and conifer forests. Black bears sometimes hibernate during winter and may build dens in tree cavities, under logs or rocks, in banks, caves, or culverts, and in shallow depressions. After emerging from their winter dens in spring, they seek carion from winter-killed animals and new shoots of many plant species, especially wetland plants. In mountainous areas, they seek southerly slopes at lower elevations for forage and move to northerly and easterly slopes at higher elevations as summer progresses. Black bears use dense cover for hiding and thermal protection, as well as for bedding. They climb trees to escape danger and use forested areas as travel corridors. |
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The American black bear's [[generalist species|generalist]] behavior allowed it to exploit a wider variety of foods and has been given as a reason why, of these three genera, it alone survived climate and vegetative changes through the [[Quaternary glaciation|last Ice Age]] while the other, more specialized North American predators became extinct. However, both ''Arctodus'' and ''Tremarctos'' had survived several other, previous [[ice age]]s. After these prehistoric ursids became extinct during the last glacial period 10,000 years ago, American black bears were probably the only bear present in much of North America until the migration of brown bears to the rest of the continent.<ref name="evo" /> |
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Females generally reach [[breeding]] maturity at 3 to 4 years of age and with adequate nutrition can breed every 2 years. In poor quality habitat, they may not mature until 5-7 and may skip breeding cycles. Males are sexually mature at same age, but may not become large enough to win breeding rights until they are 4-5 years old (they have to be large enough to win fights with other males and be accepted by females). Mating is generally during summer, from Mid-June to mid-August with some variation depending on latitude, but with [[embryonic diapause]] (delayed implantation), the embryos do not begin to develop until the mother dens in the fall to [[Hibernation|hibernate]] through the winter months. Because of this delay, gestation can be 7 to 8 months, but actual development takes about 60 days. However, if food was scarce and the mother has not gained enough fat to sustain herself during hibernation as well as produce and feed cubs, the embryos do not develop. |
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=== Hybrids === |
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The cubs are generally born in January or February. They are very small, about 10-14 ounces, and are blind, nearly hairless, and helpless when born. Two to three cubs are most common, though up to four and even five cubs has been documented. First-time mothers typically have only a single cub. The mother nurses the cubs with rich milk, and by spring thaw, when the bears start leaving their dens, the cubs are fur-balls of energy, inquisitive and playful. By this time they are about 4 to 8 pounds (2-4 kg). When their mother senses danger, she grunts to the cubs to climb high up a tree. They are weaned between July and September of their first year and stay with the mother through the first winter. The cubs become independent during their second summer (when they are 1.5 years old). At this time, the sow goes into estrus (heat) again. |
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American black bears are reproductively compatible with several other bear species and occasionally produce [[Hybrid (biology)|hybrid]] offspring. According to [[Jack Hanna]]'s ''Monkeys on the Interstate'', a bear captured in [[Sanford, Florida]], was thought to have been the offspring of an escaped female Asian black bear and a male American black bear.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20101226205341/http://www.messybeast.com/genetics/hybrid-bears.htm "Hybrid Bears".] ''messybeast.com''.</ref> In 1859, an American black bear and a [[Eurasian brown bear]] were bred together in the [[London Zoological Gardens]], but the three cubs that were born died before they reached maturity.{{citation needed|date=May 2023}} In ''[[The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication]]'', [[Charles Darwin]] noted: |
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{{blockquote|In the nine-year Report it is stated that the bears had been seen in the zoological gardens to couple freely, but previously to 1848 most had rarely conceived. In the reports published since this date three species have produced young (hybrids in one case), ...<ref>{{Cite book |last=Darwin |first=Charles |author-link=Charles Darwin |year=1868 |title=The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication |volume=2 |edition=1st |location=London |publisher=[[John Murray (publishing house)|John Murray]] |url=http://darwin-online.org.uk/EditorialIntroductions/Freeman_VariationunderDomestication.html |page=151 |isbn=978-1-4068-4250-0 |access-date=December 23, 2009 |archive-date=February 28, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110228151402/http://darwin-online.org.uk/EditorialIntroductions/Freeman_VariationunderDomestication.html |url-status=live }}</ref>}} |
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A bear shot in autumn 1986 in [[Michigan]] was thought by some to be an American black bear/grizzly bear hybrid, because of its unusually large size and its proportionately larger brain case and skull. DNA testing was unable to determine whether it was a large American black bear or a grizzly bear.<ref name="hybrid">{{cite book |last=Smith |first=Richard P. |year=2007 |chapter=Hybrid Black Bear |title=Black Bear Hunting |publisher=[[Stackpole Books]] |isbn=978-0-8117-0269-0}}</ref>{{page needed|date=May 2020}} |
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Cub survival is totally dependent on the skill of the mother in teaching her cubs what to eat, where and how to forage (find food), where to den, and when and where to seek shelter from heat or danger. |
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=== Subspecies === |
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American Black Bears are [[omnivore]]s. They eat a wide variety of foods, relying most heavily on [[Poaceae|grasses]], [[herb]]s, [[fruit]]s, and mast. They also feed on [[carrion]] and [[insect]]s (mainly for the larvae) such as [[carpenter ant]]s ''(Campanotus spp.)'', [[yellow jacket]]s (''Vespula spp.''), [[bee]]s (Apidae), and [[termite]]s (Isoptera), and raid bee's nests for [[honey]]. |
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Sixteen subspecies are traditionally recognized; however, a recent genetic study does not support designating some of these, such as the Florida black bear, as distinct subspecies.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Puckett|first1=Emily E.|last2=Etter|first2=P.|last3=Johnson|first3=E.|last4=Eggert|first4=L.|date=2015|title=Phylogeographic Analyses of American Black Bears (Ursus americanus) Suggest Four Glacial Refugia and Complex Patterns of Postglacial Admixture.|journal=Molecular Biology and Evolution|volume=32|issue=9|pages=2338–2350|doi=10.1093/molbev/msv114|pmid=25989983|s2cid=25207563|doi-access=free}}</ref> Listed alphabetically according to subspecific name:<ref name=Ulev2007>{{cite web|last=Ulev|first=Elena|title=Ursus americanus|work=Fire Effects Information System|publisher=U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory|location=Missoula, Montana|year=2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220423185054/https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/animals/mammal/uram/all.html|url=https://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/animals/mammal/uram/all.html|accessdate=September 23, 2021|archivedate=April 23, 2022|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>[https://www.departments.bucknell.edu/biology/resources/msw3/browse.asp?id=14000953 "''Ursus americanus''"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220306015112/http://www.departments.bucknell.edu/biology/resources/msw3/browse.asp?id=14000953 |date=March 6, 2022 }}, ''Mammal Species of the World'', 3rd ed.</ref>{{page needed|date=May 2020}} |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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They sometimes kill and eat small [[rodent]]s and [[ungulate]] fawns. Like the [[Brown Bear]], they readily eat dead creatures (carrion). Like many animals, they seldom attack unless cornered or threatened, or wounded. They are less likely to attack humans than grizzly bears and typically have long since run for cover before one catches sight of them. Grizzly attacks are most often defensive, while black bear attacks on humans, although extremely rare, are often predatory. This makes feigning death when a black bear attacks ineffective. |
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|+American black bear subspecies |
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It is estimated that there have been only 56 documented killings of humans by black bears in North America in the past 100 years. |
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!Image !! Scientific name!! Common name!! Distribution!! Description |
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Black bears eat a great variety of vegetation and nuts, as shown in the list below. The list reflects the different types of habitat in which it is found, from prairie to swamps to both eastern and western types of forest. |
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|- |
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[[Image:American Black Bear cubs.jpg|300px|thumb|right|American black bear cubs ]] |
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| valign="top" | [[File:Black bear Quesnel Lake BC.jpg|120px]] |
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[[Image:American Black Bear close-up.jpg|thumb|300px|Close-up]] |
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*[[Persimmon|American persimmon]] (''Diospyros virginiana'') |
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*[[American pokeweed]] ('' Phytolacca americana'') |
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*[[Beech]] mast ('' Fagus grandifola, F. mexicana'') |
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*[[Blackberry]] and [[raspberry]] (''[[Rubus]]'' spp.) |
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*[[Black cherry]] (''Prunus serotina'') |
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*[[Black walnut]] (''Juglans nigra'') |
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*[[Blueberry]] and [[huckleberry]] (''[[Vaccinium]]'' spp.) |
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*[[Buffaloberry]] (''Shepherdia canadensis'') |
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*[[Rhamnus californica|California coffeeberry]] (''Rhamnus californica'') |
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*[[Sabal Palmetto|cabbage palm]] (''Sabal palmetto'') |
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*[[Chestnut]] and [[chinkapin]] mast (''Castanea dentata, C. pumila'') |
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*[[Clover]] (''Trifolium'' spp.) |
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*[[Cow parsnip]] (''Heracleum lanatum'') |
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*[[malus|Crabapples]] (''Malus'' spp.) |
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*[[Cranberry]] (''[[Viburnum]] spp.'') |
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*[[Dandelion]] (''Taraxacum officinale'') |
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*[[Dogwood]] (''Cornus'' spp.) |
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*[[Elderberry]] (''Sambucus canadensis'') |
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*[[Hazel]] (''[[Corylus]]'' spp.) mast |
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*[[Gooseberry]] (''Ribes'' spp.) |
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*[[Hickory]] mast, including [[pecans]] (''Carya'' spp.) |
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*[[Kinnikinnick]] |
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*[[Labrador tea]] (''Ledum groenlandicus'') |
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*[[Lomatium]] (''Lomatium'' spp.) |
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*[[Lousewort]] (''Pedicularis'' spp.) |
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*[[Lupin]]e (''Lupinus spp.'') |
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*[[Manzanita]] (''[[Arctostaphylos]]'' spp.) |
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*[[Galium|Northern bedstraw]] (''Galium boreale'') |
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*[[Oak]] (''[[Quercus]]'' spp.) mast |
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*[[Pawpaw]], (''Asimina triloba'') |
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*[[Pine nut]]s |
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*[[Rhubarb]] (''Polygonum alaskanum'') |
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*[[Rose hip]]s (''Rosa'' spp.) |
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*[[Rowan]] (''[[Sorbus]]'' spp.) |
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*[[Sarsaparilla]] (''Aralia nudicaulis'') |
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*[[Sassafras]] (''Sassafras albidum'') |
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*[[Saw palmetto]] (''Serenoa repens'') berries and hearts (basal shoots) |
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*[[Squawroot]] (''Conopholis americana'') |
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*[[Thistle]] (''Cirsium'' spp.) |
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*Tree [[cambium]] (inner bark) |
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*Wild [[cherry|cherries]] (''Prunus'' spp.) |
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*Wild [[grape]]s (''Vitis riparia'', ''V. labrusca'') |
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*Wild [[strawberry|strawberries]] (''Fragaria virginiana, F. californica'') |
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They will also eat [[salmon]] ([[Salmon#Pacific Ocean species|''Oncorynchus'' spp.]], [[Atlantic salmon|''Salmo salar'']]), [[Catostomidae|suckers]], [[alligator]] eggs, [[crayfish]], and [[trout]] and will raid [[orchard]]s, [[beehive (beekeeping)|beehives]], and agricultural crops. They may frequent garbage dumps or may raid the trash bins of businesses or private homes. Black bears may occasionally prey on domestic [[sheep]] and [[pig]]s when their natural foods are scarce. |
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Predators include other black bears, [[human|man]], and the [[Grizzly Bear]] (''Ursus arctos horriblis''). [[Coyote]]s (''Canis latrans'') and [[Cougar]]s (''Puma concolor'') may prey on cubs. Traffic is also a major cause of mortality; in [[Florida]] alone, more than 100 bears are killed on roads each year. |
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== Taxonomy and subspecies ranges == |
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The American Black Bear is classified in the class [[Mammal]]ia, order [[Carnivora]] and family [[Ursidae]]. Currently accepted [[subspecies]] (with their respective ranges) include: |
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{| |
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|----- |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus altifrontalis'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus altifrontalis'' |
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| valign="top" | Olympic black bear |
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| valign="top" | the Pacific Northwest coast from central [[British Columbia]] through northern [[California]] and inland to the tip of northern [[Idaho]] and British Columbia |
| valign="top" | the Pacific Northwest coast from central [[British Columbia]] through northern [[California]] and inland to the tip of northern [[Idaho]] and British Columbia |
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| valign="top" | |
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|----- |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | [[File:Black bear Yellowstone NP 2008.jpg|120px]] |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus amblyceps'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus amblyceps'' |
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| valign="top" | [[Colorado]], [[New Mexico]], |
| valign="top" | New Mexico black bear |
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| valign="top" | [[Colorado]], [[New Mexico]], western [[Texas]] and the eastern half of [[Arizona]] into northern [[Mexico]] and southeastern [[Utah]] |
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| valign="top" | |
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|----- |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | [[File:Ursus americanus PO 03.jpg|120px]] |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus americanus'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus americanus'' |
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| valign="top" | Eastern black bear |
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| valign="top" | from eastern [[Montana]] to the Atlantic; from [[Alaska]] south and east through [[Canada]] to the Atlantic and south to [[Texas]] |
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| valign="top" | Eastern [[Montana]] to the Atlantic coast, from [[Alaska]] south and east through [[Canada]] to [[Maine]] and south to [[Texas]]. Thought to be increasing in some regions. |
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|----- |
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| valign="top" | Common to [[Eastern Canada]] and the [[Eastern United States|eastern U.S.]] wherever suitable habitat is found. A large-bodied subspecies; almost all specimens have black fur. May very rarely sport a white blaze on the chest. |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | [[File:Black Bear (20261425192).jpg|120px]] |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus californiensis'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus californiensis'' |
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| valign="top" | |
| valign="top" | California black bear |
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| valign="top" | the mountain ranges of southern [[California]], north through the [[Central Valley (California)|Central Valley]] to southern [[Oregon]] |
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|----- |
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| valign="top" | Able to live in varied climates: found in temperate rain forest in the north and [[chaparral]] shrubland in the south. Small numbers may feature cinnamon-colored fur. |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus carlottae'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus carlottae'' |
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| [[Queen Charlotte Islands |
| valign="top" | [[Ursus americanus carlottae|Haida Gwaii black bear or Queen Charlotte Islands black bear]] |
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| [[Haida Gwaii]] (formerly the Queen Charlotte Islands) and [[Alaska]] |
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|----- |
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| valign="top" | Generally larger than its mainland counterparts with a large skull and molars and found only in a black color phase.<ref name="charlotte">{{cite web |url=http://www.llbc.leg.bc.ca/public/PubDocs/bcdocs/373436/Chapter%202.8.pdf |title=Haida Gwaii Black Bear (''Ursus Americanus Carlottae'' Subspecies) |access-date=February 21, 2011 |archive-date=April 20, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170420232921/http://www.llbc.leg.bc.ca/public/pubdocs/bcdocs/373436/chapter%202.8.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus cinnamomum'' |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | Idaho, western Montana, and Wyoming, eastern Washington and Oregon, northeastern Utah |
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| valign="top" | [[File:"Cinnamon" Black Bear.jpg|120px]] |
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|----- |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus cinnamomum'' |
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| valign="top" | [[Cinnamon bear]] |
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| valign="top" | Colorado, Idaho, western Montana and Wyoming, eastern Washington and Oregon and northeastern Utah |
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| valign="top" | Has brown or reddish-brown fur, reminiscent of cinnamon. |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | [[File:Glacier-Bear.jpg|120px]] |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus emmonsii'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus emmonsii'' |
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| valign="top" | |
| valign="top" | [[Glacier bear]] or blue bear |
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| valign="top" | [[Southeast Alaska|Southeastern Alaska]] |
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|----- |
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| valign="top" | Distinguished by its fur being silvery-gray with a blue luster found mostly on its flanks.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://wildlife1.wildlifeinformation.org/S/0MCarnivor/ursidae/ursus/Ursus_americanus/19Ursus_americanusSpecVar.html |title=Species Variation – Editorial Comment |publisher=Wildlife1.wildlifeinformation.org |access-date=February 21, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110723235708/http://wildlife1.wildlifeinformation.org/S/0MCarnivor/ursidae/ursus/Ursus_americanus/19Ursus_americanusSpecVar.html |archive-date=July 23, 2011 }}</ref> |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | [[File:Ursus americanus eremicus.jpg|120px]] |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus eremicus'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus eremicus'' |
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| valign="top" | |
| valign="top" | East Mexican black bear |
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| valign="top" | Northeastern Mexico and U.S. borderlands with Texas. |
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|----- |
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| valign="top" | Most often found in [[Big Bend National Park]] and the desert border with Mexico. Numbers unknown in Mexico but are presumed to be very low. Critically Endangered. |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | [[File:A Florida Black Bear.jpg|120px]] |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus floridanus'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus floridanus'' |
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| valign="top" | [[Florida |
| valign="top" | [[Florida black bear]] |
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| valign="top" | [[Florida]], southern [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]], [[Alabama]] and [[Mississippi]] (except the southern region) |
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|----- |
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| valign="top" | Has a light brown nose and shiny black fur. A white blaze on the chest is common in this subspecies. An average male weighs {{convert|136|kg|lb|abbr=on}}. |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | [[File:American black bear Gros Mornе NFL.jpg|120px]] |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus hamiltoni'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus hamiltoni'' |
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| valign="top" | |
| valign="top" | [[Newfoundland black bear]] |
||
| valign="top" | [[Newfoundland (island)|Newfoundland]] |
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|----- |
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| valign="top" | Generally bigger than its mainland relatives, ranging in size from {{convert|90|to|270|kg|lb|abbr=on}} and averaging {{convert|135|kg|lb|abbr=on}}. It has one of the longest hibernation periods of any bear in North America.<ref>[http://www.pc.gc.ca/pn-np/nl/grosmorne/natcul/natcul3.aspx#a3 "Black Bear"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140821035644/http://www.pc.gc.ca/pn-np/nl/grosmorne/natcul/natcul3.aspx |date=August 21, 2014 }}, Parks Canada</ref> Known to favor foraging in fields of ''[[Vaccinium]]'' species. |
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| valign="top" | ''[[Kermode bear|Ursus americanus kermodei]]'' |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | [[File:Ursus americanus kermodei, Spirit Bear Lodge, Klemtu, BC 1.jpg|120px]] |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus kermodei'' |
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| valign="top" | [[Kermode bear]] or island white bear, spirit bear |
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| valign="top" | the central coast of British Columbia |
| valign="top" | the central coast of British Columbia |
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| valign="top" | Approximately 10% of the population of this subspecies have white or cream-colored coats due to a recessive gene. The other 90% appear as normal-colored black bears.<ref name="Gov.bc">{{cite web|title=Spirit Bear Facts |url=http://www.corporate.gov.bc.ca/bcspiritbear/more_about_spirit_bear.htm |publisher=Province of British Columbia |access-date=December 3, 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091217143929/http://www.corporate.gov.bc.ca/bcspiritbear/more_about_spirit_bear.htm |archive-date=December 17, 2009 |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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|----- |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus luteolus'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus luteolus'' |
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| valign="top" | |
| valign="top" | [[Louisiana black bear]] |
||
| valign="top" | Eastern Texas, [[Louisiana]] and southern [[Mississippi]]. The validity of this subspecies has been repeatedly disputed.<ref name="iucn" /> |
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|----- |
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| valign="top" | Has relatively long, narrow and flat skull and proportionately large molars.<ref>[http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/publications/pwdpubs/media/pwd_bk_w7000_0013_louisiana_black_bear.pdf ''Louisiana Black Bear'' (PDF).] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131224095210/http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/publications/pwdpubs/media/pwd_bk_w7000_0013_louisiana_black_bear.pdf |date=December 24, 2013 }} Retrieved September 15, 2011.</ref> Prefers [[hardwood bottom forest]]s and [[bayou]]s as habitat. |
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|- |
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| valign="top" |[[File:Ursus americanus machetes.jpg|120px]] |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus machetes'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus machetes'' |
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| valign="top" | West Mexican black bear |
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| valign="top" | north-central Mexico |
| valign="top" | north-central Mexico |
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| valign="top" | |
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|----- |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus perniger'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus perniger'' |
||
| valign="top" | |
| valign="top" | Kenai black bear |
||
| valign="top" | the [[Kenai Peninsula]], Alaska |
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|----- |
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| valign="top" | Considered an "Apparently Secure Subspecies" by [[NatureServe]].<ref>{{cite web |title=NatureServe Explorer 2.0 |url=https://explorer.natureserve.org/Taxon/ELEMENT_GLOBAL.2.103496/Ursus_americanus_perniger |website=explorer.natureserve.org |access-date=31 March 2022 |archive-date=March 31, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220331172917/https://explorer.natureserve.org/Taxon/ELEMENT_GLOBAL.2.103496/Ursus_americanus_perniger |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus pugnax'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus pugnax'' |
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| valign="top" | |
| valign="top" | Dall Island black bear |
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| valign="top" | [[Dall Island]] in the [[Alexander Archipelago]], Alaska |
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|----- |
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| valign="top" | |
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|- |
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| valign="top" | |
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| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus vancouveri'' |
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus vancouveri'' |
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| valign="top" | Vancouver Island black bear |
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| valign="top" | [[Vancouver Island]], British Columbia |
| valign="top" | [[Vancouver Island]], British Columbia |
||
| valign="top" | Darker and slightly bigger than the other five subspecies found in British Columbia; it is most common in the north, but appears occasionally in the southern parts of Vancouver Island. |
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|} |
|} |
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== |
== Distribution and population == |
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[[ |
[[File:Grand Tetons black bear.jpg|thumb|An American black bear at [[Grand Teton National Park]], [[Wyoming]]]] |
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[[Image:bearskin.cenotaph.london.arp.jpg|thumb|right|Irish Guards, wearing bearskins]] |
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Historically, American black bears occupied the majority of North America's forested regions. Today, they are primarily limited to sparsely settled, forested areas.<ref name="plan">{{cite web| url=http://wildlife1.wildlifeinformation.org/000ADOBES/Bears/Bears_IUCN_ActionPlan/bearsAP_chapter8.pdf| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110723235737/http://wildlife1.wildlifeinformation.org/000ADOBES/Bears/Bears_IUCN_ActionPlan/bearsAP_chapter8.pdf| archive-date=July 23, 2011| title=Chapter 8. American Black Bear Conservation Action Plan |access-date=February 21, 2011 |author1=Pelton, Michael R. |author2=Coley, Alex B. |author3=Eason, Thomas H. |author4=Doan Martinez |author5=Diana L. |author6=Pederson, Joel A. |author7=van Manen, Frank T. |author8=Weaver, Keith M. }}</ref> American black bears currently inhabit much of their original Canadian range, though they seldom occur in the southern farmlands of [[Alberta]], [[Saskatchewan]] and [[Manitoba]]; they have been extirpated on [[Prince Edward Island]] since 1937.<ref name="ScheickMcCown">{{cite journal |last1=Scheick |first1=Brian K. |last2=McCown |first2=Walter |title=Geographic distribution of American black bears in North America |journal=Ursus |date=1 May 2014 |volume=25 |issue=1 |pages=24 |doi=10.2192/URSUS-D-12-00020.1 |s2cid=83706088 }}</ref> Surveys taken in the mid-1990s found the Canadian black bear population to be between 396,000 and 476,000 in seven provinces;<ref name="canada">{{cite web| url=http://wwf.ca/newsroom/?1058| title=Canadian Population| publisher=World Wildlife Fund| access-date=August 31, 2011| archive-date=October 4, 2011| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111004041940/http://wwf.ca/newsroom/?1058| url-status=live}}</ref> this estimate excludes populations in [[New Brunswick]], the [[Northwest Territories]], [[Nova Scotia]] and [[Saskatchewan]]. All provinces indicated stable populations of American black bears over the last decade.<ref name="plan" /> |
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[[Image:White-blackbear.jpg|thumb|right|A white individual (stuffed), [[Walter Rothschild Zoological Museum|Rothschild Museum]], Tring]] |
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Because their behavior has been little understood until recently, black bears have been feared and hated. Before the 20th century, these bears were shot intermittently as vermin, food, and trophies, being seen as either a vicious beast or an endless commodity; until recently, in many areas, bounties were paid for black bears. The Queen of the [[United Kingdom]] Foot Guard's hat has been for centuries made of black bear fur, and its original name is ''[[bearskin]]''. |
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The current range in the United States is constant throughout most of the [[Northeastern United States|Northeast]] and within the [[Appalachian Mountains]] almost continuously from [[Maine]] to northern [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]], the northern [[Midwestern United States|Midwest]], the [[Mountain States|Rocky Mountain region]], the [[West Coast of the United States|West Coast]] and [[Alaska]].<ref name="ScheickMcCown" /> However, it becomes increasingly fragmented or absent in other regions. Despite this, American black bears in those areas seem to have expanded their range in recent decades, such as with recent sightings in [[Ohio]],<ref name="ScheickMcCown" /> [[Illinois]],<ref>{{Cite web |last=DeBrock |first=Ron |date=2021-07-19 |title=Black bear seen in Godfrey park |url=https://www.thetelegraph.com/news/article/Black-bear-seen-in-Godfrey-park-16325152.php |access-date=2022-08-02 |website=Alton Telegraph |language=en-US |archive-date=August 2, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220802161227/https://www.thetelegraph.com/news/article/Black-bear-seen-in-Godfrey-park-16325152.php |url-status=dead }}</ref> southern [[Indiana]],<ref>{{cite news |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Black Bear hit by car in Southern Indiana |url=http://www.wsvx.com/2018/11/19/black-bear-hit-by-car-in-southern-indiana/ |work=Giant FM |date=19 November 2018 |access-date=19 November 2018 |archive-date=November 20, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181120010700/http://www.wsvx.com/2018/11/19/black-bear-hit-by-car-in-southern-indiana/ |url-status=live }}</ref> and western Nebraska.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hoffman |first1=Justin D. |last2=Wilson |first2=Sam |last3=Genoways |first3=Hugh H. |title=Recent occurrence of an American black bear in Nebraska |journal=Ursus |date=April 2009 |volume=20 |issue=1 |pages=69–72 |doi=10.2192/08SC030R.1 |s2cid=84359190 |url=https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1131&context=museummammalogy |access-date=July 2, 2021 |archive-date=May 5, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220505094546/https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1131&context=museummammalogy |url-status=live }}</ref> Sightings of itinerant black bears in the [[Driftless Area]] of southeastern [[Minnesota]], northeastern [[Iowa]], and southwestern [[Wisconsin]] are common.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.wisconsinoutdoorsman.com/threads/early-black-bear-sightings-in-southern-wisconsin.4797/|title=Early black bear sightings in southern Wisconsin|publisher=Wisconsin Outdoorsman|access-date=April 24, 2019|archive-date=April 24, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190424162942/https://www.wisconsinoutdoorsman.com/threads/early-black-bear-sightings-in-southern-wisconsin.4797/|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.iowadnr.gov/Conservation/Iowas-Wildlife/Occasional-Wildlife-Visitors/|title=Occasional wildlife visitors to Iowa|publisher=Iowa Department of Natural Resources|access-date=April 24, 2019|archive-date=April 24, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190424161446/https://www.iowadnr.gov/Conservation/Iowas-Wildlife/Occasional-Wildlife-Visitors|url-status=live}}</ref> In 2019, biologists with the [[Iowa Department of Natural Resources]] confirmed documentation of an American black bear living year-round in woodlands near the town of [[Decorah, Iowa|Decorah]] in northeastern Iowa, believed to be the first instance of a resident black bear in Iowa since the 1880s.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.kcrg.com/content/news/Biologists-excited-after-black-bear-caught-on-camera-in-northeast-Iowa-508784351.html|title=Biologists excited after black bear caught on camera in northeast Iowa|date=April 19, 2019|publisher=KCRG|location=Cedar Rapids, Iowa|access-date=April 24, 2019|archive-date=April 24, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190424161439/https://www.kcrg.com/content/news/Biologists-excited-after-black-bear-caught-on-camera-in-northeast-Iowa-508784351.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.whotv.com/2019/04/17/video-shows-bear-in-iowa-dnr-says-it-could-be-states-first-resident-bear-since-the-1880s/|title=Video Shows Bear in Iowa, DNR Says it Could be State's First 'Resident' Bear Since the 1880s|date=April 17, 2019|publisher=WHO-TV|location=Des Moines, Iowa|access-date=August 16, 2019|archive-date=April 18, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190418131545/https://whotv.com/2019/04/17/video-shows-bear-in-iowa-dnr-says-it-could-be-states-first-resident-bear-since-the-1880s/|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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Surveys taken from 35 states in the early 1990s indicated that American black bear populations were either stable or increasing, except in [[Idaho]] and [[New Mexico]]. The population in the United States was estimated to range between 339,000 and 465,000 in 2011,<ref name="us">{{cite web| url=http://wwf.ca/newsroom/?1058| title=United States Population| publisher=World Wildlife Fund| access-date=August 31, 2011| archive-date=October 4, 2011| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111004041940/http://wwf.ca/newsroom/?1058| url-status=live}}</ref> though this estimate does not include data from Alaska, [[Idaho]], [[South Dakota]], [[Texas]] or [[Wyoming]], whose populations were not recorded in the survey.<ref name="plan" /> In [[California]] there were an estimated 25,000-35,000 black bears in 2017, making it the largest population of the species in any of the 48 [[contiguous United States]].<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.tahoewildbears.org/black_bear_facts.htm |title=Black Bear Facts |access-date=December 2, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170809012840/http://www.tahoewildbears.org/black_bear_facts.htm |archive-date=August 9, 2017 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url=https://www.wildlife.ca.gov/Conservation/Mammals/Black-Bear/Population| title=Black Bear Population Information| access-date=June 8, 2016| archive-date=October 5, 2016| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161005024328/https://www.wildlife.ca.gov/Conservation/Mammals/Black-Bear/Population| url-status=live}}</ref> In 2020 there were about 1,500 bears in [[Great Smoky Mountains National Park]], where the population density is about two per square mile.<ref>{{cite web |title=Black Bears - Great Smoky Mountains National Park |url=https://www.nps.gov/grsm/learn/nature/black-bears.htm |website=U.S. National Park Service |access-date=November 30, 2020 |archive-date=December 7, 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201207231908/https://www.nps.gov/grsm/learn/nature/black-bears.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> In western [[North Carolina]], the black bear population has dramatically increased in recent decades, from about 3,000 in the early 2000s to over 8,000 in the 2020s.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://wlos.com/news/local/asheville-black-bear-population-how-many-growth-north-carolina-wildlife-wildlife-resources-commission-study-cubs-wnc-nature-center | title=As black bear population booms, state aims to slow growth | date=March 27, 2023 }}</ref> |
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As of 1993, known black bear populations in Mexico existed in four areas, though knowledge on the distribution of populations outside those areas has not been updated since 1959. Mexico is the only country where the species is classified as "endangered".<ref name="plan" /> |
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== Habitat == |
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Throughout their range, habitats preferred by American black bears have a few shared characteristics. They are often found in areas with relatively inaccessible terrain, thick understory vegetation and large quantities of edible material (especially [[Mast (botany)|masts]]). The adaptation to woodlands and thick vegetation in this species may have originally been because the bear evolved alongside larger, more aggressive bear species, such as the extinct giant short-faced bear and the grizzly bear, that monopolized more open habitats<ref name="Lariviere">{{cite journal |author=Lariviere, S. |year=2001 |title=''Ursus americanus'' |journal=Mammalian Species |issue=647 |pages=1–11 |url=http://www.science.smith.edu/departments/Biology/VHAYSSEN/msi/default.html |doi=10.1644/1545-1410(2001)647<0001:UA>2.0.CO;2 |s2cid=198968922 |access-date=December 17, 2012 |archive-date=September 15, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130915093329/http://www.science.smith.edu/departments/Biology/VHAYSSEN/msi/default.html |url-status=live }}</ref> and the historic presence of larger predators, such as ''[[Smilodon]]'' and the [[American lion]], that could have preyed on black bears. Although found in the largest numbers in wild, undisturbed areas and rural regions, American black bears can adapt to surviving in some numbers in [[Peri-urbanisation|peri-urban]] regions, as long as they contain easily accessible foods and some vegetative coverage.<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} |
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In most of the contiguous United States, American black bears today are usually found in heavily vegetated mountainous areas, from {{convert|400|to|3000|m|ft|abbr=on}} in elevation. For American black bears living in the [[Southwestern United States|American Southwest]] and Mexico, habitat usually consists of stands of [[chaparral]] and [[Pinyon-juniper woodland|pinyon juniper woods]]. In this region, bears occasionally move to more open areas to feed on [[Opuntia|prickly pear cactus]]. At least two distinct, prime habitat types are inhabited in the [[Southeastern United States]]. American black bears in the southern [[Appalachian Mountains]] survive in predominantly [[oak–hickory forest|oak-hickory]] and mixed [[Mesophyte|mesophytic]] forests. In the coastal areas of the southeast (such as [[Florida]], [[the Carolinas]] and [[Louisiana]]), bears inhabit a mixture of [[flatwoods]], [[bay]]s and swampy hardwood sites. |
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In the northeastern part of the range (the United States and Canada), prime habitat consists of a forest canopy of [[hardwood]]s such as [[beech]], [[maple]], [[birch]] and [[conifer]]ous species. [[Maize|Corn]] crops and oak-hickory mast are also common sources of food in some sections of the northeast; small, thick swampy areas provide excellent refuge cover largely in stands of [[Thuja occidentalis|white cedar]]. Along the Pacific coast, [[redwood]], [[Picea sitchensis|Sitka spruce]] and [[Tsuga|hemlock]]s predominate as overstory cover. Within these northern forest types are early successional areas important for American black bears, such as fields of brush, wet and dry [[meadow]]s, high [[tideland]]s, [[Riparian zone|riparian area]]s and a variety of mast-producing hardwood species. The [[Spruce|spruce-fir]] forest dominates much of the range of the American black bear in the [[Rocky Mountains|Rockies]]. Important non-forested areas here are wet meadows, riparian areas, avalanche chutes, roadsides, burns, sidehill parks and [[montane ecosystems|subalpine ridgetops]]. |
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In areas where human development is relatively low, such as stretches of Canada and Alaska, American black bears tend to be found more regularly in lowland regions.<ref name="Lariviere" /> In parts of northeastern Canada, especially [[Labrador]], American black bears have adapted exclusively to semi-open areas that are more typical habitat in North America for brown bears (likely due to the absence there of brown and polar bears, as well as other large carnivore species).<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} |
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== Description == |
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[[File:Black&brownbears.JPG|thumb|left|American black bears can be distinguished from [[brown bear]]s by their smaller size, their less concave skull profiles, their shorter claws and the lack of a shoulder hump.]] |
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=== Build === |
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{{multiple image |align=right |direction=vertical |width=220 |
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|image1=Black Bear-27527.jpg |caption1=Some individuals may develop a white "[[Lunar phase|crescent moon]]" blaze on the chest. This white blaze, which is constant in [[Asian black bear]]s, occurs in only 25% of American black bears.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.americanbear.org/otherbears.htm |title=Bears of the World |publisher=Americanbear.org |access-date=February 21, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110405230340/http://www.americanbear.org/otherbears.htm |archive-date=April 5, 2011 |df=mdy-all }}</ref> |
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|image2=Mammals of northern Alaska on the Arctic slope (1956) Ursus americanus californiensis skull.png |caption2=[[Skull]] |
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}} |
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The skulls of American black bears are broad, with narrow muzzles and large jaw hinges. In [[Virginia]], the length of adult bear skulls was found to average {{cvt|262|to|317|mm}}.<ref name="Lariviere" /> Across its range, the greatest skull length for the species has been reportedly measured from {{convert|23.5|to|35|cm|in|abbr=on}}.<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} Females tend to have slenderer and more pointed faces than males. |
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Their claws are typically black or grayish-brown. The claws are short and rounded, being thick at the base and tapering to a point. Claws from both hind and front legs are almost identical in length, though the foreclaws tend to be more sharply curved. The paws of the species are relatively large, with a rear foot length of {{convert|13.7|to|22.5|cm|in|abbr=on}}, which is proportionately larger than other medium-sized bear species, but much smaller than the paws of large adult brown, and especially polar bears.<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} The soles of the feet are black or brownish and are naked, leathery and deeply wrinkled. |
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The hind legs are relatively longer than those of Asian black bears. The typically small tail is {{cvt|7.7|-|17.7|cm}} long.{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Bear Anatomy and Physiology"}}<ref>[http://audubonguides.com/species/Mammals/American-Black-Bear.html ''Audubon Field Guide'']{{Dead link|date=September 2023|bot=InternetArchiveBot|fix-attempted=yes}}. Audubonguides.com. Retrieved September 15, 2011.</ref><ref>Kronk, C. (2007). [http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ursus_americanus.html ''Ursus americanus''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110502154717/http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ursus_americanus.html |date=May 2, 2011 }}. Animal Diversity Web. Retrieved September 15, 2011.</ref><ref>[http://www.arkive.org/american-black-bear/ursus-americanus/ "American black bear videos, photos and facts – ''Ursus americanus''"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110423031104/http://www.arkive.org/american-black-bear/ursus-americanus|date=April 23, 2011}}. ARKive. Retrieved September 15, 2011.</ref> The ears are small and rounded and are set well back on the head. |
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American black bears are highly [[Fine motor skill|dexterous]], being capable of opening screw-top jars and manipulating door latches.{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Bear Anatomy and Physiology"}} They also have great physical strength; a bear weighing {{convert|120|lb|kg}} was observed turning flat rocks weighing {{convert|310|to|325|lb|kg}} by flipping them over with a single foreleg.{{sfn|Brown|1993|p=83}} They move in a rhythmic, [[sure-footed]] way and can run at speeds of {{convert|25|to|30|mph}}.{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Behaviour and Activities"}} American black bears have good eyesight and have been proven experimentally to be able to learn visual color discrimination tasks faster than [[Common chimpanzee|chimpanzee]]s and just as fast as domestic [[dog]]s. They are also capable of rapidly learning to distinguish different shapes such as small triangles, circles and squares.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bearbiology.com/fileadmin/tpl/Downloads/URSUS/Vol_3/Bacon_Burghardt_B_Vol_3.pdf |title=Learning and Color Discrimination in the American Black Bear |publisher=bearbiology.com |access-date=December 23, 2009 |archive-date=December 3, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101203095708/http://www.bearbiology.com/fileadmin/tpl/Downloads/URSUS/Vol_3/Bacon_Burghardt_B_Vol_3.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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=== Size === |
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[[File:Black bear in yellowstone 3.jpg|thumb|A cinnamon-colored American black bear in [[Yellowstone National Park]], the U.S.]] |
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Adults typically range from {{cvt|120|to|200|cm}} in head-and-body length, and {{cvt|70|to|105|cm}} in shoulder height. Although they are the smallest bear species in [[North America]], large males exceed the size of other bear species, except the brown bear and the polar bear.{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Bear Anatomy and Physiology"}} |
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Weight tends to vary according to age, sex, health and season. Seasonal variation in weight is very pronounced: in autumn, their pre-den weight tends to be 30% higher than in spring, when black bears emerge from their dens. Bears on the [[East Coast of the United States|East Coast]] tend to be heavier on average than those on the [[West Coast of the United States|West Coast]], although they typically follow [[Bergmann's rule]], and bears from the northwest are often slightly heavier than the bears from the southeast. Adult males typically weigh between {{cvt|57|-|250|kg}}, while females weigh 33% less at {{cvt|41|-|170|kg}}.<ref name="Hunter" /><ref name="scorzafava">{{Cite book |publisher=Stackpole Books |title=Radical Bear Hunter |first=Dick |last=Scorzafava |year=2007 |isbn=978-0-8117-3418-9}}</ref> |
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In California, studies indicate that the average mass is {{cvt|86|kg}} in adult males and {{cvt|58|kg}} in adult females.<ref name="Lariviere" /> Adults in [[Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge]] in east-central Alaska were found to average {{cvt|87.3|kg}} in males and {{cvt|63.4|kg}} in females, whereas on [[Kuiu Island]] in southeastern Alaska (where nutritious [[salmon]] are readily available) adults averaged {{cvt|115|kg}}.<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://alaska.fws.gov/nwr/yukonflats/pdf/black_bear_monitoring_ursus.pdf |title=Black bear monitoring in eastern interior Alaska |journal=Ursus |volume=13 |issue=69–77 |year=2002 |author1=Bertram, M. R. |author2=Vivion M. T. |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041108124729/http://alaska.fws.gov/nwr/yukonflats/pdf/black_bear_monitoring_ursus.pdf |archive-date=November 8, 2004 }}</ref><ref>Peacock, Elizabeth (2004). [http://www.carnivoreconservation.org/files/thesis/peacock_2004_phd.pdf "Population, Genetic and Behavioral Studies of Black Bears ''Ursus americanus'' in Southeast Alaska"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130606075229/http://www.carnivoreconservation.org/files/thesis/peacock_2004_phd.pdf |date=June 6, 2013 }}. PhD Thesis, University of Nevada, Reno</ref> In [[Great Smoky Mountains National Park]], adult males averaged {{cvt|112|kg}} and adult females averaged {{cvt|47|kg}} per one study.<ref>[http://www.discoverlife.org/nh/tx/Vertebrata/Mammalia/Ursidae/Ursus/americanus/ "''Ursus americanus'' (Pallas); Black Bear"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130413151905/http://www.discoverlife.org/nh/tx/Vertebrata/Mammalia/Ursidae/Ursus/americanus/ |date=April 13, 2013 }}. Discoverlife.org. Retrieved December 20, 2012.</ref> |
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In one of the largest studies on regional body mass, bears in British Columbia averaged {{cvt|73.7|kg}} in 89 females and {{cvt|103.1|kg}} in 243 males.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=McLellan |first1=B. N. |title=Implications of a high-energy and low-protein diet on the body composition, fitness, and competitive abilities of black (''Ursus americanus'') and grizzly (''Ursus arctos'') bears |journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology |date=June 2011 |volume=89 |issue=6 |pages=546–558 |id={{Gale|A268310385}} |doi=10.1139/z11-026 }}</ref> In [[Yellowstone National Park]], a study found that adult males averaged {{cvt|119|kg}} and adult females averaged {{cvt|67|kg}}.<ref>Barnes, V. G. and Bray, O. E. (1967) "Population characteristics and activities of black bears in Yellowstone National Park". Final report, Colorado Wildl. Res. Unit, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins; cited in [http://www.nps.gov/yell/naturescience/bearchar.htm "Characteristics of Black Bears and Grizzly Bears in YNP"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130413172239/http://www.nps.gov/yell/naturescience/bearchar.htm |date=April 13, 2013 }}. nps.gov</ref> Black bears in north-central Minnesota averaged {{cvt|70|kg}} in 163 females and {{cvt|125|kg}} in 77 males.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Noyce |first1=Karen V. |last2=Garshelis |first2=David L. |title=Spring Weight Changes in Black Bears in Northcentral Minnesota: The Negative Foraging Period Revisited |journal=Ursus |date=1998 |volume=10 |pages=521–531 |jstor=3873164 }}</ref> In New York, the males average {{cvt|136|kg}} and females {{cvt|72.6|kg}}.<ref>[https://www.dec.ny.gov/docs/wildlife_pdf/bears1.pdf ''Black bears in New York State''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211111201219/https://www.dec.ny.gov/docs/wildlife_pdf/bears1.pdf |date=November 11, 2021 }}. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, page 1. Retrieved November 11, 2021.</ref> It was found in [[Nevada]] and the [[Lake Tahoe]] region that bears closer to urban regions were significantly heavier than their arid-country dwelling counterparts, with males near urban areas averaging {{cvt|138|kg}} against wild-land males which averaged {{cvt|115.5|kg}} whereas peri-urban females averaged {{cvt|97.9|kg}} against the average of {{cvt|65.2|kg}} in wild-land ones.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Beckmann |first1=Jon P. |last2=Berger |first2=Joel |title=Using Black Bears to Test Ideal-Free Distribution Models Experimentally |journal=Journal of Mammalogy |date=30 May 2003 |volume=84 |issue=2 |pages=594–606 |doi=10.1644/1545-1542(2003)084<0594:UBBTTI>2.0.CO;2 |doi-access=free}}</ref> In [[Waterton Lakes National Park]], Alberta, adults averaged {{cvt|125|to|128|kg}}.<ref>Silva, M., & Downing, J. A. (1995). ''CRC handbook of mammalian body masses''. CRC Press.</ref> |
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The biggest wild American black bear ever recorded was a male from [[New Brunswick]], shot in November 1972, that weighed {{cvt|409|kg}} after it had been dressed, meaning it weighed an estimated {{cvt|500|kg}} in life and measured {{cvt|2.41|m}} long.<ref name="wood">{{Cite book |publisher=Sterling Publishing Co. |title=The Guinness Book of Animal Facts & Feats |first=Gerald |last=Wood |year=1983 |isbn=978-0-85112-235-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/guinnessbookofan00wood }}</ref> Another notably outsized wild American black bear, weighing in at {{cvt|408|kg}}, was the cattle-killer shot in December 1921 on the Moqui Reservation in [[Arizona]].<ref name="wood" /> The record-sized American black bear from [[New Jersey]] was shot in [[Morris County, New Jersey|Morris County]] December 2011 and scaled {{cvt|376.5|kg}}.<ref>Stabile, Jim (December 16, 2011) [https://archive.today/20130120084026/http://www.dailyrecord.com/article/20111216/NJNEWS/312160008/829-pound-bear-takes-record-N-J-hunt "829-pound bear takes record in N.J. hunt"]. ''Daily Record''</ref> The Pennsylvania state record weighed {{cvt|399|kg}} and was shot in November 2010 in [[Pike County, Pennsylvania|Pike County]].<ref>[http://www.poconorecord.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20101119/NEWS/11190341/-1/NEWS01 "Record-busting, 879-pound bear bagged in Poconos"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141022004303/http://www.poconorecord.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20101119/NEWS/11190341/-1/NEWS01 |date=October 22, 2014 }}. Pocono Record. November 19, 2010. Retrieved 2013-08-19.</ref> The North American Bear Center, located in [[Ely, Minnesota]], is home to the world's largest captive male and female American black bears. Ted, the male, weighed {{cvt|431|-|453.5|kg}} in the fall of 2006.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bear.org/website/the-nabc/meet-our-bears/teds-page.html |title=Meet Our Bears > Ted's Page |publisher=North American Bear Center |last=Rogers |first=Lyn |access-date=February 11, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110217020258/http://www.bear.org/website/the-nabc/meet-our-bears/teds-page.html |archive-date=February 17, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> Honey, the female, weighed {{cvt|219.6|kg}} in the fall of 2007.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bear.org/website/the-nabc/meet-our-bears/honeys-page.html |title=Meet Our Bears > Honey's Page |publisher=North American Bear Center |access-date=February 11, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110217020216/http://www.bear.org/website/the-nabc/meet-our-bears/honeys-page.html |archive-date=February 17, 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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=== Pelage === |
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[[File:Spiritbear.jpg|thumb|upright|A white-colored [[Kermode bear]] (''U. a. kermodei'')]] |
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The fur is soft, with dense underfur and long, coarse, thick guard hairs.{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Bear Anatomy and Physiology"}} The fur is not as shaggy or coarse as that of brown bears.<ref>Wood, John George (1865). ''The Illustrated Natural History'', Vol. 2, George Routledge and Sons.</ref>{{page needed|date=May 2020}} American black bear skins can be distinguished from those of Asian black bears by the lack of a white blaze on the chest and hairier footpads.{{citation needed|date=July 2021}} |
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Despite their name, black bears show a great deal of color variation. Individual coat colors can range from white, blonde, cinnamon, light brown or dark chocolate brown to jet black, with many intermediate variations existing. Silvery-gray American black bears with a blue luster (this is found mostly on the flanks) occur along a portion of coastal Alaska and British Columbia. White to cream-colored American black bears occur in the coastal islands and the adjacent mainland of southwestern British Columbia. [[Albino]] individuals have also been recorded.<ref name="Herrero">{{cite book |author=Herrero, Stephen |title=Bear Attacks: Their Causes and Avoidance |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dqRGDwAAQBAJ |access-date=May 16, 2012 |year=2002 |publisher=Globe Pequot |isbn=978-1-58574-557-9 |archive-date=May 21, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230521140749/https://books.google.com/books?id=dqRGDwAAQBAJ |url-status=live }}</ref>{{rp|141}} Black coats tend to predominate in humid areas such as Maine, New England, New York, Tennessee, Michigan and western Washington.{{sfn|Brown|1993|p=65}} Approximately 70% of all American black bears are black, though only 50% in the Rocky Mountains are black.{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Bear Anatomy and Physiology"}} Many in northwestern North America are cinnamon, blonde or light brown in color and thus may sometimes be mistaken for grizzly bears. Grizzly (and other types of brown) bears can be distinguished by their shoulder hump, larger size and broader, more concave skull.<ref name="Macdonald">Macdonald, D. W. (2006). ''The Encyclopedia of Mammals''. Oxford University Press, Oxford {{ISBN|0-19-956799-9}}.</ref>{{page needed|date=May 2020}} |
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In his book ''The Great Bear Almanac'', Gary Brown summarized the predominance of black or brown/blonde specimens by location:{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Bear Anatomy and Physiology"}} |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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|- |
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! Colspan="2"|Color variations of American black bears by location |
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|- |
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! Location |
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! Color breakdown |
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|- |
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| [[Michigan]] |
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| 100% black |
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|- |
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| [[Minnesota]] |
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| 94% black, 6% brown |
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|- |
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| [[New England]] |
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| 100% black |
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|- |
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| [[New York (state)|New York]] |
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| 100% black |
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|- |
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| [[Tennessee]] |
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| 100% black |
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|- |
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| [[Washington (state)|Washington]] (coastal) |
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| 99% black, 1% brown or blonde |
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|- |
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| [[Washington (state)|Washington]] (inland) |
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| 21% black, 79% brown or blonde |
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|- |
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| [[Yosemite National Park]] |
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| 9% black, 91% brown or blonde |
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|} |
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== Behavior and life history == |
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{{multiple image |align=right |direction=vertical |width=220 |
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|image1=Ursus_americanus_PO_05.jpg |caption1=A swimming bear |
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|image2=Inspecting Newborn Black Bear Cubs.jpg |caption2=Three newborn [[Cub (organism)|cub]]s |
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|image3=American black bear cub in tree - DPLA - bde0bcd3661a5079a10ef3e34dd41e96.jpg |caption3=Cub climbing a tree |
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}} |
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American black bears have eyesight and hearing comparable to that of humans.{{citation needed|date=October 2022}} Their keenest sense is smell, which is about seven times more sensitive than a domestic dog's.<ref>{{cite web| title=Black Bear Biology & Behavior| url=http://westernwildlife.org/black-bear-outreach-project/biology-behavior-3/| access-date=November 21, 2013| archive-date=November 27, 2013| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131127123209/http://westernwildlife.org/black-bear-outreach-project/biology-behavior-3/| url-status=live}}</ref> They are excellent and strong swimmers, swimming for pleasure and to feed (largely on fish). They regularly climb trees to feed, escape enemies and hibernate. Four of the eight modern bear species are habitually arboreal (the most arboreal species, the American and Asian black bears and the sun bear, being fairly closely related).<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} Their arboreal abilities tend to decline with age.{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Behaviour and Activities"}} They may be active at any time of the day or night, although they mainly forage by night. Bears living near human habitations tend to be more extensively [[nocturnal]], while those living near brown bears tend to be more often [[Diurnality|diurnal]].<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}}<ref name="Lariviere" /> |
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American black bears tend to be [[Territory (animal)|territorial]] and non-[[social animal|gregarious]] in nature. However, at abundant food sources (e.g. spawning [[salmon]] or garbage dumps), they may congregate and dominance hierarchies form, with the largest, most powerful males dominating the most fruitful feeding spots.<ref name="Nowak">Nowak, R. M. (1991). ''Walker's Mammals of the World''. The Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore and London.</ref>{{page needed|date=May 2020}} They [[Territory (animal)#Scent marking|mark their territories]] by [[Scent rubbing|rubbing]] their bodies against trees and clawing at the bark. Annual ranges held by mature male bears tend to be very large, though there is some variation. On [[Long Island (Washington)|Long Island]] off the coast of Washington, ranges average {{convert|5|sqmi|km2|abbr=on}}, whereas on the [[Ungava Peninsula]] in Canada ranges can average up to {{convert|1000|sqmi|km2|abbr=on}}, with some male bears traveling as far as {{convert|4349|sqmi|km2|abbr=on}} at times of food shortages.<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}}<ref name="Nowak" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} |
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Bears may communicate with various vocal and non-vocal sounds. Tongue-clicking and grunting are the most common sounds and are made in cordial situations to conspecifics, offspring and occasionally humans. When at ease, they produce a loud rumbling hum. During times of fear or nervousness, bears may moan, huff or blow air. Warning sounds include jaw-clicking and lip-popping. In aggressive interactions, black bears produce [[guttural]] pulsing calls that may sound like growling. Cubs squeal, bawl or scream when anxious and make a motor-like humming sound when comfortable or nursing.<ref>{{cite web |publisher=North American Bear Center |url=https://www.bear.org/website/bear-pages/black-bear/communication/29-vocalizations-a-body-language.html |title=Vocalizations & Body Language |access-date=2016-12-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161223132123/https://www.bear.org/website/bear-pages/black-bear/communication/29-vocalizations-a-body-language.html |archive-date=December 23, 2016 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=Masterson, Linda |year=2016 |title=Living With Bears Handbook: Expanded 2nd Edition |publisher=PixyJack Press |pages=215–16 |isbn=978-1936555611}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=Naughton, Donna |year=2014 |title=The Natural History of Canadian Mammals |publisher=University of Toronto Press|page=411|isbn=978-1-4426-4483-0}}</ref> American black bears often mark trees using their teeth and claws as a form of communication with other bears, a behavior common to many species of bears.<ref name="iucn">{{cite iucn| author=Garshelis, D. L.| author2=Scheick, B. K.| author3=Doan-Crider, D. L. | author4=Beecham, J. J. | author5=Obbard, M. E. | name-list-style=amp| year=2016 | errata=2017 | page=e.T41687A114251609 | doi=10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T41687A45034604.en | title=''Ursus americanus''| access-date=19 February 2022}}</ref> |
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=== Reproduction and development === |
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Sows usually produce their first litter at the age of 3 to 5 years,{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Behaviour and Activities"}} with those living in more developed areas tending to get pregnant at younger ages.<ref name="life">{{cite web |url=https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080930135301.htm |title=Urban Black Bears "Live Fast, Die Young" |publisher=Sciencedaily.com |date=October 1, 2008 |access-date=February 21, 2011 |archive-date=February 23, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110223145458/http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080930135301.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> The breeding period usually occurs in the June–July period, though it can extend to August in the species' northern range. The breeding period lasts for two to three months. Both sexes are promiscuous. Males try to mate with several females, but large, dominant ones may violently claim a female if another mature male comes near.<ref name="Lariviere" /> Copulation can last 20–30 minutes.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Ludlow |first1=Jeanne C. |title=Observations on the Breeding of Captive Black Bears, Ursus americanus |journal=Bears: Their Biology and Management |date=1976 |volume=3 |pages=65–69 |doi=10.2307/3872755 |jstor=3872755 |citeseerx=10.1.1.552.1405 }}</ref> Sows tend to be short-tempered with their mates after copulating. |
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The fertilized eggs undergo delayed development and do not implant in the female's womb until November. The gestation period lasts 235 days, and litters are usually born in late January to early February. Litter size is between one and six cubs, typically two or three.<ref name="North American Bear Center – Reproduction">{{cite web |title=Reproduction |url=http://www.bear.org/website/bear-pages/black-bear/reproduction.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101217155959/http://www.bear.org/website/bear-pages/black-bear/reproduction.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=2010-12-17 |publisher=North American Bear Center}}</ref> At birth, cubs weigh {{convert|280|–|450|g|lb|abbr=on}} and measure {{convert|20.5|cm|in|abbr=on}} in length. They are born with fine, gray, down-like hair and their hind quarters are underdeveloped. They typically open their eyes after 28–40 days and begin walking after 5 weeks. Cubs are dependent on their mother's milk for 30 weeks and will reach independence at 16–18 months. At 6 weeks, they attain {{convert|900|g|lb|abbr=on}}, by 8 weeks they reach {{convert|2.5|kg|lb|abbr=on}} and by 6 months they weigh {{convert|18|to|27|kg|lb|abbr=on}}. They reach sexual maturity at 3 years and attain their full growth at 5 years.{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Behaviour and Activities"}} |
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=== Longevity and mortality === |
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[[File:Ursus americanus PO 4.ogv|thumb|A female with cubs in [[Parc Omega]], [[Quebec]]]] |
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The average lifespan in the wild is 18 years, though it is quite possible for wild individuals to survive for more than 23 years.<ref name="Macdonald" /> The record age of a wild individual was 39 years,<ref>{{cite press release |url=http://news.dnr.state.mn.us/2013/08/27/world%E2%80%99s-oldest-known-wild-black-bear-dies-at-39/ |title=World's oldest-known wild black bear dies at 39 |agency=Minnesota Department of Natural Resources |date=August 27, 2013 |access-date=2016-01-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304053538/http://news.dnr.state.mn.us/2013/08/27/world%E2%80%99s-oldest-known-wild-black-bear-dies-at-39/ |archive-date=March 4, 2016 |url-status=dead }}</ref> while that in captivity was 44 years.{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Bear Anatomy and Physiology"}} The average annual survival rate is variable, ranging from 86% in Florida to 73% in Virginia and North Carolina.<ref name="Lariviere" /> In Minnesota, 99% of wintering adult bears were able to survive the hibernation cycle in one study.<ref name="Lariviere" /> Remarkably, a study of American black bears in Nevada found that the amount of annual mortality of a population of bears in wilderness areas was 0%, whereas in developed areas in the state this figure rose to 83%.<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} Survival in subadults is generally less assured. In Alaska, only 14–17% of subadult males and 30–48% of subadult females were found in a study to survive to adulthood.<ref name="Lariviere" /> Across the range, the estimated number of cubs who survive past their first year is 60%.<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} |
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With the exception of the rare confrontation with an adult brown bear or a [[Wolf|gray wolf]] pack, adult black bears are not usually subject to natural predation.<ref name="Lariviere" /> However, as evidenced by scats with fur inside of them and the recently discovered carcass of an adult sow with puncture marks in the skull, black bears may occasionally fall prey to [[North American jaguar|jaguar]]s in the southern parts of their range. In such scenarios, the big cat would have the advantage if it ambushed the bear, killing it with a crushing bite to the back of the skull.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/return-great-american-jaguar-180960443/ |title=The Return of the Great American Jaguar |last=Grant |first=Richard |website=Smithsonian Magazine |date=October 2016 |access-date=October 20, 2016 |archive-date=October 23, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161023201248/http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/return-great-american-jaguar-180960443/ |url-status=live }}</ref> Cubs tend to be more vulnerable to predation than adults, with known predators including [[bobcat]]s, [[coyote]]s, [[North American cougar|cougar]]s, gray wolves, brown bears and other bears of their own species.<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}}<ref name="Lariviere" /> Many of these will stealthily snatch small cubs right from under the sleeping mother. There is record of a [[golden eagle]] snatching a yearling cub.<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} Once out of hibernation, mother bears may be able to fight off most potential predators.<ref name="Lariviere" /> Even cougars will be displaced by an angry mother bear if they are discovered stalking the cubs.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://sacramento.cbslocal.com/2012/03/29/bear-saves-hiker-from-cougar-in-butte-county/ | title=Man Says Bear Saved Him from Mountain Lion Attack in Butte County | website=[[KOVR]] | date=March 29, 2012 | access-date=2012-12-21 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221208132359/https://www.cbsnews.com/sacramento/news/bear-saves-hiker-from-cougar-in-butte-county/ | archive-date=December 8, 2022 | url-status=live}}</ref> Flooding of dens after birth may also occasionally kill newborn cubs. However, in current times, bear fatalities are mainly attributable to human activities. Seasonally, thousands of black bears are hunted legally across North America to control their numbers, while some are illegally poached or trapped unregulated. Auto collisions also may claim many black bears annually.<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}}<ref name="Lariviere" /> |
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=== Hibernation === |
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[[File:Bear hibernating.jpg|right|thumb|A female and cubs hibernating]] |
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American black bears were once not considered true or "deep" [[Hibernation|hibernators]], but because of discoveries about the metabolic changes that allow black bears to remain dormant for months without eating, drinking, urinating or defecating, most biologists have redefined mammalian hibernation as "specialized, seasonal reduction in metabolism concurrent with scarce food and cold weather". American black bears are now considered highly efficient hibernators.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.bear.org/website/bear-pages/black-bear/black-bear-facts/hibernation.html |title=Hibernation |publisher=Bear.org |date=July 19, 2004 |access-date=February 19, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100608193610/http://www.bear.org/website/bear-pages/black-bear/black-bear-facts/hibernation.html |archive-date=June 8, 2010 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nps.gov/yell/naturescience/denning.htm |title=Yellowstone National Park – Denning and Hibernation Behavior |publisher=[[U.S. National Park Service]] |date=April 15, 2008 |access-date=February 19, 2011 |archive-date=February 12, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150212103120/http://www.nps.gov/yell/naturescience/denning.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> The physiology of American black bears in the wild is closely related to that of bears in captivity. Understanding the physiology of bears in the wild is vital to the bear's success in captivity.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=McCain |first1=Stephanie |last2=Ramsay |first2=Ed |last3=Kirk |first3=Claudia |s2cid=21582518 |date=2013-06-01 |title=The effects of hibernation and captivity on glucose metabolism and thyroid hormones in American black bear (''Ursus americanus'') |journal=Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine|volume=44 |issue=2 |pages=324–332 |doi=10.1638/2012-0146R1.1 |pmid=23805551 }}</ref> |
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The bears enter their dens in October and November, although in the southernmost areas of their range (i.e. Florida, Mexico, the [[southeastern United States]]), only pregnant females and mothers with yearling cubs will enter hibernation.<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} Prior to that time, they can put on up to {{convert|30|lb|order=flip|abbr=on}} of body fat to get them through the several months during which they fast. Hibernation typically lasts 3–8 months, depending on regional climate.<ref name="charlotte" /><ref>{{cite web |last=Michigan |first=Department of Natural Resources |title=Michigan Black Bear Facts |publisher=State of Michigan |date=19 November 2004 |url=http://michigan.gov/dnr/0%2C1607%2C7-153-10369-105034--%2C00.html |access-date=5 April 2015 |archive-date=April 11, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150411044556/http://michigan.gov/dnr/0%2C1607%2C7-153-10369-105034--%2C00.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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Hibernating bears spend their time in hollowed-out dens in tree cavities, under logs or rocks, in banks, caves, or culverts, and in shallow depressions. Although naturally-made dens are occasionally used, most dens are dug out by the bear.<ref name="Macdonald" /> During their time in hibernation, an American black bear's heart rate drops from 40 to 50 beats per minute to 8 beats per minute, and the metabolic rate can drop to a quarter of the bear's (nonhibernating) [[basal metabolic rate]]. These reductions in metabolic rate and heart rate do not appear to decrease the bear's ability to heal injuries during hibernation. Their [[circadian rhythm]] stays intact during hibernation. This allows the bear to sense the changes in the day based on the ambient temperature caused by the sun's position in the sky. It has also been shown that ambient light exposure and low disturbance levels (that is to say, wild bears in ambient light conditions) directly correlate with their activity levels.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Jansen |first1=Heiko T. |last2=Leise |first2=Tanya|author2-link= Tanya Leise |last3=Stenhouse |first3=Gordon |last4=Pigeon |first4=Karine |last5=Kasworm |first5=Wayne |last6=Teisberg |first6=Justin |last7=Radandt |first7=Thomas |last8=Dallmann |first8=Robert |last9=Brown |first9=Steven |last10=Robbins |first10=Charles T. |date=December 2016 |title=The bear circadian clock doesn't 'sleep' during winter dormancy |journal=Frontiers in Zoology |volume=13 |issue=1 |pages=42 |doi=10.1186/s12983-016-0173-x |pmc=5026772 |pmid=27660641 |doi-access=free }}</ref> The bear keeping track of the changing days allows it to awaken from hibernation at the appropriate time of year to conserve as much energy as possible.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Iaizzo |first1=Paul A. |last2=Laske |first2=Timothy G. |last3=Harlow |first3=Henry J. |last4=McCLAY |first4=Carolyn B. |last5=Garshelis |first5=David L. |s2cid=38880222 |date=2012-03-01 |title=Wound healing during hibernation by black bears (''Ursus americanus'') in the wild: elicitation of reduced scar formation |journal=[[Integrative Zoology]] |volume=7 |issue=1 |pages=48–60 |doi=10.1111/j.1749-4877.2011.00280.x |pmid=22405448 }}</ref> |
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The hibernating bear does not display the same rate of muscle and bone atrophy relative to other nonhibernatory animals that are subject to long periods of inactivity due to ailment or old age.<ref name="Lohuis Harlow Beck Iaizzo 2007">{{Cite journal |last1=Lohuis |first1=T. D. |last2=Harlow |first2=H. J. |last3=Beck |first3=T. D. I. |last4=Iaizzo |first4=P. A. |date=2007-05-01 |title=Hibernating Bears Conserve Muscle Strength and Maintain Fatigue Resistance |journal=Physiological and Biochemical Zoology |volume=80 |issue=3 |pages=257–269 |doi=10.1086/513190 |pmid=17390282 |hdl=20.500.11919/2961 |s2cid=8738656 |url=https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/13678639 |hdl-access=free |access-date=June 19, 2023 |archive-date=March 3, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240303091130/https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Hibernating_Bears_Conserve_Muscle_Strength_and_Maintain_Fatigue_Resistance/13678639 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Pardy |first1=Connor K. |last2=Wohl |first2=Gregory R. |last3=Ukrainetz |first3=Philip J. |last4=Sawers |first4=Andrew |last5=Boyd |first5=Steven K. |last6=Zernicke |first6=Ronald F. |date=2004-08-01 |title=Maintenance of bone mass and architecture in denning black bears (''Ursus americanus'') |journal=Journal of Zoology |volume=263 |issue=4 |pages=359–364 |doi=10.1017/S0952836904005412 }}</ref> A hibernating bear only loses approximately half the muscular strength compared to that of a well-nourished, inactive human. The bear's bone mass does not change in geometry or mineral composition during hibernation, which implies that the bear's conservation of bone mass during hibernation is caused by a biological mechanism.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=McGee-Lawrence |first1=Meghan E. |last2=Wojda |first2=Samantha J. |last3=Barlow |first3=Lindsay N. |last4=Drummer |first4=Thomas D. |last5=Bunnell |first5=Kevin |last6=Auger |first6=Janene |last7=Black |first7=Hal L. |last8=Donahue |first8=Seth W. |date=2009-07-22 |title=Six months of disuse during hibernation does not increase intracortical porosity or decrease cortical bone geometry, strength, or mineralization in black bear (''Ursus americanus'') femurs |journal=Journal of Biomechanics |volume=42 |issue=10 |pages=1378–1383 |doi=10.1016/j.jbiomech.2008.11.039 |pmc=2707508 |pmid=19450804 }}</ref> During hibernation American black bears retain all excretory waste, leading to the development of a hardened mass of fecal material in the colon known as a [[fecal plug]].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Rogers |first1=Lynn |last2=Mansfield |first2=Sue |title=Daily Updates foot pads and fecal plugs |url=http://www.bearstudy.org/website/updates/daily-updates/813-update-february-8-2010-800-pm-cst.html |website=Bearstudy.org |publisher=Wildlife Research Institute |access-date=18 November 2016 |archive-date=November 18, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161118101443/http://www.bearstudy.org/website/updates/daily-updates/813-update-february-8-2010-800-pm-cst.html |url-status=live }}</ref> [[Leptin]] is released into the bear's systems to suppress appetite. The retention of waste during hibernation (specifically in minerals such as [[calcium]]) may play a role in the bear's resistance to atrophy.<ref name="Lohuis Harlow Beck Iaizzo 2007" /> |
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The body temperature does not drop significantly, like other mammalian hibernators (staying around {{Convert|35|C}}) and they remain somewhat alert and active. If the winter is mild enough, they may wake up and forage for food. Females also give birth in February and nurture their cubs until the snow melts.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://culter.colorado.edu:1030/~kittel/WEcol_Projects06/BearsHiberntn_BBennett.ppt |title=Hibernation of the Black and Brown Bear |last=Bennett |first=Bobby |date=Spring 2006 |access-date=November 22, 2009 |location=Mountain Research Station |archive-date=August 14, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110814035616/http://culter.colorado.edu:1030/~kittel/WEcol_Projects06/BearsHiberntn_BBennett.ppt |url-status=live }}</ref> During winter, American black bears consume 25–40% of their body weight.<ref name="jim">{{cite web |url=http://www.nps.gov/dewa/naturescience/upload/cmsstgBEAR.pdf |title=The Black Bear |work=Spanning the Gap – The newsletter of Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area |year=1993 |author=Becker, Jim |access-date=February 21, 2011 |archive-date=November 8, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121108175404/http://www.nps.gov/dewa/naturescience/upload/cmsstgBEAR.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> The footpads peel off while they sleep, making room for new tissue. |
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Many of the [[Physiology|physiological]] changes an American black bear exhibits during hibernation are retained slightly post-hibernation. Upon exiting hibernation, bears retain a reduced heart rate and basal metabolic rate. The metabolic rate of a hibernating bear will remain at a reduced level for up to 21 days after hibernation.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Tøien |first1=Øivind |last2=Blake |first2=John |last3=Edgar |first3=Dale M. |last4=Grahn |first4=Dennis A. |last5=Heller |first5=H. Craig |last6=Barnes |first6=Brian M. |s2cid=20829847 |date=2011-02-18 |title=Hibernation in black bears: independence of metabolic suppression from body temperature |journal=Science |volume=331 |issue=6019 |pages=906–909 |doi=10.1126/science.1199435 |pmid=21330544 |bibcode=2011Sci...331..906T }}</ref> After emerging from their winter dens in spring, they wander their home ranges for two weeks so that their metabolism accustoms itself to the activity. In mountainous areas, they seek southerly slopes at lower elevations for forage and move to northerly and easterly slopes at higher elevations as summer progresses. |
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The time that American black bears emerge from hibernation varies. Factors affecting this include temperature, flooding, and hunger. In southern areas, they may wake up in midwinter. Further north, they may not be seen until late March, April, or even early May. Altitude also has an effect. Bears at lower altitudes tend to emerge earlier. Mature males tend to come out earliest, followed by immature males and females, and lastly mothers with cubs. Mothers with yearling cubs are seen before those with newborns.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Furtman |first1=Michael |title=Black bear country |date=1998 |publisher=NorthWord Press |isbn=978-1-55971-667-3 |oclc=38542528 }}{{page needed|date=July 2021}}</ref> |
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=== Dietary habits === |
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{{multiple image |align=right |direction=vertical |width2=220 |
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|image1=Black Bear Caught A Salmon.jpg |caption1=A bear taking a dead [[chum salmon]] near [[Hyder, Alaska]] |
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|image2=Black bear with salmon.jpg |caption2=A bear with a [[pink salmon]] |
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|image3=Black Bear Lake Louise.jpg |caption3=A bear feeding on a bush |
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}} |
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Generally, American black bears are largely [[crepuscular]] in foraging activity, though they may actively feed at any time.<ref name="Nowak" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} Up to 85% of their diet consists of vegetation,{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Behaviour and Activities"}} though they tend to dig less than brown bears, eating far fewer [[root]]s, [[bulb]]s, [[corm]]s and [[tuber]]s than the latter species.<ref name="Herrero" /> When initially emerging from hibernation, they will seek to feed on [[carrion]] from winter-killed animals and newborn [[ungulate]]s. As the spring temperature warms, American black bears seek new shoots of many plant species, especially new [[Graminoid|grasses]], wetland plants and [[forb]]s.<ref name="jim" /> Young shoots and buds from trees and shrubs during the spring period are important to bears emerging from hibernation, as they assist in rebuilding muscle and strengthening the skeleton and are often the only digestible foods available at that time.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20110602095210/http://nationalzoo.si.edu/publications/zoogoer/1999/2/fact-americanblack.cfm "American Black Bear Fact Sheet"]. National Zoo| FONZ. Retrieved September 15, 2011.</ref> During summer, the diet largely comprises fruits, especially berries and soft masts such as buds and [[drupe]]s. |
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During the [[Hyperphagia (ecology)|autumn hyperphagia]], feeding becomes virtually the full-time task. [[Mast (botany)|Hard masts]] become the most important part of the diet in autumn and may even partially dictate the species' distribution. Favored masts such as [[hazelnut]]s, [[Acorn|oak acorns]] and [[Whitebark pine|whitebark pine nuts]] may be consumed by the hundreds each day by a single bear during the fall.<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}}<ref name="Lariviere" /> During the fall period, bears may also habitually raid the nut caches of [[tree squirrel]]s.<ref name="jim" /> Also extremely important in fall are berries such as [[Huckleberry|huckleberries]] and [[Shepherdia|buffalo berries]].<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} Bears living in areas near human settlements or around a considerable influx of recreational human activity often come to rely on foods inadvertently provided by humans, especially during summertime. These include refuse, birdseed, agricultural products and honey from [[Apiary|apiaries]].<ref name="Macdonald" /> |
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The majority of the diet consists of insects, such as bees, yellow jackets, ants, beetles and their larvae.<ref name="jim" /><ref>{{cite web | url=https://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Ursus_americanus/ | title=Ursus americanus (American black bear) | website=[[Animal Diversity Web]] | access-date=March 24, 2023 | archive-date=December 21, 2014 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141221132929/https://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Ursus_americanus/ | url-status=live }}</ref> American black bears are also fond of [[honey]]<ref>{{Cite web| url=https://www.crittersanctuary.com/why-do-bears-like-honey/| title=Why do Bears Like Honey [The #1 Reason They Do]| date=August 8, 2019| access-date=September 22, 2019| archive-date=September 22, 2019| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190922101020/https://www.crittersanctuary.com/why-do-bears-like-honey/| url-status=dead}}</ref> and will gnaw through trees if hives are too deeply set into the trunks for them to reach it with their paws. Once the hive is breached, the bears will scrape the [[honeycomb]]s together with their paws and eat them, regardless of stings from the bees.<ref name="wood" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} Bears that live in northern coastal regions (especially the Pacific Coast) will fish for [[salmon]] during the night, as their black fur is easily spotted by salmon in the daytime. Other bears, such as the white-furred Kermode bears of the islands of western Canada, have a 30% greater success rate in catching salmon than their black-furred counterparts.<ref name="invis">{{cite news |last=Bourton |first=Jody |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/earth/hi/earth_news/newsid_8344000/8344367.stm |title=Spirit bears become 'invisible' by Jody Bourton, Earth News reporter |work=BBC News |date=November 6, 2009 |access-date=February 21, 2011 |archive-date=June 18, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120618221714/http://news.bbc.co.uk/earth/hi/earth_news/newsid_8344000/8344367.stm |url-status=live }}</ref> Other fish, including [[Catostomidae|suckers]], [[trout]] and [[catfish]], are readily caught whenever possible.{{citation needed|date=July 2021}} Although American black bears do not often engage in active predation of other large animals for much of the year, the species will regularly prey on [[Mule deer|mule]] and [[white-tailed deer]] fawns in spring, given the opportunity.<ref>{{cite thesis |last1=Smith |first1=Randall |title=Mule Deer Reproduction and Survival in the LaSal Mountains, Utah |type=MS thesis |publisher=Utah State University |date=May 1983 |url=https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/4314/ |doi=10.26076/46d5-bbc1 |access-date=July 1, 2021 |archive-date=July 9, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210709182241/https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/4314/ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Matthews">{{cite journal |doi=10.1139/z88-179 |last1=Mathews |first1=N. E. |last2=Porter |first2=W. F. |year=1988 |title=Black bear predation on white-tailed deer neonates in the central Adirondacks |journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology |volume=66 |issue=5|pages=1241–1242}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |jstor=3801608 |author=Ozoga, J. J. |author2=Clute, R. K. |year=1988 |title=Mortality rates of marked and unmarked fawns |journal=Journal of Wildlife Management |volume=52 |issue=3|pages=549–551 |doi=10.2307/3801608 }}</ref> Bears may catch the scent of hiding fawns when foraging for something else and then sniff them out and pounce on them. As the fawns reach 10 days of age, they can outmaneuver the bears, and their scent is soon ignored until the next year.<ref>{{cite web |title=Animal Protein |publisher=North American Bear Center |url=https://www.bear.org/website/bear-pages/black-bear/foraging-a-foods/84-animal-protein.html |access-date=2017-03-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170323142720/https://www.bear.org/website/bear-pages/black-bear/foraging-a-foods/84-animal-protein.html |archive-date=March 23, 2017 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> American black bears have also been recorded similarly preying on [[elk]] calves in Idaho<ref>{{cite journal |id={{NAID|10006692813}} |url=http://www.muledeerworkinggroup.com/Docs/Proceedings/1977-Western%20States%20Elk%20Workshop/Factors%20Affecting%20Calf%20Elk%20Survival%20on%20Coolwater%20Ridge%20in%20No.pdf |last1=Schlegel |first1=M. |year=1976 |title=Factor affecting calf elk survival in north central Idaho |journal=Western Association of State Game and Fish Commission |volume=56 |pages=342–355 |access-date=February 24, 2015 |archive-date=February 24, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150224061024/http://www.muledeerworkinggroup.com/Docs/Proceedings/1977-Western%20States%20Elk%20Workshop/Factors%20Affecting%20Calf%20Elk%20Survival%20on%20Coolwater%20Ridge%20in%20No.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> and [[moose]] calves in Alaska.<ref>{{cite journal |jstor=3808038 |title=Moose calf mortality in summer at Kenai Peninsula, Alaska |journal=Journal of Wildlife Management |volume=44 |issue=3|pages=764–768 |doi=10.2307/3808038 |year=1980 |last1=Franzmann |first1=Albert W. |last2=Schwartz |first2=Charles C. |last3=Peterson |first3=Rolf O.}}</ref> |
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Predation on adult deer is rare, but it has been recorded.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Behrend |first1=D. F. |last2=Sage |first2=R. W. Jr. |year=1974 |title=Unusual feeding behavior by black bears |journal=Journal of Wildlife Management |volume=38 |issue=3 |pages=570 |doi=10.2307/3800894 |jstor=3800894 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Svoboda |first1=Nathan J. |last2=Belant |first2=Jerrold L. |last3=Beyer |first3=Dean E. |last4=Duquette |first4=Jared F. |last5=Stricker |first5=Heather K. |last6=Albright |first6=Craig A. |title=American black bear predation of an adult white-tailed deer |journal=Ursus |date=April 2011 |volume=22 |issue=1 |pages=91–94 |doi=10.2192/URSUS-D-10-00024.1 |s2cid=54910723 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Austin |first1=Matthew A. |last2=Obbard |first2=Martyn E. |last3=Kolenosky |first3=George B. |year=1994 |title=Evidence for a black bear, ''Ursus americanus'', killing an adult moose, ''Alces alces'' |journal=The Canadian Field-Naturalist |volume=108 |issue=2 |pages=236–238 |doi=10.5962/p.356768 |url=https://archive.org/details/canadianfieldnat108otta/page/236/ |doi-access=free }}</ref> They may even hunt prey up to the size of adult female moose, which are considerably larger than themselves, by ambushing them.<ref name="TEDDY" /> There is at least one record of a male American black bear killing two bull elk over the course of six days by chasing them into deep snow banks, which impeded their movements. In [[Labrador]], American black bears are exceptionally carnivorous, living largely off [[Reindeer|caribou]], usually young, injured, old, sickly or dead specimens, and rodents such as [[vole]]s. This is believed to be due to a paucity of edible plant life in this sub-Arctic region and a local lack of competing large carnivores (including other bear species).<ref name="Macdonald" /> Like brown bears, American black bears try to use surprise to ambush their prey and target the weak, injured, sickly or dying animals in the herds. Once a deer fawn is captured, it is frequently torn apart alive while feeding.<ref name="Matthews" /> If it is able to capture a mother deer in spring, the bear frequently begins feeding on the udder of lactating females, but generally prefers meat from the [[viscera]]. Bears often drag their prey to cover, preferring to feed in seclusion. The skin of large prey is stripped back and turned inside out, with the skeleton usually left largely intact. Unlike gray wolves and coyotes, bears rarely scatter the remains of their kills. Vegetation around the carcass is usually matted down, and their droppings are frequently found nearby. Bears may attempt to cover remains of larger carcasses, though they do not do so with the same frequency as cougars and grizzly bears.<ref name="Predation">{{cite web |title=Bear Predation — Description |url=http://texnat.tamu.edu/ranchref/predator/bears/t-bears.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061017112052/http://texnat.tamu.edu/ranchref/predator/bears/t-bears.htm |archive-date=October 17, 2006 |access-date=November 24, 2008 |publisher=Texas Natural Resources Server - Texas A&M University}}</ref> They will readily consume eggs and nestlings of various birds and can easily access many tree nests, even the huge nests of bald eagles.{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Behaviour and Activities"}} Bears have been reported stealing deer and other game from human hunters. |
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=== Interspecific predatory relationships === |
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Over much of their range, American black bears are assured [[scavenger]]s that can intimidate, using their large size and considerable strength, and if necessary dominate other predators in confrontations over carcasses. However, on occasions where they encounter [[Kodiak bear|Kodiak]] or grizzly bears, the larger two brown subspecies dominate them. American black bears tend to escape competition from brown bears by being more active in the daytime and living in more densely forested areas. Violent interactions, resulting in the deaths of American black bears, have been recorded in [[Yellowstone National Park]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.greateryellowstonescience.org/files/pdf/ys5-gunther.pdf |title=Evidence of grizzly bear predation on a black bear in Hayden Valley |author1=Gunther, Kerry A. |author2=Biel, Mark J. |access-date=February 21, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110726131314/http://www.greateryellowstonescience.org/files/pdf/ys5-gunther.pdf |archive-date=July 26, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nps.gov/yell/naturescience/upload/predation.pdf |title=Probable Grizzly Bear Predation on an American Black Bear in Yellowstone National Park |access-date=February 21, 2011 |archive-date=October 9, 2022 |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/http://www.nps.gov/yell/naturescience/upload/predation.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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American black bears do occasionally compete with cougars over carcasses. Like brown bears, they will sometimes steal kills from cougars. One study found that both bear species visited 24% of cougar kills in Yellowstone and [[Glacier National Park (U.S.)|Glacier National Parks]], usurping 10% of the carcasses.<ref>{{cite journal |author=COSEWIC. Canadian Wildlife Service |journal=COSEWIC Assessment and Update Status Report |title=Assessment and Update Status Report on the Grizzly Bear (Ursus arctos) |publisher=[[Environment Canada]] |year=2002 |url=http://dsp-psd.pwgsc.gc.ca/Collection/CW69-14-166-2002E.pdf |access-date=April 8, 2007 |archive-date=October 9, 2022 |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221009/http://dsp-psd.pwgsc.gc.ca/Collection/CW69-14-166-2002E.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Murphy |first1=Kerry M. |last2=Felzien |first2=Gregory S. |last3=Hornocker |first3=Maurice G. |last4=Ruth |first4=Toni K. |title=Encounter Competition between Bears and Cougars: Some Ecological Implications |journal=Ursus |date=1998 |volume=10 |pages=55–60 |jstor=3873109 }}</ref> Another study found that American black bears visited 48% of cougar kills in summer in Colorado and 77% of kills in California. As a result, the cats spend more time killing and less time feeding on each kill.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Elbroch |first1=L. M. |last2=Lendrum |first2=P. E. |last3=Allen |first3=M. L. |last4=Wittmer |first4=H. U. |title=Nowhere to hide: pumas, black bears, and competition refuges |journal=Behavioral Ecology |date=1 January 2015 |volume=26 |issue=1 |pages=247–254 |doi=10.1093/beheco/aru189 |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine |author=ELboch, M. |date=November 1, 2014 |title=Mountain Lions Versus Black Bears |magazine=National Geographic |access-date=September 24, 2016 |url=http://voices.nationalgeographic.com/2014/11/01/mountain-lions-versus-black-bears/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141101221217/http://voices.nationalgeographic.com/2014/11/01/mountain-lions-versus-black-bears/|url-status=dead|archive-date=November 1, 2014}}</ref> |
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American black bear interactions with [[Wolf|gray wolves]] are much rarer than with brown bears, due to differences in habitat preferences. The majority of American black bear encounters with wolves occur in the species' northern range, with no interactions being recorded in Mexico. Despite the American black bear being more powerful on a one-to-one basis, packs of wolves have been recorded to kill black bears on numerous occasions without eating them. Unlike brown bears, American black bears frequently lose against wolves in disputes over kills.<ref name="WOLVES">{{cite book |author1=Mech, L. David |author2=Boitani, Luigi |title=Wolves: Behaviour, Ecology and Conservation | year=2001 | page= 448 | isbn= 978-0-226-51696-7 | publisher= University of Chicago Press | location= Chicago }}</ref> Wolf packs typically kill American black bears when the larger animals are in their hibernation cycle.<ref name="scorzafava" /> |
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There is at least one record of an American black bear killing a [[wolverine]] (''Gulo gulo'') in a dispute over food in Yellowstone National Park.<ref name="cc">{{cite news |url=http://www.ecoearth.info/shared/reader/welcome.aspx?linkid=22714&keybold=predator%20AND%20%20coyote |title=In Yellowstone, It's a Carnivore Competition |newspaper=The Washington Post |date=May 19, 2003 |access-date=February 21, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101124131447/http://www.ecoearth.info/shared/reader/welcome.aspx?linkid=22714&keybold=predator%20AND%20%20coyote |archive-date=November 24, 2010 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> Anecdotal cases of [[alligator]] predation on American black bears have been reported, though such cases may involve assaults on cubs.<ref>[http://www.keywestaquarium.com/alligator "Key West Florida Attractions | Alligator Exhibit"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121213103422/http://www.keywestaquarium.com/alligator |date=December 13, 2012 }}. Key West Aquarium (November 30, 2012). Retrieved 2012-12-20.</ref> At least one [[jaguar]] (''Panthera onca'') has been recorded to have attacked and eaten a black bear: "[[El Jefe (jaguar)|El Jefe]]", the jaguar famous for being the first jaguar seen in the United States in over a century.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/return-great-american-jaguar-180960443/?no-ist|title=The Return of the Great American Jaguar|access-date=August 26, 2020|archive-date=October 14, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171014033938/https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/return-great-american-jaguar-180960443/?no-ist|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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== Relationships with humans == |
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=== In folklore, mythology and culture === |
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[[File:Harry Colebourne and Winnie.jpg|thumb|upright|[[Harry Colebourn]] and [[Winnipeg (bear)|Winnipeg]], the bear from which [[Winnie-the-Pooh]] got his name]] |
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[[File:Domesticated american black bear - head 02.jpg|thumb|right|A tame bear on a leash]] |
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==== Indigenous ==== |
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Black bears feature prominently in the stories of some of North America's [[indigenous peoples of the Americas|indigenous peoples]]. One tale tells of how the black bear was a creation of the [[Great Spirit]], while the grizzly bear was created by the Evil Spirit.<ref>Lippincott, Joshua B. (2009). ''Folklore and Legends of the North American Indian'', Abela Publishing Ltd., {{ISBN|0-9560584-6-9}}</ref>{{page needed|date=May 2020}} In the mythology of the [[Haida people|Haida]], [[Tlingit]] and [[Tsimshian]] people of the northwest coast, mankind first learned to respect bears when a girl married the son of a black bear chieftain.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bastian |first1=Dawn Elaine |last2=Mitchell |first2=Judy K. |year=2004 |title=Handbook of Native American Mythology |publisher=[[ABC-CLIO]] |isbn=1-85109-533-0}}</ref>{{page needed|date=May 2020}} In [[Kwakwakaʼwakw|Kwakwa̱ka̱ʼwakw]] mythology, 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 children.<ref>[[Julia Averkieva|Averkieva, Julia]] and [[Mark Sherman (collector)|Sherman, Mark]]. ''Kwakiutl String Figures'', UBC Press, 1992, {{ISBN|0-7748-0432-7}}</ref> The [[Navajo]] believed that the Big Black Bear was chief among the bears of the four directions surrounding Sun's house and would pray to it in order to be granted its protection during raids.<ref>Clark, LaVerne Harrell (2001). ''They Sang for Horses: The Impact of the Horse on Navajo & Apache Folklore'', University Press of Colorado, {{ISBN|0-87081-496-6}}</ref>{{page needed|date=May 2020}} |
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[[Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore|Sleeping Bear Dunes]] in Michigan is named after a Native American legend, where a female bear and her two cubs swam across [[Lake Michigan]] to escape a fire on the Wisconsin shore. The mother bear reached the shore and waited for her cubs, but they did not make it across. Two islands mark where the cubs drowned, while the dune marks the spot where the mother bear waited.<ref>National Park Service. (2020, September 10). ''The story of Sleeping Bear Dunes''. https://www.nps.gov/slbe/learn/kidsyouth/the-story-of-sleeping-bear.htm {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210622202040/https://www.nps.gov/slbe/learn/kidsyouth/the-story-of-sleeping-bear.htm |date=June 22, 2021 }}</ref> |
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==== Anglo-American ==== |
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[[Morris Michtom]], the creator of the [[teddy bear]], was inspired to make the toy when he came across a cartoon of [[Theodore Roosevelt]] refusing to shoot a black bear cub tied to a tree.<ref name="LoC">{{cite web| url=http://www.americaslibrary.gov/cgi-bin/page.cgi/aa/presidents/roosevelt/bears_1| title=Teddy Bears| publisher=Library Of Congress| access-date=December 10, 2007| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071217035253/http://www.americaslibrary.gov/cgi-bin/page.cgi/aa/presidents/roosevelt/bears_1| archive-date=December 17, 2007| url-status=dead| df=mdy-all}}</ref> The fictional character [[Winnie-the-Pooh]] was named after [[Winnipeg (bear)|Winnipeg]], a female cub that lived at the [[London Zoo]] from 1915 until her death in 1934.<ref name="winnie">[https://web.archive.org/web/20070703045949/http://www.cbc.ca/winnie/ ''A Bear Named Winnie''] Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.ca TV (2004)</ref> A cub, who in the spring of 1950 was caught in the [[Capitan Gap Fire]], was made into the living representative of [[Smokey Bear]], the mascot of the [[United States Forest Service]].<ref name="smoke">{{cite web |url=http://nationalzoo.si.edu/Publications/ZooGoer/2002/6/smokey.cfm |title=Zoogoer Nov/Dec 2002 Sidebar: Smokey Comes to Washington by Alex Hawes |publisher=Nationalzoo.si.edu |access-date=February 21, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100619235709/http://nationalzoo.si.edu/Publications/ZooGoer/2002/6/smokey.cfm |archive-date=June 19, 2010 }}</ref> |
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[[Terrible Ted (bear)|Terrible Ted]] was a de-toothed and de-clawed bear who was forced to perform as a [[pro wrestler]] and whose "career" lasted from the 1950s to the 1970s. The American black bear is the mascot of the [[University of Maine]] and [[Baylor University]], where the university houses two live bears on campus. |
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Paradoxically, black bears have also been portrayed as harmless and cuddly. For example, the [[teddy bear]] owes its existence to a young black bear cub [[Theodore Roosevelt]] refused to shoot. Today, black bears are as much an important game species as they are a point of debate across the continent, especially when it comes to the fact that many are finding life in the suburbs quite comfortable. Given their relatively low reproductive rate, black bear hunting must be carefully controlled and is probably inappropriate in areas where populations are feeble or where habitat is no longer intact. |
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=== Attacks on humans === |
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Their tendencies to follow their stomachs and habitat encroachment by humans have created human-bear conflicts. This is especially true in areas where they may have been uncommon or absent for a long time, as in many parts of the eastern [[United States]]. An excellent example is the state of [[New Jersey]]. In New Jersey, bears were quite uncommon before the modern era because much land was cleared for homes and farming and as a result of poor policies regarding hunting and forestry; by 1970 only about 100 bears remained. However, because of changes in land use, management, and population increases in neighboring [[Pennsylvania]] and [[New York]], that number increased to nearly 1500 by 2003. The result is that the residents of this densely populous state sometimes awaken to find the garbage ripped to shreds or a bird feeder knocked to the ground at best, and at worst a bear invading the home or attacking. Invasion usually happens after a bear has lost its fear and has come to associate people with food, and attacks occur when a human gets in the way of the food. This is a cause for concern among civilians and scientists alike. Similar events have unfolded in other states and in Canada. State, provincial, and federal agencies are working to address the issue with trap-and-release programs, limited hunting, and hazing bears with rubber bullets, other aversion techniques, and dogs. In agricultural areas, electric fences have been very effective. |
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{{See also|Bear attack|Bear danger}} |
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[[File:Bearmailbox.JPG|thumb|left|upright|The incidence of bear attacks in parks and campgrounds declined after the introduction of bear-resistant garbage cans and other reforms.]] |
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Although an adult bear is quite capable of killing a human, American black bears typically avoid confronting humans. Unlike grizzly bears, which became a subject of fearsome legend among the European settlers of North America, black bears were rarely considered overly dangerous, even though they lived in areas where the pioneers had settled. |
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==Legal status== |
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[[Image:Blkbearzoo.jpg|thumb|right|Captive black bears at a zoo in Florida]] |
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Today, a major threat to the American black bear is [[poaching]], or illegal killing, to supply [[Asia]]n markets with bear [[gall bladder|galls]] and paws, considered to have medicinal value in [[China]], [[Japan]], and [[Korea]]. The demand for these parts also affects grizzly and polar bears. The [[Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora]] (CITES), a treaty among more than 120 nations, provides measures to curb illegal trade in wildlife and wildlife products across international boundaries, helping to protect the black bear from poaching. |
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American black bears rarely attack when confronted by humans and usually only make mock charges, emit blowing noises and swat the ground with their forepaws. The number of attacks on humans is higher than those by brown bears in North America, but this is largely because black bears considerably outnumber brown bears. Compared to brown bear attacks, aggressive encounters with black bears rarely lead to serious injury. Most attacks tend to be motivated by hunger rather than territoriality and thus victims have a higher probability of surviving by fighting back rather than submitting. Unlike female brown bears, female American black bears are not as protective of their cubs and rarely attack humans in the vicinity of the cubs.<ref name="Herrero" /> However, occasionally such attacks do occur.<ref name="Lariviere" /> The worst recorded attack occurred in May 1978, in which a bear killed three teenagers fishing in [[Algonquin Park]] in Ontario.<ref name="kruuk" /> Another exceptional attack occurred in August 1997 in [[Liard River Hot Springs Provincial Park]] in [[British Columbia]], when an emaciated bear attacked a mother and child, killing the mother and a man who intervened. The bear was shot while mauling a fourth victim.<ref name="OutdoorLifeApril11999">{{cite magazine |url=http://www.outdoorlife.com/articles/hunting/2007/09/black-bears-simple-fools-or-cunning-killers |title=Black Bears—Simple Fools or Cunning Killers |last=Shockey |first=Jim |date=1 April 1999 |magazine=Outdoor Life |access-date=20 October 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110430151609/http://www.outdoorlife.com/articles/hunting/2007/09/black-bears-simple-fools-or-cunning-killers |archive-date=April 30, 2011 }}</ref><ref name="17Aug1997LAT">{{cite news |title=Black Bear Kills Texas Woman, Canadian Man |url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-aug-17-mn-23311-story.html |access-date=September 10, 2016 |newspaper=[[Los Angeles Times]] |date=17 August 1997 |archive-date=November 4, 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121104115128/http://articles.latimes.com/1997/aug/17/news/mn-23311 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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Black bears are abundant in much of the West, in portions of the Midwest, and in most of Canada. For example, [[Ontario]] is home to about 100,000 bears, with at least as many in neighboring [[Quebec]], while [[Minnesota]] has a very healthy population of 30,000 bears. In contrast, [[Iowa]], where land is heavily used for agriculture, has virtually none. Most eastern populations in the [[United States]] are seeing a marked, steady increase in population: bears are moving back into places where they may not have been present for over a century as suitable habitat has come back. In eastern states with heavily wooded areas, populations are growing very quickly; in [[North Carolina]] there were 11,000 bears at last count in 2004, [[Pennsylvania]] estimates 15,000 bears currently, New Jersey (one of the urbanized states) 1,500, and even tiny [[Rhode Island]] has seen evidence of bears moving into areas where they haven't been in decades. The Florida black bear has also seen increases in numbers in recent decades, in 2004 the Florida Fish & Wildlfie Commission estimated over 2,400 bears were in the state. Unfortunately, not all is well. Continued development may reduce connectivity between the already separated populations in Florida. Numbers of bears in the Louisiana subspecies continue to be at critically low levels, although several reintroduction projects have added bears to new areas of the state. In Mexico, the indigenous black bear population is listed as endangered and is mostly limited to increasingly fragmented habitat in the mountainous northern parts of the country. Individuals from this area seem to have naturally recolonized parts of southern Texas. |
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The majority of attacks happened in national parks, usually near campgrounds, where the bears had [[habituation|habituated]] to close human proximity and food.<ref name="Herrero" /> Of 1,028 incidents of aggressive acts toward humans, recorded from 1964 to 1976 in the [[Great Smoky Mountains National Park]], 107 resulted in injury and occurred mainly in tourist hot spots where people regularly fed the bears handouts.<ref name="kruuk">Kruuk, Hans (2002). ''Hunter and Hunted: Relationships Between Carnivores and People'', Cambridge University Press, {{ISBN|0-521-89109-4}}</ref>{{page needed|date=May 2020}} In almost every case where open garbage dumps that attracted bears were closed and handouts ceased, the number of aggressive encounters dropped.<ref name="Lariviere" /> However, in the Liard River Hot Springs case, the bear was apparently dependent on a local garbage dump that had closed and so was starving to death.<ref name="OutdoorLifeApril11999" /> Attempts to relocate bears are typically unsuccessful, as the bears seem able to return to their home range, even without familiar landscape cues.<ref name="Lariviere" /> |
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In [[1992]], the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service listed the Louisiana black bear subspecies as "threatened" under the [[Endangered Species Act]], meaning it could be in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range in the near future. The American black bear is also protected by legislation in the affected states (Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas), owing to its close resemblance to this subspecies. The Florida black bear was denied protection under the Endangered Species Act in 1998 and 2004 due to its adequate protection and management by the State of Florida. |
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=== Livestock and crop predation === |
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== Encountering a black bear in the wild == |
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A limitation of food sources in early spring and wild berry and nut crop failures in summer may contribute to bears regularly feeding from human-based food sources. These bears often eat crops, especially during autumn hyperphagia when natural foods are scarce. Favored crops include apples, oats and corn.<ref name="Hunter" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} American black bears can do extensive damage in areas of the northwestern United States by stripping the bark from trees and feeding on the [[Vascular cambium|cambium]]. Livestock depredations occur mostly in spring. |
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{{howto}} |
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If one encounters a black bear in the wild, it must be given plenty of room; try to avoid any contact by slowly backing away and leaving the area. If a black bear charges at you, it is most likely a "bluff charge" where the bear "stops short". Bluff charges are designed to frighten you off or to assert dominance; stand your ground and do your best to appear imposing. Huddle together if in a group, raise your hands or backpack in the air to appear larger, and make plenty of noise. Unless you have come between a sow and her cubs (or you are simply unlucky), you will probably succeed in scaring it away. Avoid eye contact with the bear, but after it has engaged you, seek eye contact to discourage the animal. A bear that rears up on its hind legs is not signalling aggression; a black bear's range of view is a meter (three feet) off the ground, whereas a human's is between 1.5 and 2 m (five to six feet). It is trying to get a look at what you are and see whether you are a threat. If you hear the bear making a popping sound with its jaw, it is warning you that it is uncomfortable. That is a sign to slowly back away (if possible) and leave the area. Headlong flight must be avoided at all cost because the bear will pursue as prey and bears can achieve sustained speeds of up to 48 km/h (30 miles per hour). |
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Although they occasionally hunt adult cattle and horses, they seem to prefer smaller prey such as sheep, goats, pigs and young calves. They usually kill by biting the neck and shoulders, though they may break the neck or back of the prey with blows with the paws. Evidence of a bear attack includes claw marks and is often found on the neck, back and shoulders of larger animals. [[Surplus killing]] of sheep and goats is common. American black bears have been known to frighten livestock herds over cliffs, causing injuries and death to many animals; whether this is intentional is not known.<ref name="Predation" /> Occasionally bears kill pets, especially domestic dogs, which are most prone to harass a bear.<ref>[http://www.wjhg.com/home/headlines/Black-Bear-Attacks-Dog-163784946.html "Black Bear Attacks Dog"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120730030121/http://www.wjhg.com/home/headlines/Black-Bear-Attacks-Dog-163784946.html |date=July 30, 2012 }}. WJHG. Retrieved December 21, 2012.</ref> It is not recommended to use unleashed dogs to deter bear attacks. Although large, aggressive dogs can sometimes cause a bear to run, if pressed, angry bears often turn the tables and end up chasing the dogs in return. A bear in pursuit of a pet dog can threaten both canid and human lives.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20131120140301/http://www.nps.gov/dena/frequently-asked-questions-regarding-bears.htm "Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Bears"]. Denali National Park & Preserve, National Park Service. Retrieved December 21, 2012.</ref><ref>[http://www.uaex.edu/Other_Areas/publications/PDF/FSA-9087.pdf "Encountering Black Bears in Arkansas"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121229035255/http://www.uaex.edu/Other_Areas/publications/PDF/FSA-9087.pdf |date=December 29, 2012 }}. University of Arkansas.</ref> |
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If the bear charges and doesn't "stop short" but makes actual physical contact with you, you must fight back. Use whatever you have close at hand to try to injure it so that it no longer finds you worth the fight. In particular, aim for the nose, as it is a sensitive part of the bear, or the face in general. The bear's thick skull makes blows to the top and side of the head nearly useless. It is not uncommon for black bears to disengage after being injured; [[pepper spray]] in the eyes has been known to work, but one needs to be fairly close to the bear to hit the eyes with the spray. If fighting the bear does not seem like a wise choice, consider other options. If you play dead, grizzlies may leave you alone, but black bears will begin to eat you or drag you away. You cannot outrun a black bear. Climbing a tree is futile, since black bears excel at climbing trees. Retreat is usually the best option, but your retreat must be slow and methodical, backing away from the bear. |
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=== Hunting === |
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► The rules applicable to brown bear encounters |
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{{main|Bear hunting}} |
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are not the same as those applicable to black |
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bear encounters. Brown bears are more likely to |
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make repeated bluff charges and conduct knock- |
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down attacks to defend cubs or a kill. They |
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may also smack the ground, bark and clack their |
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teeth together as part of a defensive posturing |
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to keep humans and other animals at bay. Brown |
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Sows are far more likely to defend their cubs |
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with force, way beyond a slashing attack to the |
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eyes and face. People have weathered brown bear |
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attacks (including [[Grizzly Bear|Grizzly]] attacks) by dropping |
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into a "fetal" position with neck and face |
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between the knees with your hands over the back |
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of your neck, or by lying flat on the ground on |
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your stomach with hands link behind your neck. |
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The hunting of American black bears has taken place since the initial [[settlement of the Americas]]. The first piece of evidence dates to a [[Clovis culture|Clovis site]] at [[Lehner Mammoth-Kill Site|Lehner Ranch]], Arizona. Partially [[Calcination|calcined]] teeth of a 3-month old black bear cub came from a roasting pit, suggesting the bear cub was eaten. The surrounding charcoal was dated to the [[Greenlandian|Early Holocene]] (10,940 BP). Black bear remains also appear to be associated with early peoples in [[Tlapacoya (archeological site)|Tlapacoya]], Mexico. Native Americans increasingly utilized black bears during the [[Holocene]], particularly in the late Holocene [[upper Midwest]], e.g., [[Hopewell tradition|Hopewell]] and [[Mississippian culture|Mississippian]] cultures.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Pérez-Crespo |first1=J. |last2=Arroyo-Cabrales |first2=J. E. |last3=Johnson |first3=R. W. |last4=Graham |first4=V. A. |url=http://worldcat.org/oclc/1227719621 |title=North American ursid (mammalia: ursidae) defaunation from Pleistocene to recent |date=2016-01-01 |oclc=1227719621 |access-date=March 2, 2022 |archive-date=March 3, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240303091153/https://search.worldcat.org/title/1227719621 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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Black bears are much less likely to engage in the kind of defensive behavior associated with brown bears. In most cases of rare black bear attack, the bears exhibited classic predatory behavior. They will not bark, clack teeth, or make noise. Rather, they will simply approach at a measured pace and attack the human as prey. The calm appearance of the black bear may have lured some victims into a false sense of security. A black bear calmly and steadily approaching that is not bothered by yelling or thrown objects should be considered extremely dangerous. Because black bear are much less likely to be conducting a purely defensive attack, "playing dead" is never an appropriate response with them. |
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Some Native American tribes,{{which|date=April 2014}} in admiration for the American black bear's intelligence, would decorate the heads of bears they killed with trinkets and place them on blankets. Tobacco smoke would be wafted into the disembodied head's nostrils by the hunter that dealt the killing blow, who would compliment the animal for its courage.<ref name="wood" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} The [[Gwichʼin|Kutchin]] typically hunted American black bears during their hibernation cycle. Unlike the hunting of hibernating grizzly bears, which was fraught with danger, hibernating American black bears took longer to awaken and hunting them was thus safer and easier.<ref name="kutch" /> During the European colonisation of eastern North America, thousands of bears were hunted for their meat, fat and fur.<ref name="world" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} [[Theodore Roosevelt]] wrote extensively on black bear hunting in his ''Hunting the Grisly and other sketches'', in which he stated, |
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In areas where carrying a firearm is allowed, that is the time to use one. A rifle in the [[.30-30]] class or better firing expanding bullets of 150 grain or greater is considered the minimum for black bear, though 180 grain bullets from a rifle in the [[.308]] ([[7.62x51mm]]) class may be a safer bet. A [[.357 magnum]], [[10mm Auto]] or [[.44 magnum]] handgun firing heavy hardcast lead slugs is potentially effective but requires more skill to deploy effectively than a rifle. A shotgun loaded with hardcast [[Brenneke slugs]] is also a popular option. |
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{{blockquote|text=in [a black bear] chase there is much excitement, and occasionally a slight spice of danger, just enough to render it attractive; so it has always been eagerly followed.<ref name="TEDDY">{{cite book |author=Roosevelt, Theodore |title=Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rXzr9PaITD4C&pg=PT33 |year= 2007 |publisher= ReadHowYouWant.com |isbn=978-1-4250-7306-0 |pages=33–}}</ref>}} |
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In summary, the game plan in any encounter is, quite simply: |
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*retreat noisily and slowly, if at all possible, without appearing weak, |
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*fight if the bear knocks you down or otherwise makes contact with you. |
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He wrote that black bears were difficult to hunt by stalking, due to their habitat preferences, though they were easy to trap. Roosevelt described how, in the southern states, [[Planter class|planters]] regularly hunted bears on horseback with hounds. [[Wade Hampton III|General Wade Hampton]] was known to have been present at 500 successful bear hunts, two-thirds of which he killed personally. He killed 30 or 40 bears with only a knife, which he would use to stab the bears between the shoulder blades while they were distracted by his hounds.<ref name="TEDDY" /> Unless well trained, horses were often useless in bear hunts, as they often bolted when the bears stood their ground.<ref name="wood" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} In 1799, 192,000 American black bear skins were exported from Quebec. In 1822, 3,000 skins were exported from the [[Hudson's Bay Company]].<ref>[[Charles Frederick Partington|Partington, Charles Frederick]] (1835). ''The British Cyclopædia of Natural History: Combining a Scientific Classification of Animals, Plants, and Minerals'', Vol. 1, Orr & Smith.</ref> In 1992, untanned, fleshed and salted hides were sold for an average of $165.{{sfn|Brown|1993|loc=Ch. "Use of Bears and Bear Parts"}} |
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Predation by grizzlies or black bears is an exceedingly rare event and mostly the result of extremely hungry, younger individuals forced |
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near human habitation as a result of territorial pressure. |
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In Canada, black bears are considered as both a big game and furbearer species in all provinces, save for New Brunswick and the Northwest Territories, where they are only classed as a big game species. There are around 80,900 licensed bear hunters in Canada. Canadian black bear hunts take place in the fall and spring, and both male and female bears can be legally taken, though some provinces prohibit the hunting of females with cubs, or yearlings.<ref name="plan" /> |
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Attacks by bears are in most cases defensive measures and occur when the animal is startled by human presence or, in the case of brown bears, when a |
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human comes too close to offspring or wanders in between the sow and her cubs. Some people have taken to hand-feeding half-tame bears |
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and have been bitten or swatted. The explanation for this kind of behavior is that the bear is attracted close to the human by the food, |
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but once the food is gone, the animal will feel highly insecure so near a human, and instead of taking flight by turning its vulnerable back, it will first move to disable the human. Usually the bear will swat the human just hard enough to cause the human to lose balance and then turn around and run away. Behavior researchers studying bear behavior assume that bears view human beings as bears, meaning they expect humans to behave like bears and signal accordingly. When associating with one another, bears use light swats and measured bites that do not break the skin or merely scratch to communicate displeasure with another individual's behavior. Bears learn as cubs how to control the strength of their bite in social play. People in wildlife parks who have taunted bears by miming to offer them food when in fact they had none to offer, or people who tried to pet the bears, were given light, yet painful signal bites and nips as the animals communicated their displeasure. In most cases when bears have bitten or swatted humans, the injuries they caused were nowhere near the animals' potential of inflicting injuries, showing that the bears as social animals usually practice great restraint and avoid unnecessary deaths. |
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Currently, 28 of the [[U.S. state]]s have American black bear hunting seasons. Nineteen states require a bear hunting license, with some also requiring a big game license. In eight states, only a big game license is required. Overall, over 481,500 American black bear hunting licenses are sold per year. The hunting methods and seasons vary greatly according to state, with some bear hunting seasons including fall only, spring and fall, or year-round. New Jersey, in November 2010, approved a six-day bear-hunting season in early December 2010 to slow the growth of the population. Bear hunting had been banned in New Jersey for five years before that time.<ref>{{cite web |author=Sciarrino, Robert |url=http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/07/nj_environmental_comissioner_g.html |title=Black bear hunt gets final approval from Department of Environmental Protection head |work=The Star-Ledger |date=July 21, 2010 |access-date=February 19, 2011 |archive-date=August 26, 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100826014842/http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/07/nj_environmental_comissioner_g.html |url-status=live }}</ref> A [[Fairleigh Dickinson University]] PublicMind poll found that 53% of New Jersey voters approved of the new season if scientists concluded that bears were leaving their usual habitats and destroying private property.<ref name="fdu Public Approves">{{cite web |url=http://publicmind.fdu.edu/1011bears/ |title=Bear Necessity? Public Approves of Bear Hunt |publisher=Publicmind.fdu.edu |access-date=February 19, 2011 |archive-date=June 29, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629195551/http://publicmind.fdu.edu/1011bears/ |url-status=live }}</ref> Men, older voters and those living in rural areas were more likely to approve of a bear hunting season in New Jersey than women, younger voters and those living in more developed parts of the state.<ref name="fdu Public Approves" /> In the western states, where there are large American black bear populations, there are spring and year-round seasons. Approximately 18,000 American black bears were killed annually in the U.S. between 1988 and 1992. Within this period, annual kills ranged from six bears in South Carolina to 2,232 in Maine.<ref name="plan" /> According to Dwight Schuh in his ''Bowhunter's Encyclopedia'', American black bears are the third most popular quarry of [[Bowhunting|bowhunters]], behind deer and elk.<ref>Schuh, Dwight R. (1992). ''Bowhunter's Encyclopedia'', Stackpole Books, {{ISBN|0-8117-2412-3}}</ref> |
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Great care must be taken to properly identify a bear as either a black bear or a grizzly, as it is not enough to rely on the color of their fur. There are many grizzlies with very dark fur and black bears with cinnamon or completely brown fur. The main differences to look for are the ears (black bears have very large ears in comparison with grizzlies) for the grizzly, a hump on its back; the claws (black bears have short claws for climbing, grizzlies have longer claws for holding onto prey and digging); and, above all, the face. A black bear has an elongated snout, whereas a grizzly has a flat, dishlike facial appearance. |
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== |
==== Meat ==== |
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{{nutritionalvalue | name=American black bear meat | kJ=649 | water=71.20 g | protein=20.10 g | fat=8.30 g | ash=0.40 g | carbs=0.00 g | | iron_mg=7.20 | phosphorus_mg=162 | thiamin_mg=0.160 | riboflavin_mg=0.680 | niacin_mg=3.200 | vitA_ug=78 | right=1 | source_usda=1 }} |
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When camping, it is wise to take steps to avoid negative encounters with bears: |
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Bear meat had historically been held in high esteem among North America's indigenous people and colonists.<ref name="wood" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} American black bears were the only bear species the Kutchin hunted for their meat, though this constituted only a small part of their diet.<ref name="kutch">Nelson, Richard K. (1986). ''Hunters of the Northern Forest: Designs for Survival Among the Alaskan Kutchin'', University of Chicago Press, {{ISBN|0-226-57181-5}}</ref> According to the second volume of ''[[Frank Forester]]'s Field Sports of the United States, and British Provinces, of North America'': |
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{{blockquote|text=The flesh of the [black] bear is savoury, but rather luscious, and tastes not unlike [[pork]]. It was once so common an article of food in New-York as to have given the name of ''Bear Market'' to one of the principal markets of the city.|sign=''Frank Forester's Field Sports of the United States, and British Provinces, of North America'', p. 186}} |
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*Do not bring food into the tent. It invites more than just ants into your bedroom. |
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*Clean all pots, pans, and grills thoroughly with unscented soap and water, making sure no trace of food is left for animals to smell. |
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*Do not leave food lying around. Clean up everything right away after a meal and contain uneaten food in plastic bags or containers. |
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*Do not assume food and supplies are safe in a car. If you must keep supplies in a car, lock them in the trunk. It is not unknown for bears to try to break into cars through the windshield or windows! |
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*Do not go to bed in the same clothes you were cooking in. Keep dirty clothes and packs outside the tent. |
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*If possible, use a [[bear-resistant food storage container|bear canister]] to keep foods safe or hoist your food in a tree ten feet off the ground and four feet out in a bear bag. |
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*Be careful about how you dispose of garbage. Try to dispose of garbage at a designated facility away from the campsite. |
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*Try not to bring any sweet-smelling items with you, like scented soap or cough syrup. (Bears can't read the label, and they assume it is food.) If you must bring it at all, hoist it up in a tree in a bear bag or bear canister. Try not to wear anything with a scent, including deodorant and insect repellant, after 4 p.m. |
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*If the bear gets to the food anyway, do not attempt to get it back. It is not worth the fight. |
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* Do not feed a bear or attempt to do so. (What would you do if the bear found out you don't have any more?) |
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*If you have brought a pet with you, make sure it is secured and on leash at all times. |
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Theodore Roosevelt likened the flesh of young American black bears to that of pork, and not as coarse or flavorless as the meat of grizzly bears.<ref>Roosevelt, Theodore. ''Hunting Trips of a Ranchman: Hunting Trips on the Prairie and in the Mountains'', Adamant Media Corporation, {{ISBN|1-4212-6647-4}}</ref>{{page needed|date=May 2020}} The most favored cuts of are concentrated in the legs and loins. Meat from the neck, front legs and shoulders is usually ground into minced meat or used for stews and casseroles. Keeping the fat on tends to give the meat a strong flavor. As American black bears can have [[trichinellosis]], cooking temperatures need to be high in order to kill the parasites.<ref name="hunt">Smith, Richard P. (2007). ''Black Bear Hunting'', Stackpole Books, {{ISBN|0-8117-0269-3}}</ref>{{page needed|date=May 2020}} |
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== Miscellaneous == |
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Bear fat was once valued as a cosmetic article that promoted hair growth and gloss. The fat most favored for this purpose was the hard white fat found in the body's interior. As only a small portion of this fat could be harvested for this purpose, the oil was often mixed with large quantities of hog lard.<ref name="wood" />{{page needed|date=May 2020}} However, [[animal rights]] activism over the last decade{{When|date=July 2021|reason=It's not clear when this was written and therefore which decade this is meant to refer to.}} has slowed the harvest of these animals; therefore the lard from bears has not been used in recent years for the purpose of cosmetics.{{citation needed|date=March 2016}} |
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* There has been considerable evidence of black bear activity that seems to suggest that the population may be extending its range back into historical territories in Ohio, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, and other areas where bear were eradicated and have not been present for a considerable amount of time. It is suspected that adolescent males seeking new territory are wandering far and wide, literally hundreds of miles, by following natural and manmade corridors (rivers and highways) back into their ancestral lands. It has generally been recent policy that if the animal does not become a nuisance, is not a danger, or is not in any imminent peril, that it be allowed to exist unmolested and without hindrance. Most cases remain out of the general public's knowledge until there has been a significant human-bear encounter. [http://www.kypost.com/2004/07/14/bear071404.html] |
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== See also == |
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* The sports teams of the [[University of Maine]] are known as ''Black Bears''; it is also the mascot for [[Baylor University]] who maintains two bears on campus. |
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* [[List of fatal bear attacks in North America]] |
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* ''Ursus americanus kermodei'', commonly known as the [[spirit bear]], is a rare white (not [[albino]]) subspecies found in [[Pacific temperate rain forests|temperate rain forests]] on the Pacific coast of North America. Native tradition credits these animals with supernatural powers. |
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* [[Smokey Bear]], mascot of the [[United States Forest Service]] is based on an actual black bear cub found in [[New Mexico]] after a forest fire. |
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* In [[August 2004]], several news media outlets[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3580626.stm] reported that a wild black bear was found passed out after drinking about 36 cans of [[beer]] in [[Baker Lake, Washington]], USA. The bear opened a camper's cooler and used its [[claw]]s and [[tooth|teeth]] to puncture the [[aluminum beverage can|cans]]. It was found the bear selectively opened cans of [[Rainier Beer]] and left all [[Anheuser-Busch|Busch]] beer unconsumed. |
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* The largest Black Bear on record was in North Carolina in 1999 and was weighed at 400 kg (880 pounds). It was reported to have been eating hogs from an industrial hog farm. |
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*[[Winnie the Pooh]] was inspired by an [[Winnipeg bear|orphaned black bear cub]] from the Canadian city of [[White River, Ontario]]. During [[World War I]], the bear was adopted by (then) [[Lieutenant]] Harry Colebourn, a member of the Royal Winnipeg Rifles of the Canadian [[Infantry]]. It later became the mascot for the company. |
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*[[The Black Bear]], a two part 2/4 March, is a famous traditional tune played by [[Pipe Band]]s around the world; it is the traditional march for Scottish soldiers returning to barracks at the end of the day. It is traditionally played at the end of each performance of the [[Edinburgh Tattoo]] |
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== |
== References == |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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*[[List of fatal bear attacks in North America by decade]] |
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== Further reading == |
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==References== |
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* {{Cite book |last=Brown |first= Gary |title=The Great Bear Almanac |url=https://archive.org/details/greatbearalmanac0000brow|url-access=registration |year=1993|publisher=Lyons & Burford|isbn=978-1-55821-210-7}} |
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* {{IUCN2006|assessors=Bear Specialist Group|year=1996|id=41687|title=Ursus americanus|downloaded=12 May 2006}} |
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* {{Cite book |last = Craighead|first =Lance |year =2000 |title =Bears of the World |url = https://archive.org/details/bearsofworld0000crai|url-access = registration|pages=[https://archive.org/details/bearsofworld0000crai/page/63 63]–80|publisher=Voyageur Press |isbn=978-0-89658-503-4 }} |
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* {{ITIS|ID=180544|taxon=Ursus americanus|year=2006|date=18 March}} |
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* {{Cite book |last =Powell |first =Roger A. |year =1997 |title =Ecology and Behaviour of North American Black Bears: Home Ranges, Habitat, and Social Organization |url =https://books.google.com/books?id=A7DhOqvbtMwC&pg=PA2 |publisher=Chapman & Hall |isbn=978-0-412-57990-5}} |
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* Bears, consulting editor Ian Stirling, Fog City Press, 1993. |
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==External links== |
== External links == |
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{{ |
{{Commons category|Ursus americanus}} |
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* {{wikispecies-inline|Ursus americanus|Ursus americanus - (American black bear)}} |
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* [http://www.mnh.si.edu/mna/image_info.cfm?species_id=415 Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History species account-Black Bear] |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20110723235737/http://wildlife1.wildlifeinformation.org/000ADOBES/Bears/Bears_IUCN_ActionPlan/bearsAP_chapter8.pdf Wildlifeinformation.org: American Black Bear Conservation Action Plan] |
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* [http://www.bbcc.org/ Black Bear Conservation Committee] |
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* [http://www.sinapu.org/Pages/Bears/Bears.htm Black Bears in the Southern Rockies] |
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* [http://species.fws.gov/species_accounts/bio_bear.html US Fish and Wildlife Service] |
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* [http://www.bear.org North American Bear Center] |
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* [http://www.wlbt.com/Global/story.asp?S=4141199&nav=2CSf Black Bears Returning to Mississippi] |
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* [http://www.thomasoneil.com/species2.php?n=503 Black Bear images] from Alaska. |
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* [http://www.wildernessutah.com/brain/blackbears.html Wilderness Utah] - handling a black bear encounter |
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* [http://www.bearplanet.org/blackbear.shtml Black Bears by BearPlanet] |
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{{Carnivora|Ca.}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Bear, American Black}} |
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{{North American Game}} |
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[[Category:Bears]] |
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{{Authority control}} |
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[[Category:Fauna of Canada]] |
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[[Category:Fauna of Mexico]] |
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[[Category:Fauna of the United States]] |
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[[Category:Fauna of Southeastern United States]] |
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[[Category:Hunting in the United States]] |
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[[Category:American black bears]] |
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[[Category:Mammals described in 1780]] |
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Latest revision as of 01:36, 1 January 2025
American black bear Late | |
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An American black bear in Manitoba's Riding Mountain National Park | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Mammalia |
Order: | Carnivora |
Family: | Ursidae |
Genus: | Ursus |
Species: | U. americanus
|
Binomial name | |
Ursus americanus Pallas, 1780
| |
Subspecies | |
16, see text | |
American black bear range[1]
Present-day range
| |
Synonyms | |
Euarctos americanus |
The American black bear (Ursus americanus), or simply black bear, is a species of medium-sized bear endemic to North America. It is the continent's smallest and most widely distributed bear species. It is an omnivore, with a diet varying greatly depending on season and location. It typically lives in largely forested areas but will leave forests in search of food and is sometimes attracted to human communities due to the immediate availability of food.
The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) lists the American black bear as a least-concern species because of its widespread distribution and a large population, estimated to be twice that of all other bear species combined. Along with the brown bear (Ursus arctos), it is one of only two modern bear species not considered by the IUCN to be globally threatened with extinction.
Taxonomy and evolution
[edit]The American black bear is not closely related to the brown bear or polar bear, though all three species are found in North America; genetic studies reveal that they split from a common ancestor 5.05 million years ago (mya).[3] American and Asian black bears are considered sister taxa and are more closely related to each other than to the other modern species of bears.[3][4] According to recent studies, the sun bear is also a relatively recent split from this lineage.[5][page needed]
A small primitive bear called Ursus abstrusus is the oldest known North American fossil member of the genus Ursus, dated to 4.95 mya.[6] This suggests that U. abstrusus may be the direct ancestor of the American black bear, which evolved in North America.[3][7] Although Wolverton and Lyman still consider U. vitabilis an "apparent precursor to modern black bears",[8] it has also been placed within U. americanus.[7]
The ancestors of American black bears and Asian black bears diverged from sun bears 4.58 mya. The American black bear then split from the Asian black bear 4.08 mya.[3][9] The earliest American black bear fossils, which were located in Port Kennedy, Pennsylvania, greatly resemble the Asian species,[10] though later specimens grew to sizes comparable to grizzly bears.[11] From the Holocene to the present, American black bears seem to have shrunk in size,[3] but this has been disputed because of problems with dating these fossil specimens.[8]
The American black bear lived during the same period as the giant and lesser short-faced bears (Arctodus simus and A. pristinus, respectively) and the Florida spectacled bear (Tremarctos floridanus). These tremarctine bears evolved from bears that had emigrated from Asia to the Americas 7–8 mya.[12] The giant and lesser short-faced bears are thought to have been heavily carnivorous and the Florida spectacled bear more herbivorous,[13] while the American black bears remained arboreal omnivores, like their Asian ancestors.
The American black bear's generalist behavior allowed it to exploit a wider variety of foods and has been given as a reason why, of these three genera, it alone survived climate and vegetative changes through the last Ice Age while the other, more specialized North American predators became extinct. However, both Arctodus and Tremarctos had survived several other, previous ice ages. After these prehistoric ursids became extinct during the last glacial period 10,000 years ago, American black bears were probably the only bear present in much of North America until the migration of brown bears to the rest of the continent.[11]
Hybrids
[edit]American black bears are reproductively compatible with several other bear species and occasionally produce hybrid offspring. According to Jack Hanna's Monkeys on the Interstate, a bear captured in Sanford, Florida, was thought to have been the offspring of an escaped female Asian black bear and a male American black bear.[14] In 1859, an American black bear and a Eurasian brown bear were bred together in the London Zoological Gardens, but the three cubs that were born died before they reached maturity.[citation needed] In The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication, Charles Darwin noted:
In the nine-year Report it is stated that the bears had been seen in the zoological gardens to couple freely, but previously to 1848 most had rarely conceived. In the reports published since this date three species have produced young (hybrids in one case), ...[15]
A bear shot in autumn 1986 in Michigan was thought by some to be an American black bear/grizzly bear hybrid, because of its unusually large size and its proportionately larger brain case and skull. DNA testing was unable to determine whether it was a large American black bear or a grizzly bear.[16][page needed]
Subspecies
[edit]Sixteen subspecies are traditionally recognized; however, a recent genetic study does not support designating some of these, such as the Florida black bear, as distinct subspecies.[17] Listed alphabetically according to subspecific name:[18][19][page needed]
Image | Scientific name | Common name | Distribution | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ursus americanus altifrontalis | Olympic black bear | the Pacific Northwest coast from central British Columbia through northern California and inland to the tip of northern Idaho and British Columbia | ||
Ursus americanus amblyceps | New Mexico black bear | Colorado, New Mexico, western Texas and the eastern half of Arizona into northern Mexico and southeastern Utah | ||
Ursus americanus americanus | Eastern black bear | Eastern Montana to the Atlantic coast, from Alaska south and east through Canada to Maine and south to Texas. Thought to be increasing in some regions. | Common to Eastern Canada and the eastern U.S. wherever suitable habitat is found. A large-bodied subspecies; almost all specimens have black fur. May very rarely sport a white blaze on the chest. | |
Ursus americanus californiensis | California black bear | the mountain ranges of southern California, north through the Central Valley to southern Oregon | Able to live in varied climates: found in temperate rain forest in the north and chaparral shrubland in the south. Small numbers may feature cinnamon-colored fur. | |
Ursus americanus carlottae | Haida Gwaii black bear or Queen Charlotte Islands black bear | Haida Gwaii (formerly the Queen Charlotte Islands) and Alaska | Generally larger than its mainland counterparts with a large skull and molars and found only in a black color phase.[20] | |
Ursus americanus cinnamomum | Cinnamon bear | Colorado, Idaho, western Montana and Wyoming, eastern Washington and Oregon and northeastern Utah | Has brown or reddish-brown fur, reminiscent of cinnamon. | |
Ursus americanus emmonsii | Glacier bear or blue bear | Southeastern Alaska | Distinguished by its fur being silvery-gray with a blue luster found mostly on its flanks.[21] | |
Ursus americanus eremicus | East Mexican black bear | Northeastern Mexico and U.S. borderlands with Texas. | Most often found in Big Bend National Park and the desert border with Mexico. Numbers unknown in Mexico but are presumed to be very low. Critically Endangered. | |
Ursus americanus floridanus | Florida black bear | Florida, southern Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi (except the southern region) | Has a light brown nose and shiny black fur. A white blaze on the chest is common in this subspecies. An average male weighs 136 kg (300 lb). | |
Ursus americanus hamiltoni | Newfoundland black bear | Newfoundland | Generally bigger than its mainland relatives, ranging in size from 90 to 270 kg (200 to 600 lb) and averaging 135 kg (298 lb). It has one of the longest hibernation periods of any bear in North America.[22] Known to favor foraging in fields of Vaccinium species. | |
Ursus americanus kermodei | Kermode bear or island white bear, spirit bear | the central coast of British Columbia | Approximately 10% of the population of this subspecies have white or cream-colored coats due to a recessive gene. The other 90% appear as normal-colored black bears.[23] | |
Ursus americanus luteolus | Louisiana black bear | Eastern Texas, Louisiana and southern Mississippi. The validity of this subspecies has been repeatedly disputed.[1] | Has relatively long, narrow and flat skull and proportionately large molars.[24] Prefers hardwood bottom forests and bayous as habitat. | |
Ursus americanus machetes | West Mexican black bear | north-central Mexico | ||
Ursus americanus perniger | Kenai black bear | the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska | Considered an "Apparently Secure Subspecies" by NatureServe.[25] | |
Ursus americanus pugnax | Dall Island black bear | Dall Island in the Alexander Archipelago, Alaska | ||
Ursus americanus vancouveri | Vancouver Island black bear | Vancouver Island, British Columbia | Darker and slightly bigger than the other five subspecies found in British Columbia; it is most common in the north, but appears occasionally in the southern parts of Vancouver Island. |
Distribution and population
[edit]Historically, American black bears occupied the majority of North America's forested regions. Today, they are primarily limited to sparsely settled, forested areas.[26] American black bears currently inhabit much of their original Canadian range, though they seldom occur in the southern farmlands of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba; they have been extirpated on Prince Edward Island since 1937.[27] Surveys taken in the mid-1990s found the Canadian black bear population to be between 396,000 and 476,000 in seven provinces;[28] this estimate excludes populations in New Brunswick, the Northwest Territories, Nova Scotia and Saskatchewan. All provinces indicated stable populations of American black bears over the last decade.[26]
The current range in the United States is constant throughout most of the Northeast and within the Appalachian Mountains almost continuously from Maine to northern Georgia, the northern Midwest, the Rocky Mountain region, the West Coast and Alaska.[27] However, it becomes increasingly fragmented or absent in other regions. Despite this, American black bears in those areas seem to have expanded their range in recent decades, such as with recent sightings in Ohio,[27] Illinois,[29] southern Indiana,[30] and western Nebraska.[31] Sightings of itinerant black bears in the Driftless Area of southeastern Minnesota, northeastern Iowa, and southwestern Wisconsin are common.[32][33] In 2019, biologists with the Iowa Department of Natural Resources confirmed documentation of an American black bear living year-round in woodlands near the town of Decorah in northeastern Iowa, believed to be the first instance of a resident black bear in Iowa since the 1880s.[34][35]
Surveys taken from 35 states in the early 1990s indicated that American black bear populations were either stable or increasing, except in Idaho and New Mexico. The population in the United States was estimated to range between 339,000 and 465,000 in 2011,[36] though this estimate does not include data from Alaska, Idaho, South Dakota, Texas or Wyoming, whose populations were not recorded in the survey.[26] In California there were an estimated 25,000-35,000 black bears in 2017, making it the largest population of the species in any of the 48 contiguous United States.[37][38] In 2020 there were about 1,500 bears in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, where the population density is about two per square mile.[39] In western North Carolina, the black bear population has dramatically increased in recent decades, from about 3,000 in the early 2000s to over 8,000 in the 2020s.[40]
As of 1993, known black bear populations in Mexico existed in four areas, though knowledge on the distribution of populations outside those areas has not been updated since 1959. Mexico is the only country where the species is classified as "endangered".[26]
Habitat
[edit]Throughout their range, habitats preferred by American black bears have a few shared characteristics. They are often found in areas with relatively inaccessible terrain, thick understory vegetation and large quantities of edible material (especially masts). The adaptation to woodlands and thick vegetation in this species may have originally been because the bear evolved alongside larger, more aggressive bear species, such as the extinct giant short-faced bear and the grizzly bear, that monopolized more open habitats[41] and the historic presence of larger predators, such as Smilodon and the American lion, that could have preyed on black bears. Although found in the largest numbers in wild, undisturbed areas and rural regions, American black bears can adapt to surviving in some numbers in peri-urban regions, as long as they contain easily accessible foods and some vegetative coverage.[5][page needed]
In most of the contiguous United States, American black bears today are usually found in heavily vegetated mountainous areas, from 400 to 3,000 m (1,300 to 9,800 ft) in elevation. For American black bears living in the American Southwest and Mexico, habitat usually consists of stands of chaparral and pinyon juniper woods. In this region, bears occasionally move to more open areas to feed on prickly pear cactus. At least two distinct, prime habitat types are inhabited in the Southeastern United States. American black bears in the southern Appalachian Mountains survive in predominantly oak-hickory and mixed mesophytic forests. In the coastal areas of the southeast (such as Florida, the Carolinas and Louisiana), bears inhabit a mixture of flatwoods, bays and swampy hardwood sites.
In the northeastern part of the range (the United States and Canada), prime habitat consists of a forest canopy of hardwoods such as beech, maple, birch and coniferous species. Corn crops and oak-hickory mast are also common sources of food in some sections of the northeast; small, thick swampy areas provide excellent refuge cover largely in stands of white cedar. Along the Pacific coast, redwood, Sitka spruce and hemlocks predominate as overstory cover. Within these northern forest types are early successional areas important for American black bears, such as fields of brush, wet and dry meadows, high tidelands, riparian areas and a variety of mast-producing hardwood species. The spruce-fir forest dominates much of the range of the American black bear in the Rockies. Important non-forested areas here are wet meadows, riparian areas, avalanche chutes, roadsides, burns, sidehill parks and subalpine ridgetops.
In areas where human development is relatively low, such as stretches of Canada and Alaska, American black bears tend to be found more regularly in lowland regions.[41] In parts of northeastern Canada, especially Labrador, American black bears have adapted exclusively to semi-open areas that are more typical habitat in North America for brown bears (likely due to the absence there of brown and polar bears, as well as other large carnivore species).[5][page needed]
Description
[edit]Build
[edit]The skulls of American black bears are broad, with narrow muzzles and large jaw hinges. In Virginia, the length of adult bear skulls was found to average 262 to 317 mm (10.3 to 12.5 in).[41] Across its range, the greatest skull length for the species has been reportedly measured from 23.5 to 35 cm (9.3 to 13.8 in).[5][page needed] Females tend to have slenderer and more pointed faces than males.
Their claws are typically black or grayish-brown. The claws are short and rounded, being thick at the base and tapering to a point. Claws from both hind and front legs are almost identical in length, though the foreclaws tend to be more sharply curved. The paws of the species are relatively large, with a rear foot length of 13.7 to 22.5 cm (5.4 to 8.9 in), which is proportionately larger than other medium-sized bear species, but much smaller than the paws of large adult brown, and especially polar bears.[5][page needed] The soles of the feet are black or brownish and are naked, leathery and deeply wrinkled.
The hind legs are relatively longer than those of Asian black bears. The typically small tail is 7.7–17.7 cm (3.0–7.0 in) long.[43][44][45][46] The ears are small and rounded and are set well back on the head.
American black bears are highly dexterous, being capable of opening screw-top jars and manipulating door latches.[43] They also have great physical strength; a bear weighing 120 pounds (54 kg) was observed turning flat rocks weighing 310 to 325 pounds (141 to 147 kg) by flipping them over with a single foreleg.[47] They move in a rhythmic, sure-footed way and can run at speeds of 25 to 30 miles per hour (40 to 48 km/h).[48] American black bears have good eyesight and have been proven experimentally to be able to learn visual color discrimination tasks faster than chimpanzees and just as fast as domestic dogs. They are also capable of rapidly learning to distinguish different shapes such as small triangles, circles and squares.[49]
Size
[edit]Adults typically range from 120 to 200 cm (47 to 79 in) in head-and-body length, and 70 to 105 cm (28 to 41 in) in shoulder height. Although they are the smallest bear species in North America, large males exceed the size of other bear species, except the brown bear and the polar bear.[43]
Weight tends to vary according to age, sex, health and season. Seasonal variation in weight is very pronounced: in autumn, their pre-den weight tends to be 30% higher than in spring, when black bears emerge from their dens. Bears on the East Coast tend to be heavier on average than those on the West Coast, although they typically follow Bergmann's rule, and bears from the northwest are often slightly heavier than the bears from the southeast. Adult males typically weigh between 57–250 kg (126–551 lb), while females weigh 33% less at 41–170 kg (90–375 lb).[5][50]
In California, studies indicate that the average mass is 86 kg (190 lb) in adult males and 58 kg (128 lb) in adult females.[41] Adults in Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge in east-central Alaska were found to average 87.3 kg (192 lb) in males and 63.4 kg (140 lb) in females, whereas on Kuiu Island in southeastern Alaska (where nutritious salmon are readily available) adults averaged 115 kg (254 lb).[51][52] In Great Smoky Mountains National Park, adult males averaged 112 kg (247 lb) and adult females averaged 47 kg (104 lb) per one study.[53]
In one of the largest studies on regional body mass, bears in British Columbia averaged 73.7 kg (162 lb) in 89 females and 103.1 kg (227 lb) in 243 males.[54] In Yellowstone National Park, a study found that adult males averaged 119 kg (262 lb) and adult females averaged 67 kg (148 lb).[55] Black bears in north-central Minnesota averaged 70 kg (150 lb) in 163 females and 125 kg (276 lb) in 77 males.[56] In New York, the males average 136 kg (300 lb) and females 72.6 kg (160 lb).[57] It was found in Nevada and the Lake Tahoe region that bears closer to urban regions were significantly heavier than their arid-country dwelling counterparts, with males near urban areas averaging 138 kg (304 lb) against wild-land males which averaged 115.5 kg (255 lb) whereas peri-urban females averaged 97.9 kg (216 lb) against the average of 65.2 kg (144 lb) in wild-land ones.[58] In Waterton Lakes National Park, Alberta, adults averaged 125 to 128 kg (276 to 282 lb).[59]
The biggest wild American black bear ever recorded was a male from New Brunswick, shot in November 1972, that weighed 409 kg (902 lb) after it had been dressed, meaning it weighed an estimated 500 kg (1,100 lb) in life and measured 2.41 m (7 ft 11 in) long.[60] Another notably outsized wild American black bear, weighing in at 408 kg (899 lb), was the cattle-killer shot in December 1921 on the Moqui Reservation in Arizona.[60] The record-sized American black bear from New Jersey was shot in Morris County December 2011 and scaled 376.5 kg (830 lb).[61] The Pennsylvania state record weighed 399 kg (880 lb) and was shot in November 2010 in Pike County.[62] The North American Bear Center, located in Ely, Minnesota, is home to the world's largest captive male and female American black bears. Ted, the male, weighed 431–453.5 kg (950–1,000 lb) in the fall of 2006.[63] Honey, the female, weighed 219.6 kg (484 lb) in the fall of 2007.[64]
Pelage
[edit]The fur is soft, with dense underfur and long, coarse, thick guard hairs.[43] The fur is not as shaggy or coarse as that of brown bears.[65][page needed] American black bear skins can be distinguished from those of Asian black bears by the lack of a white blaze on the chest and hairier footpads.[citation needed]
Despite their name, black bears show a great deal of color variation. Individual coat colors can range from white, blonde, cinnamon, light brown or dark chocolate brown to jet black, with many intermediate variations existing. Silvery-gray American black bears with a blue luster (this is found mostly on the flanks) occur along a portion of coastal Alaska and British Columbia. White to cream-colored American black bears occur in the coastal islands and the adjacent mainland of southwestern British Columbia. Albino individuals have also been recorded.[66]: 141 Black coats tend to predominate in humid areas such as Maine, New England, New York, Tennessee, Michigan and western Washington.[67] Approximately 70% of all American black bears are black, though only 50% in the Rocky Mountains are black.[43] Many in northwestern North America are cinnamon, blonde or light brown in color and thus may sometimes be mistaken for grizzly bears. Grizzly (and other types of brown) bears can be distinguished by their shoulder hump, larger size and broader, more concave skull.[68][page needed]
In his book The Great Bear Almanac, Gary Brown summarized the predominance of black or brown/blonde specimens by location:[43]
Color variations of American black bears by location | |
---|---|
Location | Color breakdown |
Michigan | 100% black |
Minnesota | 94% black, 6% brown |
New England | 100% black |
New York | 100% black |
Tennessee | 100% black |
Washington (coastal) | 99% black, 1% brown or blonde |
Washington (inland) | 21% black, 79% brown or blonde |
Yosemite National Park | 9% black, 91% brown or blonde |
Behavior and life history
[edit]American black bears have eyesight and hearing comparable to that of humans.[citation needed] Their keenest sense is smell, which is about seven times more sensitive than a domestic dog's.[69] They are excellent and strong swimmers, swimming for pleasure and to feed (largely on fish). They regularly climb trees to feed, escape enemies and hibernate. Four of the eight modern bear species are habitually arboreal (the most arboreal species, the American and Asian black bears and the sun bear, being fairly closely related).[5][page needed] Their arboreal abilities tend to decline with age.[48] They may be active at any time of the day or night, although they mainly forage by night. Bears living near human habitations tend to be more extensively nocturnal, while those living near brown bears tend to be more often diurnal.[5][page needed][41]
American black bears tend to be territorial and non-gregarious in nature. However, at abundant food sources (e.g. spawning salmon or garbage dumps), they may congregate and dominance hierarchies form, with the largest, most powerful males dominating the most fruitful feeding spots.[70][page needed] They mark their territories by rubbing their bodies against trees and clawing at the bark. Annual ranges held by mature male bears tend to be very large, though there is some variation. On Long Island off the coast of Washington, ranges average 5 sq mi (13 km2), whereas on the Ungava Peninsula in Canada ranges can average up to 1,000 sq mi (2,600 km2), with some male bears traveling as far as 4,349 sq mi (11,260 km2) at times of food shortages.[5][page needed][70][page needed]
Bears may communicate with various vocal and non-vocal sounds. Tongue-clicking and grunting are the most common sounds and are made in cordial situations to conspecifics, offspring and occasionally humans. When at ease, they produce a loud rumbling hum. During times of fear or nervousness, bears may moan, huff or blow air. Warning sounds include jaw-clicking and lip-popping. In aggressive interactions, black bears produce guttural pulsing calls that may sound like growling. Cubs squeal, bawl or scream when anxious and make a motor-like humming sound when comfortable or nursing.[71][72][73] American black bears often mark trees using their teeth and claws as a form of communication with other bears, a behavior common to many species of bears.[1]
Reproduction and development
[edit]Sows usually produce their first litter at the age of 3 to 5 years,[48] with those living in more developed areas tending to get pregnant at younger ages.[74] The breeding period usually occurs in the June–July period, though it can extend to August in the species' northern range. The breeding period lasts for two to three months. Both sexes are promiscuous. Males try to mate with several females, but large, dominant ones may violently claim a female if another mature male comes near.[41] Copulation can last 20–30 minutes.[75] Sows tend to be short-tempered with their mates after copulating.
The fertilized eggs undergo delayed development and do not implant in the female's womb until November. The gestation period lasts 235 days, and litters are usually born in late January to early February. Litter size is between one and six cubs, typically two or three.[76] At birth, cubs weigh 280–450 g (0.62–0.99 lb) and measure 20.5 cm (8.1 in) in length. They are born with fine, gray, down-like hair and their hind quarters are underdeveloped. They typically open their eyes after 28–40 days and begin walking after 5 weeks. Cubs are dependent on their mother's milk for 30 weeks and will reach independence at 16–18 months. At 6 weeks, they attain 900 g (2.0 lb), by 8 weeks they reach 2.5 kg (5.5 lb) and by 6 months they weigh 18 to 27 kg (40 to 60 lb). They reach sexual maturity at 3 years and attain their full growth at 5 years.[48]
Longevity and mortality
[edit]The average lifespan in the wild is 18 years, though it is quite possible for wild individuals to survive for more than 23 years.[68] The record age of a wild individual was 39 years,[77] while that in captivity was 44 years.[43] The average annual survival rate is variable, ranging from 86% in Florida to 73% in Virginia and North Carolina.[41] In Minnesota, 99% of wintering adult bears were able to survive the hibernation cycle in one study.[41] Remarkably, a study of American black bears in Nevada found that the amount of annual mortality of a population of bears in wilderness areas was 0%, whereas in developed areas in the state this figure rose to 83%.[5][page needed] Survival in subadults is generally less assured. In Alaska, only 14–17% of subadult males and 30–48% of subadult females were found in a study to survive to adulthood.[41] Across the range, the estimated number of cubs who survive past their first year is 60%.[5][page needed]
With the exception of the rare confrontation with an adult brown bear or a gray wolf pack, adult black bears are not usually subject to natural predation.[41] However, as evidenced by scats with fur inside of them and the recently discovered carcass of an adult sow with puncture marks in the skull, black bears may occasionally fall prey to jaguars in the southern parts of their range. In such scenarios, the big cat would have the advantage if it ambushed the bear, killing it with a crushing bite to the back of the skull.[78] Cubs tend to be more vulnerable to predation than adults, with known predators including bobcats, coyotes, cougars, gray wolves, brown bears and other bears of their own species.[5][page needed][41] Many of these will stealthily snatch small cubs right from under the sleeping mother. There is record of a golden eagle snatching a yearling cub.[5][page needed] Once out of hibernation, mother bears may be able to fight off most potential predators.[41] Even cougars will be displaced by an angry mother bear if they are discovered stalking the cubs.[79] Flooding of dens after birth may also occasionally kill newborn cubs. However, in current times, bear fatalities are mainly attributable to human activities. Seasonally, thousands of black bears are hunted legally across North America to control their numbers, while some are illegally poached or trapped unregulated. Auto collisions also may claim many black bears annually.[5][page needed][41]
Hibernation
[edit]American black bears were once not considered true or "deep" hibernators, but because of discoveries about the metabolic changes that allow black bears to remain dormant for months without eating, drinking, urinating or defecating, most biologists have redefined mammalian hibernation as "specialized, seasonal reduction in metabolism concurrent with scarce food and cold weather". American black bears are now considered highly efficient hibernators.[80][81] The physiology of American black bears in the wild is closely related to that of bears in captivity. Understanding the physiology of bears in the wild is vital to the bear's success in captivity.[82]
The bears enter their dens in October and November, although in the southernmost areas of their range (i.e. Florida, Mexico, the southeastern United States), only pregnant females and mothers with yearling cubs will enter hibernation.[5][page needed] Prior to that time, they can put on up to 14 kg (30 lb) of body fat to get them through the several months during which they fast. Hibernation typically lasts 3–8 months, depending on regional climate.[20][83]
Hibernating bears spend their time in hollowed-out dens in tree cavities, under logs or rocks, in banks, caves, or culverts, and in shallow depressions. Although naturally-made dens are occasionally used, most dens are dug out by the bear.[68] During their time in hibernation, an American black bear's heart rate drops from 40 to 50 beats per minute to 8 beats per minute, and the metabolic rate can drop to a quarter of the bear's (nonhibernating) basal metabolic rate. These reductions in metabolic rate and heart rate do not appear to decrease the bear's ability to heal injuries during hibernation. Their circadian rhythm stays intact during hibernation. This allows the bear to sense the changes in the day based on the ambient temperature caused by the sun's position in the sky. It has also been shown that ambient light exposure and low disturbance levels (that is to say, wild bears in ambient light conditions) directly correlate with their activity levels.[84] The bear keeping track of the changing days allows it to awaken from hibernation at the appropriate time of year to conserve as much energy as possible.[85]
The hibernating bear does not display the same rate of muscle and bone atrophy relative to other nonhibernatory animals that are subject to long periods of inactivity due to ailment or old age.[86][87] A hibernating bear only loses approximately half the muscular strength compared to that of a well-nourished, inactive human. The bear's bone mass does not change in geometry or mineral composition during hibernation, which implies that the bear's conservation of bone mass during hibernation is caused by a biological mechanism.[88] During hibernation American black bears retain all excretory waste, leading to the development of a hardened mass of fecal material in the colon known as a fecal plug.[89] Leptin is released into the bear's systems to suppress appetite. The retention of waste during hibernation (specifically in minerals such as calcium) may play a role in the bear's resistance to atrophy.[86]
The body temperature does not drop significantly, like other mammalian hibernators (staying around 35 °C (95 °F)) and they remain somewhat alert and active. If the winter is mild enough, they may wake up and forage for food. Females also give birth in February and nurture their cubs until the snow melts.[90] During winter, American black bears consume 25–40% of their body weight.[91] The footpads peel off while they sleep, making room for new tissue.
Many of the physiological changes an American black bear exhibits during hibernation are retained slightly post-hibernation. Upon exiting hibernation, bears retain a reduced heart rate and basal metabolic rate. The metabolic rate of a hibernating bear will remain at a reduced level for up to 21 days after hibernation.[92] After emerging from their winter dens in spring, they wander their home ranges for two weeks so that their metabolism accustoms itself to the activity. In mountainous areas, they seek southerly slopes at lower elevations for forage and move to northerly and easterly slopes at higher elevations as summer progresses.
The time that American black bears emerge from hibernation varies. Factors affecting this include temperature, flooding, and hunger. In southern areas, they may wake up in midwinter. Further north, they may not be seen until late March, April, or even early May. Altitude also has an effect. Bears at lower altitudes tend to emerge earlier. Mature males tend to come out earliest, followed by immature males and females, and lastly mothers with cubs. Mothers with yearling cubs are seen before those with newborns.[93]
Dietary habits
[edit]Generally, American black bears are largely crepuscular in foraging activity, though they may actively feed at any time.[70][page needed] Up to 85% of their diet consists of vegetation,[48] though they tend to dig less than brown bears, eating far fewer roots, bulbs, corms and tubers than the latter species.[66] When initially emerging from hibernation, they will seek to feed on carrion from winter-killed animals and newborn ungulates. As the spring temperature warms, American black bears seek new shoots of many plant species, especially new grasses, wetland plants and forbs.[91] Young shoots and buds from trees and shrubs during the spring period are important to bears emerging from hibernation, as they assist in rebuilding muscle and strengthening the skeleton and are often the only digestible foods available at that time.[94] During summer, the diet largely comprises fruits, especially berries and soft masts such as buds and drupes.
During the autumn hyperphagia, feeding becomes virtually the full-time task. Hard masts become the most important part of the diet in autumn and may even partially dictate the species' distribution. Favored masts such as hazelnuts, oak acorns and whitebark pine nuts may be consumed by the hundreds each day by a single bear during the fall.[5][page needed][41] During the fall period, bears may also habitually raid the nut caches of tree squirrels.[91] Also extremely important in fall are berries such as huckleberries and buffalo berries.[5][page needed] Bears living in areas near human settlements or around a considerable influx of recreational human activity often come to rely on foods inadvertently provided by humans, especially during summertime. These include refuse, birdseed, agricultural products and honey from apiaries.[68]
The majority of the diet consists of insects, such as bees, yellow jackets, ants, beetles and their larvae.[91][95] American black bears are also fond of honey[96] and will gnaw through trees if hives are too deeply set into the trunks for them to reach it with their paws. Once the hive is breached, the bears will scrape the honeycombs together with their paws and eat them, regardless of stings from the bees.[60][page needed] Bears that live in northern coastal regions (especially the Pacific Coast) will fish for salmon during the night, as their black fur is easily spotted by salmon in the daytime. Other bears, such as the white-furred Kermode bears of the islands of western Canada, have a 30% greater success rate in catching salmon than their black-furred counterparts.[97] Other fish, including suckers, trout and catfish, are readily caught whenever possible.[citation needed] Although American black bears do not often engage in active predation of other large animals for much of the year, the species will regularly prey on mule and white-tailed deer fawns in spring, given the opportunity.[98][99][100] Bears may catch the scent of hiding fawns when foraging for something else and then sniff them out and pounce on them. As the fawns reach 10 days of age, they can outmaneuver the bears, and their scent is soon ignored until the next year.[101] American black bears have also been recorded similarly preying on elk calves in Idaho[102] and moose calves in Alaska.[103]
Predation on adult deer is rare, but it has been recorded.[104][105][106] They may even hunt prey up to the size of adult female moose, which are considerably larger than themselves, by ambushing them.[107] There is at least one record of a male American black bear killing two bull elk over the course of six days by chasing them into deep snow banks, which impeded their movements. In Labrador, American black bears are exceptionally carnivorous, living largely off caribou, usually young, injured, old, sickly or dead specimens, and rodents such as voles. This is believed to be due to a paucity of edible plant life in this sub-Arctic region and a local lack of competing large carnivores (including other bear species).[68] Like brown bears, American black bears try to use surprise to ambush their prey and target the weak, injured, sickly or dying animals in the herds. Once a deer fawn is captured, it is frequently torn apart alive while feeding.[99] If it is able to capture a mother deer in spring, the bear frequently begins feeding on the udder of lactating females, but generally prefers meat from the viscera. Bears often drag their prey to cover, preferring to feed in seclusion. The skin of large prey is stripped back and turned inside out, with the skeleton usually left largely intact. Unlike gray wolves and coyotes, bears rarely scatter the remains of their kills. Vegetation around the carcass is usually matted down, and their droppings are frequently found nearby. Bears may attempt to cover remains of larger carcasses, though they do not do so with the same frequency as cougars and grizzly bears.[108] They will readily consume eggs and nestlings of various birds and can easily access many tree nests, even the huge nests of bald eagles.[48] Bears have been reported stealing deer and other game from human hunters.
Interspecific predatory relationships
[edit]Over much of their range, American black bears are assured scavengers that can intimidate, using their large size and considerable strength, and if necessary dominate other predators in confrontations over carcasses. However, on occasions where they encounter Kodiak or grizzly bears, the larger two brown subspecies dominate them. American black bears tend to escape competition from brown bears by being more active in the daytime and living in more densely forested areas. Violent interactions, resulting in the deaths of American black bears, have been recorded in Yellowstone National Park.[109][110]
American black bears do occasionally compete with cougars over carcasses. Like brown bears, they will sometimes steal kills from cougars. One study found that both bear species visited 24% of cougar kills in Yellowstone and Glacier National Parks, usurping 10% of the carcasses.[111][112] Another study found that American black bears visited 48% of cougar kills in summer in Colorado and 77% of kills in California. As a result, the cats spend more time killing and less time feeding on each kill.[113][114]
American black bear interactions with gray wolves are much rarer than with brown bears, due to differences in habitat preferences. The majority of American black bear encounters with wolves occur in the species' northern range, with no interactions being recorded in Mexico. Despite the American black bear being more powerful on a one-to-one basis, packs of wolves have been recorded to kill black bears on numerous occasions without eating them. Unlike brown bears, American black bears frequently lose against wolves in disputes over kills.[115] Wolf packs typically kill American black bears when the larger animals are in their hibernation cycle.[50]
There is at least one record of an American black bear killing a wolverine (Gulo gulo) in a dispute over food in Yellowstone National Park.[116] Anecdotal cases of alligator predation on American black bears have been reported, though such cases may involve assaults on cubs.[117] At least one jaguar (Panthera onca) has been recorded to have attacked and eaten a black bear: "El Jefe", the jaguar famous for being the first jaguar seen in the United States in over a century.[118]
Relationships with humans
[edit]In folklore, mythology and culture
[edit]Indigenous
[edit]Black bears feature prominently in the stories of some of North America's indigenous peoples. One tale tells of how the black bear was a creation of the Great Spirit, while the grizzly bear was created by the Evil Spirit.[119][page needed] In the mythology of the Haida, Tlingit and Tsimshian people of the northwest coast, mankind first learned to respect bears when a girl married the son of a black bear chieftain.[120][page needed] In Kwakwa̱ka̱ʼwakw mythology, 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 children.[121] The Navajo believed that the Big Black Bear was chief among the bears of the four directions surrounding Sun's house and would pray to it in order to be granted its protection during raids.[122][page needed]
Sleeping Bear Dunes in Michigan is named after a Native American legend, where a female bear and her two cubs swam across Lake Michigan to escape a fire on the Wisconsin shore. The mother bear reached the shore and waited for her cubs, but they did not make it across. Two islands mark where the cubs drowned, while the dune marks the spot where the mother bear waited.[123]
Anglo-American
[edit]Morris Michtom, the creator of the teddy bear, was inspired to make the toy when he came across a cartoon of Theodore Roosevelt refusing to shoot a black bear cub tied to a tree.[124] The fictional character Winnie-the-Pooh was named after Winnipeg, a female cub that lived at the London Zoo from 1915 until her death in 1934.[125] A cub, who in the spring of 1950 was caught in the Capitan Gap Fire, was made into the living representative of Smokey Bear, the mascot of the United States Forest Service.[126]
Terrible Ted was a de-toothed and de-clawed bear who was forced to perform as a pro wrestler and whose "career" lasted from the 1950s to the 1970s. The American black bear is the mascot of the University of Maine and Baylor University, where the university houses two live bears on campus.
Attacks on humans
[edit]Although an adult bear is quite capable of killing a human, American black bears typically avoid confronting humans. Unlike grizzly bears, which became a subject of fearsome legend among the European settlers of North America, black bears were rarely considered overly dangerous, even though they lived in areas where the pioneers had settled.
American black bears rarely attack when confronted by humans and usually only make mock charges, emit blowing noises and swat the ground with their forepaws. The number of attacks on humans is higher than those by brown bears in North America, but this is largely because black bears considerably outnumber brown bears. Compared to brown bear attacks, aggressive encounters with black bears rarely lead to serious injury. Most attacks tend to be motivated by hunger rather than territoriality and thus victims have a higher probability of surviving by fighting back rather than submitting. Unlike female brown bears, female American black bears are not as protective of their cubs and rarely attack humans in the vicinity of the cubs.[66] However, occasionally such attacks do occur.[41] The worst recorded attack occurred in May 1978, in which a bear killed three teenagers fishing in Algonquin Park in Ontario.[127] Another exceptional attack occurred in August 1997 in Liard River Hot Springs Provincial Park in British Columbia, when an emaciated bear attacked a mother and child, killing the mother and a man who intervened. The bear was shot while mauling a fourth victim.[128][129]
The majority of attacks happened in national parks, usually near campgrounds, where the bears had habituated to close human proximity and food.[66] Of 1,028 incidents of aggressive acts toward humans, recorded from 1964 to 1976 in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, 107 resulted in injury and occurred mainly in tourist hot spots where people regularly fed the bears handouts.[127][page needed] In almost every case where open garbage dumps that attracted bears were closed and handouts ceased, the number of aggressive encounters dropped.[41] However, in the Liard River Hot Springs case, the bear was apparently dependent on a local garbage dump that had closed and so was starving to death.[128] Attempts to relocate bears are typically unsuccessful, as the bears seem able to return to their home range, even without familiar landscape cues.[41]
Livestock and crop predation
[edit]A limitation of food sources in early spring and wild berry and nut crop failures in summer may contribute to bears regularly feeding from human-based food sources. These bears often eat crops, especially during autumn hyperphagia when natural foods are scarce. Favored crops include apples, oats and corn.[5][page needed] American black bears can do extensive damage in areas of the northwestern United States by stripping the bark from trees and feeding on the cambium. Livestock depredations occur mostly in spring.
Although they occasionally hunt adult cattle and horses, they seem to prefer smaller prey such as sheep, goats, pigs and young calves. They usually kill by biting the neck and shoulders, though they may break the neck or back of the prey with blows with the paws. Evidence of a bear attack includes claw marks and is often found on the neck, back and shoulders of larger animals. Surplus killing of sheep and goats is common. American black bears have been known to frighten livestock herds over cliffs, causing injuries and death to many animals; whether this is intentional is not known.[108] Occasionally bears kill pets, especially domestic dogs, which are most prone to harass a bear.[130] It is not recommended to use unleashed dogs to deter bear attacks. Although large, aggressive dogs can sometimes cause a bear to run, if pressed, angry bears often turn the tables and end up chasing the dogs in return. A bear in pursuit of a pet dog can threaten both canid and human lives.[131][132]
Hunting
[edit]The hunting of American black bears has taken place since the initial settlement of the Americas. The first piece of evidence dates to a Clovis site at Lehner Ranch, Arizona. Partially calcined teeth of a 3-month old black bear cub came from a roasting pit, suggesting the bear cub was eaten. The surrounding charcoal was dated to the Early Holocene (10,940 BP). Black bear remains also appear to be associated with early peoples in Tlapacoya, Mexico. Native Americans increasingly utilized black bears during the Holocene, particularly in the late Holocene upper Midwest, e.g., Hopewell and Mississippian cultures.[133]
Some Native American tribes,[which?] in admiration for the American black bear's intelligence, would decorate the heads of bears they killed with trinkets and place them on blankets. Tobacco smoke would be wafted into the disembodied head's nostrils by the hunter that dealt the killing blow, who would compliment the animal for its courage.[60][page needed] The Kutchin typically hunted American black bears during their hibernation cycle. Unlike the hunting of hibernating grizzly bears, which was fraught with danger, hibernating American black bears took longer to awaken and hunting them was thus safer and easier.[134] During the European colonisation of eastern North America, thousands of bears were hunted for their meat, fat and fur.[4][page needed] Theodore Roosevelt wrote extensively on black bear hunting in his Hunting the Grisly and other sketches, in which he stated,
in [a black bear] chase there is much excitement, and occasionally a slight spice of danger, just enough to render it attractive; so it has always been eagerly followed.[107]
He wrote that black bears were difficult to hunt by stalking, due to their habitat preferences, though they were easy to trap. Roosevelt described how, in the southern states, planters regularly hunted bears on horseback with hounds. General Wade Hampton was known to have been present at 500 successful bear hunts, two-thirds of which he killed personally. He killed 30 or 40 bears with only a knife, which he would use to stab the bears between the shoulder blades while they were distracted by his hounds.[107] Unless well trained, horses were often useless in bear hunts, as they often bolted when the bears stood their ground.[60][page needed] In 1799, 192,000 American black bear skins were exported from Quebec. In 1822, 3,000 skins were exported from the Hudson's Bay Company.[135] In 1992, untanned, fleshed and salted hides were sold for an average of $165.[136]
In Canada, black bears are considered as both a big game and furbearer species in all provinces, save for New Brunswick and the Northwest Territories, where they are only classed as a big game species. There are around 80,900 licensed bear hunters in Canada. Canadian black bear hunts take place in the fall and spring, and both male and female bears can be legally taken, though some provinces prohibit the hunting of females with cubs, or yearlings.[26]
Currently, 28 of the U.S. states have American black bear hunting seasons. Nineteen states require a bear hunting license, with some also requiring a big game license. In eight states, only a big game license is required. Overall, over 481,500 American black bear hunting licenses are sold per year. The hunting methods and seasons vary greatly according to state, with some bear hunting seasons including fall only, spring and fall, or year-round. New Jersey, in November 2010, approved a six-day bear-hunting season in early December 2010 to slow the growth of the population. Bear hunting had been banned in New Jersey for five years before that time.[137] A Fairleigh Dickinson University PublicMind poll found that 53% of New Jersey voters approved of the new season if scientists concluded that bears were leaving their usual habitats and destroying private property.[138] Men, older voters and those living in rural areas were more likely to approve of a bear hunting season in New Jersey than women, younger voters and those living in more developed parts of the state.[138] In the western states, where there are large American black bear populations, there are spring and year-round seasons. Approximately 18,000 American black bears were killed annually in the U.S. between 1988 and 1992. Within this period, annual kills ranged from six bears in South Carolina to 2,232 in Maine.[26] According to Dwight Schuh in his Bowhunter's Encyclopedia, American black bears are the third most popular quarry of bowhunters, behind deer and elk.[139]
Meat
[edit]Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Energy | 649 kJ (155 kcal) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
0.00 g | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
8.30 g | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
20.10 g | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other constituents | Quantity | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Water | 71.20 g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
†Percentages estimated using US recommendations for adults,[140] except for potassium, which is estimated based on expert recommendation from the National Academies.[141] |
Bear meat had historically been held in high esteem among North America's indigenous people and colonists.[60][page needed] American black bears were the only bear species the Kutchin hunted for their meat, though this constituted only a small part of their diet.[134] According to the second volume of Frank Forester's Field Sports of the United States, and British Provinces, of North America:
The flesh of the [black] bear is savoury, but rather luscious, and tastes not unlike pork. It was once so common an article of food in New-York as to have given the name of Bear Market to one of the principal markets of the city.
— Frank Forester's Field Sports of the United States, and British Provinces, of North America, p. 186
Theodore Roosevelt likened the flesh of young American black bears to that of pork, and not as coarse or flavorless as the meat of grizzly bears.[142][page needed] The most favored cuts of are concentrated in the legs and loins. Meat from the neck, front legs and shoulders is usually ground into minced meat or used for stews and casseroles. Keeping the fat on tends to give the meat a strong flavor. As American black bears can have trichinellosis, cooking temperatures need to be high in order to kill the parasites.[143][page needed]
Bear fat was once valued as a cosmetic article that promoted hair growth and gloss. The fat most favored for this purpose was the hard white fat found in the body's interior. As only a small portion of this fat could be harvested for this purpose, the oil was often mixed with large quantities of hog lard.[60][page needed] However, animal rights activism over the last decade[when?] has slowed the harvest of these animals; therefore the lard from bears has not been used in recent years for the purpose of cosmetics.[citation needed]
See also
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Further reading
[edit]- Brown, Gary (1993). The Great Bear Almanac. Lyons & Burford. ISBN 978-1-55821-210-7.
- Craighead, Lance (2000). Bears of the World. Voyageur Press. pp. 63–80. ISBN 978-0-89658-503-4.
- Powell, Roger A. (1997). Ecology and Behaviour of North American Black Bears: Home Ranges, Habitat, and Social Organization. Chapman & Hall. ISBN 978-0-412-57990-5.
External links
[edit]- Data related to Ursus americanus - (American black bear) at Wikispecies
- Wildlifeinformation.org: American Black Bear Conservation Action Plan
- IUCN Red List least concern species
- American black bears
- Extant Piacenzian first appearances
- Hunting in the United States
- Mammals described in 1780
- Mammals of North America
- Mammals of Canada
- Mammals of the United States
- Mammals of Mexico
- Pleistocene mammals of North America
- Pliocene carnivorans
- Pliocene mammals of North America
- Quaternary carnivorans
- Quaternary mammals of North America
- Scavengers
- Symbols of Alabama
- Symbols of West Virginia
- Taxa named by Peter Simon Pallas
- Ursus (mammal)
- Fauna of California