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Post by oldindigosilverback on Sept 19, 2021 7:45:59 GMT -5
From Shortridge
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Post by arctozilla on Oct 5, 2021 11:24:25 GMT -5
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Post by Gorilla king on Oct 5, 2021 17:35:33 GMT -5
BROWN BEAR DISPLACES 2 WOLVES FROM KILL:
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Post by arctozilla on Oct 7, 2021 12:44:20 GMT -5
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Post by oldindigosilverback on Oct 10, 2021 22:56:37 GMT -5
Bears seem to make good kleptoparasites.
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Post by Gorilla king on Nov 6, 2021 9:47:48 GMT -5
NEW GRIZZLY-WOLVES INTERACTION:
Occurred on October 15, 2021 / Yellowstone, Wyoming, USA
"On October 15, 2021, while in Yellowstone for a week, we made a video of 10 plus Junction Pack Wolves fighting with a Grizzly Bear over pieces of Elk carcass. There was butt nipping and paw swiping but no injuries. Looked like they had done this before."
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Post by arctozilla on Nov 6, 2021 10:17:14 GMT -5
That bear was probably a juvenile. Dude it was skinny and small.
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Post by Gorilla king on Nov 6, 2021 10:39:37 GMT -5
That bear was probably a juvenile. Dude it was skinny and small. I agree, didn't look that large next to the wolves. Anyhow, looks like he held the carcass, at least until the end of the video. The guy talking said "he is throwing the wolves around", "the bear is trying to kill the wolves"
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Post by arctozilla on Nov 6, 2021 11:00:06 GMT -5
Very good so that means if a juvenile bear can hold a pack of wolves then a male adult grizzly would do that easier.
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Post by Gorilla king on Nov 6, 2021 11:24:47 GMT -5
Very good so that means if a juvenile bear can hold a pack of wolves then a male adult grizzly would do that easier. Yeah sure, plenty of videos and accounts in this thread show this.
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Post by Gorilla king on Dec 30, 2021 21:36:07 GMT -5
Video: Grizzly Bear Runs with Wolves in Yellowstone, Then Steals Their Elk Kill
The National Park Service called this phenomenon "kleptoparasitism," which means parasitism by theft
BY SAGE MARSHALL | PUBLISHED DEC 30, 2021 2:55
An unusual inter-species interaction took place in Yellowstone National Park this fall, and National Park Service (NPS) biologists were able to capture it on film. In October, a grizzly bear was reportedly seen running—and even hunting—with a pack of wolves. “On the morning of October 21, 2021, visitors watching wildlife in Yellowstone’s northern range were amazed when they saw an adult grizzly bear seemingly hunting elk with the Junction Butte Wolf Pack,” writes Yellowstone National Park Service in a Facebook post on December 15. “Wolves and bears typically compete with one another for prey, so why might this be happening?”
Well, the biologists that were on the scene quickly found out why—and it wasn’t because the wolves benefited from the bear’s presence. Instead, a group of wolves from the Junction Butte Pack, which is one of the park’s most well-known, successfully takes down a cow elk, no thanks to the grizzly bear. But the bear soon shows up at the scene of the wolf’s kill and successfully pushes them off of their it to feed.
“Typically, wolves will yield to incoming bears. Since hunting is dangerous and often unsuccessful, it’s better for wolves to wait their turn at a carcass that has been usurped by a bear than it is for them to continue hunting,” explains the Yellowstone NPS. “From the bear’s perspective, it takes a lot of energy to follow a wolf pack around, but the reward is high if it successfully takes over a carcass. A fresh elk carcass is a wonderful source of fat and protein for a grizzly bear preparing for hibernation. This bear seems to have figured out that following the wolves in the morning will increase its chances of encountering a high-calorie meal.”
Yellowstone National Park is home to approximately 150 grizzly bears and at least 123 wolves, according to the NPS. Ninety percent of the wolves’ winter diets are made up of elk. Grizzly bears have also been known to effectively hunt elk, but are known as opportunistic feeders and often scavenge the kills of other predators. The Yellowstone NPS calls the recent interaction between the grizzly and wolves a case of “kleptoparasitism,” which literally translates to parasitism by theft. Science Direct explains that this phenomenon is “a form of resource acquisition where one animal takes resources from another.” Well, the big bruin didn’t care about the elaborate scientific terminology for what it did; it had a belly full of fresh elk meat.
www.fieldandstream.com/survival/grizzly-bear-hunts-with-wolves-yellowstone-park/
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Post by Gorilla king on Jan 2, 2022 22:21:20 GMT -5
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Post by Montezuma on Jan 3, 2022 22:42:13 GMT -5
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Post by Montezuma on Jan 3, 2022 22:49:34 GMT -5
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Post by Gorilla king on Jan 4, 2022 15:21:25 GMT -5
Reply #73
That is a great find there bro. There aren't many accounts of bears killing wolves, this is because wolves are very hard to catch for bears. But now we have 6/7 accounts of dead wolves.
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Post by Gorilla king on Feb 6, 2022 7:11:31 GMT -5
New study shows wolves change behavior around bears
A new study at University of Montana shows Yellowstone wolves change their behavior around bears.
Biologists wanted to know more about how predators interact with each other.
UM released the following on Feb. 4:
If you are a wolf living in Yellowstone National Park, bears mess with you. They show up uninvited and steal kills from your pack. And when scavenging bears drive you away from tasty carcasses, you and your fellow wolves will – strangely enough – kill less often.
The reasons for this unexpected finding are explored in a new study by researchers at the University of Montana, Yellowstone National Park, Norwegian Institute for Nature Research and others. The work was published in the scientific journal Ecological Monographs.
“In both Yellowstone and Scandinavia, previous research had shown how the presence of bears led to wolf kill rates that were lower,” said Dr. Matthew Metz, a research associate with the Yellowstone Wolf Project, who earned his doctorate in wildlife biology from UM in December. “This was exciting because it showed that wolf foraging behavior doesn’t occur in a vacuum – it is affected by other apex predators on the landscape.”
This latest study delved into the competitive mechanisms that lead to decreased kill rates by wolves, and examined whether they were the same between continents.
Research has shown that larger cat species kill more often when sharing hunting grounds with bears. Bears drive them away from kill sites, and the cats are forced back to hunting, driving up their predator kill rates. Metz said this dynamic differs for wolves.
“What we did was break down the wolf foraging sequence,” he said. “We studied their searching time and their handling time – the amount of time they spend eating and digesting their kills.”
The researchers found that wolf handling times sometimes increased when bears were around, including for the wolf-bear interactions during summer in Yellowstone National Park. Aimee Tallian, a scientist with the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research and the lead author of the international study, said they suspect wolves stick around more to defend their kills, or they move back and forth from kills sites more often to avoid confrontations with bears.
Metz said wolf behavior also is greatly affected by the seasons. In winter, wolves experience less competition when bears hibernate. In the summer, wolves are denning and raising pups, which affects their foraging behavior since they must care for their young.
The primary ungulate prey of wolves – elk in Yellowstone and moose in Scandinavia – are born in large pulses in the early summer, and the presence of newborn prey drives up kill rates. However, adult prey become hardier as their nutrition improves during warmer months, and bears have emerged from hibernation to complicate matters.
The researchers studied two types of competition between bears and wolves: exploitation and interference. Tallian studied both forms in Scandinavia, and researchers focused on interference competition in Yellowstone.
Exploitation competition happens when the two species vie for the same prey in the same area. If one predator is successful, it leaves less available prey for the competitor species. Metz said this form of competition is expected to mostly occur in the early summer, when wolves and bears both hunt and kill newborn elk or moose calves.
Interference competition happens when wolves and bears actually confront one another. Usually it’s wolves killing prey and then bears sometimes stealing their kills.
With both forms of competition, the kill rates for wolves would diminish when bears were around. In this study, the researchers leveraged data about wolf foraging dynamics to decipher which form of competition was operating.
“Relatively little had been known about how bears affected the foraging dynamics of wolves,” Metz said. “Our work starts to fill in the gap by demonstrating that the dynamics do differ and provides another reminder of how changes in ecosystem complexity – in this case the presence of bears – affects the behavior of other species.”
A Cleveland native, Metz came to Montana in 2000 to earn his undergraduate degree from UM’s highly regarded Wildlife Biology program. He then used two decades of work with the Yellowstone Wolf Project to help complete his graduate work. For his doctorate, he was mentored by renowned researcher Mark Hebblewhite, a UM professor of ungulate habitat ecology in the W.A. Franke College of Forestry & Conservation.
Metz said the North American portion of the data for this recent study resulted from long-term work assessing summer wolf predation from May to July. The Yellowstone work involved hiking to clusters of locations pinpointed by Global Positioning Systems on wolf collars.
“We investigated those locations for carcasses where wolves fed,” he said. “Most of the carcasses that we found were elk. At these sites, we then also documented the presence of other scavengers, including bears.”
What’s it like doing research in one of America’s most-treasured national parks?
“Northern Yellowstone is an amazing place to work,” he said. “There are mountain peaks with amazing views that let you see all the way to the Tetons on a clear day. However, we also have picked our way through miles of super-dense forest ‘regen’ resulting from the 1988 fires to search for wolf GPS locations in the absolute middle of nowhere. But the sum total of all those days over many years led to an amazing data set.”
Metz said it was exciting to work on an international research project.
“Aimee brought together teams from the Yellowstone Wolf Project, the Scandinavian Wolf Project and the Scandinavian Brown Bear Research Project,” Metz said. “This led to an incredible experience of working with and learning from researchers from the Scandinavian system.”
He and Tallian said the Scandinavian team had developed long-term data about wolf predation just like the study team in Yellowstone. Scandinavia and Yellowstone also have similar species on the landscape. But there were differences: The primary prey species for wolves in Scandinavia was not the same (moose instead of elk), bear density was lower and the landscape had been more heavily modified by humans.
“The ability to compare and contrast findings from each system was powerful,” Metz said. “Using the data from each system, as well as the collective understanding of the systems from researchers with many decades of experience, really helped us understand how the components of each ecosystem may have affected our results.”
And these results reveal some of the reasons how bears change how wolves hunt and kill, no matter which side of the globe they live on.
www.google.com/amp/s/nbcmontana.com/amp/news/local/new-study-shows-wolves-change-behavior-around-bears
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Post by arctozilla on Feb 6, 2022 10:28:52 GMT -5
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Post by arctozilla on Feb 6, 2022 11:39:59 GMT -5
/\ it's now truly an established fact that grizzlies dominate pack of wolves. I don't care if the wolfaboos and doggo fanboys refuse to accept this and the cat fanatics crap out on this. Truth doesn't change.
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Post by Gorilla king on Feb 12, 2022 17:45:55 GMT -5
Apennine wolf vs Marsican bear
Description of the video:
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Post by arctozilla on Feb 13, 2022 2:26:26 GMT -5
/\ I know that in Abruzzo there are wolves and brown bears. But don't get why we have not any records about their interactions.
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