No, "The Tale of the Dancing Bear" is a work of fiction, typically referred to in a literary or storytelling context. This phrase is not usually used to describe a real-life event.
The main weakness is its balls getting to them is not easy If you have a gun aim straight at its balls. I would wait just to get a clear shot at it when you have one shoot more than once or five times I mould use a powerful shotgun or rifle or whatever as long as it's powerful. Another weakness is the eye gouge it after you have shot in the balls for more damage. If it's a female shooting it in the family jewels will do alot of damage I would shoot it more than once maybe five or more.Once you have done that go up to the bear and if you have a sharp object like a knife drive it into it balls
Yes, Wolves rarely do kill Bears if the pack is here to help the pack leader by jumping and clamping it's jaws on the back or the butt and the muzzle of the bear & then the bear will be killed and eaten by the whole pack of wolves for them to feed, especially carcasses of bison, elk, horses, deer, or male bears.
Some bear species can run as fast as 35 mph at top speed, this includes Brown Bears and Grizzly Bears. Black Bears and Polar Bears, for example, are a bit slower and average about 25 to 30 mph at top speed.
So any animal with a top speed of over 35 mph would be faster. Some good examples are Cheetah (at 70 mph), Elk (at 45 MPH), Zebra (at 40 MPH) and Lions (at 50 MPH).
Bears live in India. One species that can be found there is the sloth bear. A sloth bear is a nocturnal bear that eats insects. It is also known as the Stickney bear or labiated bear.
Most bears are believed to be dangerous because of the lack of respect and understanding humans have with them. Bears are only dangerous if a person does not heed the warning signs a bear gives them, or makes quick sudden movements and high-pitched noises which could make the bear think they are prey. But mostly it's due to a misunderstanding of bear behaviour and psychology that make them seem so dangerous.
Technically, bears ARE vulperines. Vulperine is the name given to a prehistoric group of wolf-like mammals from which all modern carnivorous mammals descended including dogs, bears, hyenas, cats, weasels, seals, etc.
The hippo would definitely win this fight because a hippo has a larger body with thick skin and a huge jaw that can crush the black bear to death. One hippo can even kill a polar bear without getting injured.
When fallen fruits ferment, alcohol is produced. Small animals like sparrows or squirrels can easily get drunk eating fermented berries. However, drunkenness is a function of the percentage of alcohol in the blood stream, so a bear would need to eat a very large volume of fermented berries in order to become drunk.
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15 an hour. Fish to bear eating is a much smaller ratio.
Basically little or nothing, their Metabolism slows down to a point where they seem semi-comatose and spend most of the winter asleep [hibernation] in a sheltered spot.
Before Europeans came to America, there was a subspecies of the grizzly bear known as the Plains grizzly. It was found in the grasslands of North America. It had very light yellow colored hair and was smaller in size, as adaptations to the grassland life. With the arrival of Europeans, the bears themselves as well as their animal prey food sources were heavily hunted causing their extinction by the mid to late 1800's.
Probably the most opposite would be an ant. Bears are large and solitary whereas ants are very small and community animals.
Well it depends on which bear if it's a polar bear they mostly eat seals or sea lions. Maybe even walruses. If its a grizzly bear probably fish.
um it like never cuz we are away from the bears and we only have bear in the zoo so it rare to get attack by bears