It depends on the scenario and the incident of the fight. A grizzly bear has sharp enough claws to pierce into the bull's head and swat that thing to death. If the bull charges and gores the grizzly bear with those horns, it would win the fight against the grizzly bear.
Answer 2:A grizzly would not dare take on a big bull in a natural environment. And a bull, like all prey animals, would rather run the other way than take on a great bear like a grizzly. But if a fight should occur, a bull, if he has horns, would gore the bear in the ribs, or if he's not horned, would crush the bear's ribs with his head to the point that the bear may die soon after. The bear will try to claw at the bull with his long claws and bite at the throat, but the dewlap on the bull, not to mention the bull's thick, muscular neck, would protect him from serious injury. Thus, a bull would win.In actual practice, it turns out they don't fight very often. Black bears are smaller and tend to run from grizzlies rather than attempt to fight them.
If it does come down to a fight, the grizzly usually wins.
A grizzly bear would win.
bear
a puma would eat a black bear.
A grizzuma.
Man, wolves, puma, grizzly bears.
Definitely, yes. A polar bear stands 13 ft tall, while a grizzly bear is 9 ft. Polar bears weigh 1800 pounds, while grizzly bears weigh 1500 pounds. Polar bears have longer claws and thicker paws than grizzly bears. Polar bears have stronger jaws and sharper teeth. All the grizzly bear has to do is to run away.
A grizzumagorillantula (from Steven Kellogg's Pecos Bill).
Humans and other animals such as: The puma, the american bear, grizzly bears, and even people who are provoked.
Normally, large predators tend to avoid each other. The cat would be too fast for the bear, but the bear more powerful. Chances are, the puma would relinquish the field to the bear. Unless, in defense of her young.
In most areas the puma would be a level 3 - a secondary consumer that eats herbivores. In other areas they are level 5 - apex predators. Bears, grizzly bears, wolf packs and jaguars are sometimes competitors that out-rank the puma.
Puma would kill the ostrich.
Bears. Black bears can chase off pumas, or pumas chase them off. When they fight to the death, black bear easily wins, being larger and more powerful. Grizzly bears/and brown bears) almost always win because a puma runs away. Sometimes a puma will swat the bear, and jump away and keep doing it until the bear leaves, or the puma gives up. If they fight to the death the bear has no problem in killing the puma with one swat in the head. Coyotes. The 40 pound coyote is no match for the 200 pound puma, but sometimes a pack will drive one off, or sometimes the cougar will not leave or kill some of the coyotes. Wolves. A single wolf is killed by a puma but they have to fight and avoid getting hurt, though a cougar is no match for a pack or more than one wolf. They fight and bite each other and then the puma bites the wolfs neck which is the end of the wolf. Though some single wolves can kill a single male or female puma by fighting and biting, and then grabbing the cat by the throat killing it. Though a puma is about 90% more likely to win. Sometimes a puma will be driven away by a single wolf that only threatens by snarling and growling. Humans. They shoot pumas for fun, fur, livestock attacking, pet attacking, walking in their property, and attacking people. Wolverines. Wolverines can drive pumas from there kills by threatening the cat, though if they fought either one could win, though the cougar is more likely to win. Eagles. Killing an eagle is easy for a cougar, but sometimes the eagle will get the cougars face before it can do anything and kill it by ripping out it's eyes. Even if there was a place where only cougars lived out of all predators, there still would be a lot of competition. They would be fighting and killing each other. When two male/female pumas fight, usually the younger one wins. A female puma is no match for a male unless she has babies.
puma
a puma would win because it is bigger.