It hides them from their prey so they may sneak up and catch them easier.
Polar bears have white fur which lets them blend in with the snow. They eat seals and other arctic animals. They also have a thick layer of fat to help insulate them from the cold.
This helps them ( the polar bears ) move through the water and polar bears need water to live. In fact, this marine mammal can swim for 60 miles without stopping!! Your welcome
This helps them ( the polar bears ) move through the water and polar bears need water to live. In fact, this marine mammal can swim for 60 miles without stopping!! Your welcome
their white fur help them blend in with the snow polar bears fur insn't really white each piece is a clear hollow tube that keeps heat from escaping the polar bear
They usally have a thick fur coat so they can swim in low tempertures so they can survive eating a finding a home.
they just adapt to the environment like fish can breath in the water and polar bears have thick fur to help them survive in the cold arctic
It usues its fur for warmth, and it also usues its claws for breaking frozen things.
they do not
Bear's teeth help almost all of the bears survive, for example; polar bears need their teeth to tear of meat from seals and other animals. Teeth also help bears to protect them. A hard bite in you neck from a grizzly can easily take your head off. You get the picture
Yes, it does help polar bears fish. Not really. the webbed feet help swimming in water.
A desert is not good for a polar bear because it can't help it live. For example polar bears eat fish and other animals so if they lived in the desert it would be most likely that they wouldn't be able to find food and soon enough they would be extinct. Hope I helped :)ANS2:That question presumes that polar bears don't do just fine in a desert...The frozen wastelands of the north are a form of desert because they have little liquid precipitation and plant life is scarce. Polar bears aren't found in any large numbers in other habitats.
send a letter to everyone to heop save polar bears.