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Post by Gorilla king on Sept 4, 2021 17:36:49 GMT -5
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Post by Gorilla king on Sept 4, 2021 17:45:50 GMT -5
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Post by Gorilla king on Sept 4, 2021 17:50:34 GMT -5
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Post by Gorilla king on Sept 4, 2021 17:53:33 GMT -5
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Post by arctozilla on Sept 19, 2021 12:12:48 GMT -5
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Post by Gorilla king on Sept 19, 2021 13:20:15 GMT -5
Its just wrong, plain and simple. No idea why they would put something like that.
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Post by nocap on Sept 24, 2021 14:12:39 GMT -5
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Post by Montezuma on Nov 10, 2021 20:06:24 GMT -5
Native americans (Red indians), dressed as grizzly bear, eagle and sheep in animal ritual dance.
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Post by Montezuma on Nov 10, 2021 20:08:44 GMT -5
Native american dressed as grizzly bear and eagle. (Two most sacred animals to them).
A red indian sculpture of a grizzly bear.
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Post by Gorilla king on Nov 24, 2021 10:01:59 GMT -5
Am so glad to see new news of "The Boss" (the bear at replies 22-24)
THE BEAST OF BANFF Massive 600lb ‘cannibal’ bear dubbed ‘The Boss’ who was hit by a train & lived as tourists warned to stay away from him
ROAMING the hills of a national park in Canada is a suspected cannibal bear known as "The Boss" as visitors are urged to stay away from him.
The behemoth 600 lb male grizzly - officially designated Bear 122 - is the largest bear prowling Banff National Park.
His status has been elevated to one of internet legend as fans track his activity and his sightings online.
He has become known as one of the world's biggest and baddest bears - with 122 this week making waves once again on Reddit.
Video posted to a nature subreddit showed a bear identified as The Boss prowling across a road showing off his mighty claws.
The massive mammal is heavier than three grown men, roams the hills and woods near Banff, and is usually the first bear to emerge from hibernation.
He is estimated to be around 20 years old and is the biggest bear in the national park, hence his name "The Boss".
And perhaps the most horrifying fact about 122, is that he is known to kill and cannibalise other smaller bears.
It was documented in 2013 when The Boss is thought to have killed and eaten a smaller rival in Sundance Canyon.
"It had been completely consumed,"Steve Michel, a human wildlife conflict specialist with Banff National Park told The National Post.
"There was nothing remaining other than a skull, a hide, the four paws and some bones."
He added: "It looks like that black bear just happened to find himself in the wrong place at the wrong time when a very large grizzly bear came by."
And the expert added it would have likely been a "fairly quick fight" as The Boss was some five times larger than the 45lb black bear.
He’s the most dominant male grizzly...and there’s nothing else in the food chain that could push him off
Dan Rafla
"[The Boss] is definitely the dominant animal out on the landscape, so there are very few animals that would compare against him in terms of size," added Mr Michel.
And just to add to his tough guy reputation, Bear 122 is also reported to have once been hit by a train and survived.
He is still known to cross railway lines in his in his 1,000 square mile territory being completely fearless despite his near miss.
Experts have urged people to stay away from The Boss - just as they would any other bear - with there being five fatal bear attacks in North America over the past two years.
However, The Boss so far has not reported to have been aggressive to humans.
But he is known to viciously fight - and win - against other bears, including his biggest rival a 500lb grizzly called Split Lip.
Bear 122 also ventures into the nearby national parks of Yoho and Kootenay in his search for food and potential mates.
He is believed to have sired cubs across his vast home home range, with experts saying his life revolves around "food and mating".
Dan Rafla, a human-wildlife coexistence specialist with Parks Canada, told The Culture Trip: "He’s the boss of this landscape.
"He’s the most dominant male grizzly in the Bow Valley…and there’s nothing else in the food chain that could push him off."
He added: "There are only a few grizzlies that big in the area, so people become more familiar with the bears they get to see more.
"He’s seen enough to be recognized."
Mr Rafla added that animal observers in the park however are keen to discourage use of his nickname The Boss.
They fear it will build up his celebrity and could lead to dangerous encounters with tourists keen to get snaps of him.
Parks Canada ecologist Ryan Phinney said: "It has personalized him to the point people think it’s just part of the park experience to go see and meet him."
He added: "With a name, it attaches all kinds of ideas and expectations to an animal, it can define it.
"We don’t want people to see these animals as celebrities because it minimizes them, their impact on the environment and their richness as animals.”
However, 122's legend continue to grow - with his size and continued appearances around Banff boosting his reputation.
www.google.com/amp/s/www.the-sun.com/news/4128514/cannibal-bear-the-boss-canada/amp/
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Post by Gorilla king on Nov 25, 2021 12:06:15 GMT -5
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Post by arctozilla on Nov 25, 2021 13:59:17 GMT -5
/\ then cat fanatics say grizzly beats aren't apex predators. LOL
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Post by fluffyfatbear on Nov 25, 2021 14:31:07 GMT -5
/\ then cat fanatics say grizzly beats aren't apex predators. LOL yeah, a 600 pound aggressive fur ball made of thick evolutionary Armour and strength, cat fans think this thing is NOT an apex predator? Lmao
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Post by Montezuma on Dec 10, 2021 5:02:34 GMT -5
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Post by arctozilla on Dec 15, 2021 7:44:32 GMT -5
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Post by brobear on Dec 15, 2021 15:40:03 GMT -5
Ever since the reintroduction of wolves, the Yellowstone grizzlies have been eating more red meat. Just about the time when the garbage cans in the park were made bear-proof, along came the wolf packs which presented the bears with more opportunities for acquiring healthier foods.
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Post by arctozilla on Dec 16, 2021 4:13:05 GMT -5
/\ yes it seems like that grizzly bears are largely carnivorous.
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Post by Gorilla king on Dec 16, 2021 4:48:43 GMT -5
Ever since the reintroduction of wolves, the Yellowstone grizzlies have been eating more red meat. Just about the time when the garbage cans in the park were made bear-proof, along came the wolf packs which presented the bears with more opportunities for acquiring healthier foods. Take a look at reply #31, you wont believe this but from 1914-1918, the Yellowstone garbage-fed grizzlies ate 85% of meat, then the contemporary Yellowstone adult male grizzlies actually went just a bit down, to 80% of meat.
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Post by brobear on Dec 17, 2021 8:59:04 GMT -5
Ever since the reintroduction of wolves, the Yellowstone grizzlies have been eating more red meat. Just about the time when the garbage cans in the park were made bear-proof, along came the wolf packs which presented the bears with more opportunities for acquiring healthier foods. Take a look at reply #31, you wont believe this but from 1914-1918, the Yellowstone garbage-fed grizzlies ate 85% of meat, then the contemporary Yellowstone adult male grizzlies actually went just a bit down, to 80% of meat.Sure, when meat was present in the garbage along with cake, flapjacks, old bread, and other food items that bears and I love.
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Post by Gorilla king on Dec 21, 2021 20:27:15 GMT -5
Epiphyseal Fusion in Brown Bears: A Population Study of Grizzlies (Ursus arctos horribilis) from Montana and Wyoming
Abstract
This contribution presents results of a study of the timing of appendicular epiphyseal fusion in brown bears (Ursus arctos) based on the visual examination of 86 modern skeletons of grizzlies (U. a. horribilis) of known age and sex from the greater Yellowstone area, in the States of Wyoming and Montana (US). The timing of fusion in brown bears was compared with the (scant) information available for the black bear (Ursus americanus); both similarities and differences were found. It is still inconclusive whether the discrepancies stem from the methods of study (visual examination vs. X-rays) or whether they reflect real difference in fusion ages. It is suggested that data derived from U. arctos can be used profitably to investigate mortality patterns of extinct bears such as the cave bear Ursus spelaeus. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
www.researchgate.net/publication/229558974_Epiphyseal_Fusion_in_Brown_Bears_A_Population_Study_of_Grizzlies_Ursus_arctos_horribilis_from_Montana_and_Wyoming
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