Of course. Such threats include habitat loss, poaching for the Chinese black market, not to mention the compromise of the ability to live naturally in the wild when there's all the opportunities of getting their food from humans via their garbage, or even people offering hand-outs to the bears.
Brown bear. The American black bear attacks more humans than any other species.
An Asiatic Black Bear has less fur than a sloth bear on its head and does not have any marks on its head. Sloth bears climb trees like sloths do, and sloth bears have claws like sloths do. Asiatic black bears are more aggressive and dangerous than sloth bears.
The Black Bear, and any Bear for that matter, any Mammal, are warmblooded creatures.
The Black Bear, and any Bear for that matter, any Mammal, are warmblooded creatures.
The Kermode, or Spirit bear, is a genetic subset of the American black bear. It faces the same dangers as any black bear. Grizzlies have occasionally killed black bears, but the main danger any bear faces is loss of habitat, human encroachment, poaching. The Kermode is protected from human hunting in British Columbia. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kermode_bear
Yeah, it does. It interacts with what it eats, such as fish, or any other living creature. It also interacts with bear predators, etc. :)
I know they have poor eyesight, but they make up for it in hearing and in smell.
no
A single word like that is unlikely to translate into "little black bear" in English, simply because "little" and "black" would have to be expressed as separate concepts in most native languages.The Ojibwe term makwa means simply "bear"; to say "black bear" is two words - makadewi-makwa. To make this a "little black bear" adds a diminutive ending (-oons): makadewi-makoons.So makoons on its own simply means a bear cub, which might be brown, black or any other colour.
a black bear on the average weighs about any where from 300 to 500 lb .
The polar bear is much stronger than any black bear. Even a very large male black bear would be no match for a female polar bear.
I don't think there are any, except those that live in a zoo.