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The Grizzly Bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) is a large North American bear featured in the Standard Edition of Planet Zoo.

Zoopedia Description[]

General[]

Population in the Wild: 55,000

Native to northern USA and Canada, the grizzly bear is in fact a subspecies of brown bear (or Ursus arctos) and is often called the North American brown bear to prevent confusion. A Grizzly can be identified by its thick, brown fur, a large shoulder hump, a straight snout and rounded ears. They have strong front legs with long claws used for digging and hunting. Grizzlies can grow extremely large, but often exhibit a lot of variation in size between different populations - the average male weighs around 528 lbs (239 kg) and measures 7.25 feet (2.2 meters) long, while an average female weighs 352 lbs (160 kg) and measures 6 ft (1.8 meters).

Although the population as a whole is not listed as endangered, there are sub-populations that are vulnerable; mostly those in areas of expanding human development. Additionally, bears are often attracted to areas where humans live due to plentiful scavenging opportunities, and this often leads to them being killed when perceived as a nuisance or a threat.

Bears are also killed for sport and trophy hunting, and this is often done unsustainably. Grizzly bears are registered as threatened in the USA and Canada, and The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working to restore and protect bear populations in Montana, Wyoming, Idaho and Washington. Additionally, Canada closely monitors its bear population in various areas by logging DNA samples and taking censuses, noting when the population is increasing and decreasing, as well as by helping conservationists to target vulnerable populations.

Social[]

Grizzly bears are solitary, the only exception being a mother with her cubs. They only interact with each other to mate or fight over mates. They may be seen in close quarters when there is a desirable food source, such as gathering at a river's edge during the salmon spawning season. However, bears will usually ignore each other if they come across one another.

Reproduction[]

Male grizzly bears track females using the scent of their urine. When a male and female meet, they will play together; wrestling and pawing each other before mating. The female will be pregnant for 4 to 6 months, and she will give birth to 1 to 4 cubs during hibernation, without waking. The cubs will search out milk and suckle from their mother until the end of hibernation, when they will leave the den and have their first solid food. The bear cubs stay with their mother until they are 2 to 3 years old, at which point they will leave to establish their own territory.

Animal Care[]

Grizzly bears require a relatively large amount of land. A grizzly habitat should be 750 square meters, plus 50 meters square per additional bear after the first. Grizzlies do not require navigable water, but will swim in it if it is provided. They also appear to enjoy underwater fish feeders. Grizzlies will climb on large climbing platforms if provided, but these are also not required. Grizzly bears are strong climbers, so climbable fences like logs or chain link should not be used.

PREFERRED OBJECTS

Leaves, Nuts and Meat Ā· Fruit and Vegetables Ā· Fish

FEEDING STATIONS
Food Tray Ā· Water Pipe

FOOD ENRICHMENT
Large Fixed Roller Feeder Ā· Tree Scatter Feeder Ā· Block of Frozen Fruit Ā· Tree Forager Ā· Bamboo Feeder Ā· Block of Frozen Fish Ā· Underwater Fish Feeder

HABITAT ENRICHMENT
Bobbin Ā· Cardboard Box Ā· Firehose Ball Ā· Herb Scent Marker Ā· Block of Ice Ā· Large Ball Ā· Prey-Scented Sack Ā· Rubbing Pillar Ā· Wind Chimes Ā· Large Snow Ball Ā· Gift Box Ā· Bobbin Drum Ā· Small Tyre Ā· Scots Pine/Tamarind Scratching Tree Ā· Submarine Buoy

COMPATIBLE ANIMALS

Grizzly Bear doesn't benefit from sharing space with other species.

Trivia[]

Zoopedia Fun Facts[]

  • Grizzly bears hibernate for 5-7 months a year; they will eat huge amounts before hibernating to gain enough weight to survive this time without eating.
  • The ā€˜humpā€™ visible on a grizzly bearā€™s back is a large amount of muscle that bears use when digging dens or hunting prey.
  • Grizzly bears can gain 180kg of weight when preparing for hibernation.
  • In the wild each cub in a grizzly bear litter may have a different father.
  • Grizzly bears love to eat moths, and will make the extra effort to find moths by climbing to high altitudes and overturning rocks.

Other Trivia and Information[]

  • Planet Zoo does not simulate the massive weight gains grizzlies are known for in the wild. In nature, a grizzly may nearly double its body mass to prepare for winter, and then lose all that weight before the spring. The same bear that weighs 300 pounds in April may weigh 600 pounds by October. Real bears do not hibernate in captivity as long as food and warmth are provided year round, though their metabolism may drop and they may become less active during winter months.
  • Public awareness campaigns such as ā€œa fed bear is a dead bearā€ and the American NPS's ā€œSave A Bear's Life!ā€ campaign have seen moderate success in limiting human-ursine interactions between campers, but authorities in America are forced to euthanize around fifty bears annually due to human interaction, either to protect humans or to end the suffering of bears injured by semi trucks and trains.

Gallery[]

References[]


ANIMAL NAVIGATION
STANDARD: HABITAT
Aardvark ā€¢ African Buffalo ā€¢ African Savannah Elephant ā€¢ African Wild Dog ā€¢ Aldabra Giant Tortoise ā€¢ American Bison ā€¢ Bactrian Camel ā€¢ Baird's Tapir ā€¢ Bengal Tiger ā€¢ Black Wildebeest ā€¢ Bongo ā€¢ Bonobo ā€¢ Bornean Orangutan ā€¢ Cheetah ā€¢ Chinese Pangolin ā€¢ Common Ostrich ā€¢ Common Warthog ā€¢ Formosan Black Bear ā€¢ Galapagos Giant Tortoise ā€¢ Gemsbok ā€¢ Gharial ā€¢ Giant Panda ā€¢ Greater Flamingo ā€¢ Grizzly Bear ā€¢ Himalayan Brown Bear ā€¢ Hippopotamus ā€¢ Indian Elephant ā€¢ Indian Peafowl ā€¢ Indian Rhinoceros ā€¢ Japanese Macaque ā€¢ Mandrill ā€¢ Nile Monitor ā€¢ Nyala ā€¢ Okapi ā€¢ Plains Zebra ā€¢ Pronghorn Antelope ā€¢ Red Panda ā€¢ Red Ruffed Lemur ā€¢ Reticulated Giraffe ā€¢ Ring Tailed Lemur ā€¢ Sable Antelope ā€¢ Saltwater Crocodile ā€¢ Siberian Tiger ā€¢ Snow Leopard ā€¢ Spotted Hyena ā€¢ Springbok ā€¢ Timber Wolf ā€¢ West African Lion ā€¢ Western Chimpanzee ā€¢ Western Lowland Gorilla
ANNIVERSARY UPDATES
African Leopard ā€¢ Black-and-White Ruffed Lemur ā€¢ Collared Peccary ā€¢ Red Deer
STANDARD: EXHIBIT
Amazonian Giant Centipede ā€¢ Boa Constrictor ā€¢ Brazilian Salmon Pink Tarantula ā€¢ Brazilian Wandering Spider ā€¢ Common Death Adder ā€¢ Eastern Brown Snake ā€¢ Giant Burrowing Cockroach ā€¢ Giant Desert Hairy Scorpion ā€¢ Giant Forest Scorpion ā€¢ Giant Tiger Land Snail ā€¢ Gila Monster ā€¢ Golden Poison Frog ā€¢ Goliath Beetle ā€¢ Goliath Birdeater ā€¢ Goliath Frog ā€¢ Green Iguana ā€¢ Lehmann's Poison Frog ā€¢ Lesser Antillean Iguana ā€¢ Mexican Red Knee Tarantula ā€¢ Puff Adder ā€¢ Titan Beetle ā€¢ Western Diamondback Rattlesnake ā€¢ Yellow Anaconda
DELUXE EDITION
Komodo Dragon ā€¢ Pygmy Hippo ā€¢ Thomson's Gazelle
ARCTIC PACK
Arctic Wolf ā€¢ Dall Sheep ā€¢ Polar Bear ā€¢ Reindeer
SOUTH AMERICA PACK
Colombian White-Faced Capuchin Monkey ā€¢ Giant Anteater ā€¢ Jaguar ā€¢ Llama ā€¢ Red-Eyed Tree Frog
AUSTRALIA PACK
Dingo ā€¢ Koala ā€¢ Red Kangaroo ā€¢ Southern Cassowary ā€¢ Eastern Blue Tongued Lizard
AQUATIC PACK
Cuvier's Dwarf Caiman ā€¢ Giant Otter ā€¢ Grey Seal ā€¢ King Penguin ā€¢ Diamondback Terrapin
SOUTHEAST ASIA ANIMAL PACK
Binturong ā€¢ Clouded Leopard ā€¢ Dhole ā€¢ Malayan Tapir ā€¢ North Sulawesi Babirusa ā€¢ Proboscis Monkey ā€¢ Sun Bear ā€¢ Giant Malaysian Leaf Insect
AFRICA PACK
African Penguin ā€¢ Fennec Fox ā€¢ Meerkat ā€¢ Southern White Rhinoceros ā€¢ Sacred Scarab Beetle
NORTH AMERICA ANIMAL PACK
American Alligator ā€¢ Arctic Fox ā€¢ Black-Tailed Prairie Dog ā€¢ California Sea Lion ā€¢ Cougar ā€¢ Moose ā€¢ North American Beaver ā€¢ American Bullfrog
EUROPE PACK
Alpine Ibex ā€¢ Eurasian Lynx ā€¢ European Badger ā€¢ European Fallow Deer ā€¢ Fire Salamander
WETLANDS ANIMAL PACK
Asian Small-Clawed Otter ā€¢ Capybara ā€¢ Nile Lechwe ā€¢ Platypus ā€¢ Red-Crowned Crane ā€¢ Spectacled Caiman ā€¢ Wild Water Buffalo ā€¢ Danube Crested Newt
CONSERVATION PACK
Amur Leopard ā€¢ Axolotl ā€¢ Przewalski's Horse ā€¢ Scimitar-Horned Oryx ā€¢ Siamang
TWILIGHT PACK
Common Wombat ā€¢ Egyptian Fruit Bat ā€¢ Raccoon ā€¢ Red Fox ā€¢ Striped Skunk
GRASSLANDS ANIMAL PACK
Blue Wildebeest ā€¢ Caracal ā€¢ Cloudless Sulphur ā€¢ Emu ā€¢ European Peacock ā€¢ Maned Wolf ā€¢ Menelaus Blue Morpho ā€¢ Monarch ā€¢ Nine-Banded Armadillo ā€¢ Old World Swallowtail ā€¢ Red-Necked Wallaby ā€¢ Striped Hyena
TROPICAL PACK
Asian Water Monitor ā€¢ Brown-throated Sloth ā€¢ Fossa ā€¢ Lar Gibbon ā€¢ Red River Hog
ARID ANIMAL PACK
Addax ā€¢ African Crested Porcupine ā€¢ Black Rhinoceros ā€¢ Dama Gazelle ā€¢ Desert Horned Viper ā€¢ Dromedary Camel ā€¢ Sand Cat ā€¢ Somali Wild Ass
OCEANIA PACK
Little Penguin ā€¢ North Island Brown Kiwi ā€¢ Quokka ā€¢ Spectacled Flying Fox ā€¢ Tasmanian Devil
EURASIA ANIMAL PACK
Hermann's Tortoise ā€¢ Mute Swan ā€¢ Saiga ā€¢ Sloth Bear ā€¢ Takin ā€¢ Wild Boar ā€¢ Wisent ā€¢ Wolverine
BARNYARD ANIMAL PACK
Alpaca ā€¢ Alpine Goat ā€¢ American Standard Donkey ā€¢ Highland Cattle ā€¢ Hill Radnor Sheep ā€¢ Sussex Chicken ā€¢ Tamworth Pig
ZOOKEEPERS ANIMAL PACK
African Spurred Tortoise ā€¢ Coquerel's Sifaka ā€¢ Hamadryas Baboon ā€¢ Kirk's Dik-Dik ā€¢ Markhor ā€¢ Pallas's Cat ā€¢ Spectacled Bear
For the main article, see here.
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