yes they are the same
brown bears are the spiece as grizzles so yes they do
Ursidae. The same family that black bears, grizzly bears and brown bears are classified in.
Brown bears and grizzly bears are not the same kind of bear. Brown bears are found along the coasts in cold places, such as Alaska, and are larger than grizzly bears.
Yes. Brown bears are bigger than grizzly bears. The grizzly bear is a race of the brown bear. The European race and the North American inland grizzly are roughly the same size, males can reach 800 pounds or more. The really big brownies come from coastal areas, as the Katmai and Kodiak bears.
No..They are totally different species. The grizzly is a race of the brown bear.
Actually, it's a "race" and it's the other way around. Grizzlies are a "race" of Brown bear. So All Grizzlies are Brown Bears but not all Brown Bears are Grizzlies. It is actually a race, not a subspecies. {actually, race is the same as subspecies. Generally, race is used more commonly for birds, subspecies for mammals.}
Actually, brown bears don't live in Saskatchewan. Grizzly bears do, which are considered the same species as brown bears, but many consider them different. Temperatures these bears live in range from -10 C to over +30 C.
They are both bears.
Your question is Specious because you actually can hunt grizzly bears (brown bears are essentially the same animal). There are many areas where you cannot, such as Florida (because there aren't any, most locations around the world fall into this category), Colorado (because there is not a viable population to support a hunting season, parts of the northwestern US and western Canada fall into this category). Parts of Alaska, Canada and probably Russia, allow hunting of grizzly's/brown bears.
Grizzly bears don't affect the life of polar bears. They are just the same type of species living in a different area . They have no effect on each other.
No
three