Yes. Unless one escapes from a zoo, they will not be found in the wild.
Yes, but after the loss of land bridges to Europe, it became extinct. Due to hunting and habitat loss, it is practically extinct in Europe outside of Russia, with small populations in the Pyrenees and northern Italy.
Brown bear
Grizzly Bears are not extinct.
There are some european brown bears in England and European countires. These brown bears are a little bit bigger in size and lighter in color than grizzly bears. The brown bear was a residence in England til around 500 A.D. They were exterminated from Britain shortly thereafter.
There are now no bears in Africa. The Atlas bear once lived in north Africa, but this subspecies of the brown bear is now extinct.
They are not extinct.
1. Koalas are not bears. 2. Koalas are not extinct.
There are no bears in Sudan. In fact, no bears live in Africa. Until the 1870s, there was a subspecies of brown bear called the Atlas Bear that lived in Morocco, in North Africa, but it is now extinct.
Black bears are definitely not going extinct! The population of black bears is very healthy.
Bears HAVE instinct much like people have instinct. So take that as a Yes or No. Or if you mean "are bears EXTINCT" then No. Instinct and extinct are not opposites.
There are black bears, but no brown bears there.
No. Grizzly bears are a subspecies of Brown bears, so that although all Grizzly bears are Brown bears not all Brown bears are Grizzly bears.