All about the Brown Bear

grizzly bear

Brown bear {Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

The brown bear (Ursus arctos) can be found in North America and northern areas of Eurasia. There are sixteen recognized subspecies of the brown bear. This is the most widely distributed species of bear in the world, although its range is shrinking. Its range includes the Alaska and a few other areas of the United States, areas of Russia, and Romania and other areas of the Carpathian region, as well as Canada, Sweden, Finland, and the Balkans. The brown bear derives its common name from the coloring of its fur, and is sometimes known as bruun, bruyn, or bruin. It derives its scientific name from the Latin and Greek words for bear, ursus and arctos respectively, and this is known as a tautology.

Generally, the brown bear can reach an average body length between 4.6 and 9.2 feet, with a height between 28 to 60 inches and a tail length between 2.4 and 8.7 inches. Males can grow to be three times the size of females in many subspecies. This difference in size is shown most notably in a few subspecies, including the Eurasian brown bear and the grizzly bear. It is thought that these variations are caused by the location of each subspecies, because their genetic data does not display major differences. Inland bears are typically smaller than bears found in other areas, like the Eurasian grizzly bear, which can measure 3.3 feet in length. The largest subspecies occur in far eastern areas of Russia and in Alaska and these are the Kodiak bear and Kamchatka brown bear, although other bears from coastal Asia and western areas of North America can reach large sizes as well. Female brown bears in this area can weigh up to 700 pounds and males can reach a weight of up to 1,400 pounds. Naturally, after hibernation, brown bears will weigh considerably less than when they enter hibernation.

The fur of the brown bear is typically long, and grows longer at the neck creating a mane. The coloring of the fur can vary depending upon the location, from reddish brown in India to bi-colored in China. In North America, brown bears can vary in color from light cream to dark brown or black. The winter fur of the species is long, particularly the fur of northern subspecies, which can reach a length of five inches, and the summer fur is short and can vary in length depending upon the location. The claws of this species are long, reaching an average length between 2 and 3.9 inches. These claws can vary in color from light to dark, and are blunt. Because of this and its large size, the adult brown bear cannot climb trees.

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Source:  Red Orbit
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Bear Hunting in Alaska: Which Rifle to Bring?

"Bear Hunting in Alaska: Which Rifle to Bring?" [file photo]

“Bear Hunting in Alaska: Which Rifle to Bring?” [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

The question is not so much what you’ll be hunting as, will you be in bear country? I have hunted caribou in Alaska with a .270, .270 WSM, and 7mm Weatherby Magnum, and all three did fine. Except that, on the hunt where I had the 7mm, I was checked out by a young boar grizzly, who seemed to find the guide, my friend, and me mildly disappointing and wandered away. If he had been a mature boar grizzly, I might have wished for a much bigger rifle.

I’ve known, personally, two guides who had to kill bears (one a brown, the other a grizzly) who were trying to do the same to them. One guide did the job himself with a .416 wildcat. The other guide had a .44 Magnum revolver, and the attack took place very suddenly over the disputed carcass of a caribou. The guide told me that if his client had not stood his ground and shot very quickly and very accurately with a .338, he might not be there to tell me the story.

So, my solution to Alaska rifle question (unless you’re way up in sheep and goat country where the chances of a bear encounter are fairly small) is to take something like a .338 loaded with 200- or 210-grain bullets for whatever you’re after, and stick a half-dozen 250-grain loads where you can get at them very quickly if you have to. This is if you’re hunting the non-dangerous stuff.

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Story by:  David E. Petzal
Source: Field & Stream
For more information on Alaska Bear Hunting, click the active link.
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Montana Grizzly bear plan released

Montana Grizzly Bear management

The goal is to maintain a genetically diverse NCDE grizzly bear population with at least 800 grizzly bears, the plan says. The agency will take public comment for 90 days. [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

A draft conservation plan to manage grizzly bears in northcentral and western Montana once federal protections are lifted was released by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Friday.

The 150-page document was created by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and other federal agencies, the state of Montana and tribal governments, said Chris Servheen, grizzly bear coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Servheen emphasized that the conservation plan is not a proposal to remove the grizzly bear from the list of threatened and endangered species at this time. The status of grizzlies remains “threatened.”

However, the conservation strategy, when approved, will serve as the post-delisting management plan for grizzly bears and habitat in the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem. And once the conservation strategy is approved, the agency plans to move forward with efforts to remove federal protections, possibly as soon as next year, Servheen said.

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Story by: Karl Puckett
Source: Great Falls Tribune
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Bear Hunter harvest Polar-Grizzly Hybrid

When he heard the news of a grizzly-polar bear hybrid shot in Canada’s Arctic last month, Tom Seaton thought back to an unusual polar bear hide he’d once seen at Nelson Walker’s home in Kotzebue.

“He had two polar bear rugs in his house – one was a huge one, and the other was special; it had lots of brown in it,” Seaton said. “It looked like a regular polar bear, but for every square inch of hide, 5 to 20 percent of the hairs were brown instead of white.”

Walker, who has since passed on, was a polar bear hunting guide in the village; Seaton was then a teenage hunter who loved to listen to Walker’s stories. He’s now a biologist with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game in Fairbanks. Because he had heard that polar bears and brown bears had bred successfully in a zoo, Seaton was pretty sure Walker’s white-and-brown hide was from the mating of a polar bear and a brown bear.

That combination of large bears is so rare that DNA testing of the hybrid bear shot in 2006 off Banks Island in Canada’s high Arctic proved for the first time that a wild bear had a polar bear as its mother and a grizzly as its father. An Associated Press reporter wrote that the bear had brown patches on its white coat, long claws, and the humped back of a grizzly.

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Story by: By Ned Rozell | Alaska Science Forum
Source:  Capital City Weekly
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Wyoming Grizzly delisting next year?

Grizzly bears could be delisted in the next year or so, but it must be proven the bruins can get by without whitebark pine nuts.

That’s what Mark Bruscino said at the Wyoming Outfitters Guide Association and Cody Country Outfitters and Guides Association meeting Saturday morning in Cody.

Bruscino is the Wyoming Game and Fish Department statewide supervisor of the large carnivore management section.

He was part of a panel comprised of state and federal officials and one outfitter.

“I’m optimistic — knock on wood — that we’re going to move this thing forward in the next 12 to 14 months,” Bruscino said.

Whitebark pine has declined by 90 percent in some areas of the northern Rockies.

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Written by Gib Mathers
Source: Powell Tribune
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How to get the Squared Measurement a Bear Hide

How to Square a bear ide

How to get the Squared Size of Measuring a Bear Hide.

To square a bear hide, have the bear lying flat on its stomach and measure the tip of the nose to the tip of the tail. Write that number down. Then measure from the tip of the longest claw on left front paw, across the back to the tip of the opposing longest claw on the right paw.

Add the first measurement, nose to tail, to the second measurement, paw to paw. Then divide by 2. That should give you the “square” of your bear.

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Alberta G&F wants a limited grizzly bear hunt

EDMONTON — The Alberta Fish and Game Association wants the province to bring back a grizzly bear hunting in areas where it says there are too many of the animals.

Grizzly Bear Hunting

“Part of the push for a renewed bear hunt is coming from ranchers who live in southwest Alberta.” [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

The government suspended the hunt in 2006 over fears of dwindling numbers and declared grizzlies a threatened species in 2010.

The association, which represents about 24,000 hunters and anglers, has passed two resolutions calling for a new, limited hunt.

“It is only where there is a harvestable excess of grizzly bears — where they are causing problems, where they are spreading out beyond their territory because of no hunting anymore,” association president Gord Poirier said Wednesday.

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Source: CTV News Canada
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Alaska Board walks middle road for bear hunters

Alaska Bear Hunting

“Public testimony given at the board meeting was clearly in favor of enhanced hunting opportunity through boosting the moose population and liberalizing the wolf and brown bear hunts.” [Bear Hunting Blog file photo]

When the Board of Game met mid-March in Kenai, members had their work cut out for them. They were set to address several local game management and hunting issues, many of them contentious and sensitive to those of us living here.

Somehow, the board managed to walk the tight rope, and successfully address local concerns about moose, bear and wolf populations. That’s no easy feat.

Public testimony given at the board meeting was clearly in favor of enhanced hunting opportunity through boosting the moose population and liberalizing the wolf and brown bear hunts.

The board took action to increase the hunting and trapping of wolves by expanding the public trapping season and authorizing the Alaska Department of Fish and Game to hire trappers to target wolves. That comes on the heels of a previous decision to authorize public permits to be issued for the aerial shooting of wolves in 15C and the shooting of wolves by department employees via helicopter in non-federally-managed portions of 15A.

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Source: Peninsula Clarion
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Scoring Bear Skulls for the SCI Record Books

How to Score a Bear

Scoring Bear for the Safari Club International Record Books.

I. LENGTH OF SKULL

Measure the length of the bear skull parallel to its longitudinal axis. This measurement may include the lower jaw and normal teeth, if that will increase the measurement.

II. WIDTH OF SKULL

Measure the width of the bear skull at a right angle to its longitudinal axis. This measurement is taken across the zygomatic arches, or cheek bones.

III. TOTAL SCORE

Total the measurements. When measuring in inches, record fractions in 1/16ths of an inch. Metric measurements are recorded to 0.1 cm.

Damaged skulls: Only existing bear skull material may be measured. Missing skull material must not be estimated or allowed for. Details of any skull damage should be noted on the entry form.

Repaired skulls: Only original bear skull material from the same animal may be measured, either in its original state, or acceptably put back together so  as not to increase any measurement. Any other material, either natural or taxidermic, that has  been added to the skull is not to be measured. Details of skull repair must be noted on the entry form, and photographs clearly showing the repair will be required. The Trophy Records Committee reserves the right to require a repaired trophy to be submitted for inspection.

Source:  Safari Club International
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