The usual number is 2 cubs.
Because a female polar bear's gestational period can be about eight months, she can have between one to four cubs a year. This is the usual litter size for these animals. At birth, cubs can weigh about one pound.
Baby polar bears are called cubs.
If you're asking how many cubs Polar Bears have, they usually have one or two.
No not all polar bear cubs survive the harsh long winter.
No. Wolves aren't where polar bear cubs are located. Male polar bears if they are hungry will hunt a cub and eat it.
Polar bear cubs are born blind, covered with a light down fur.
Polar bear cubs (usually two cubs at a time) can be of either sex.
The polar bear mother is very protective of her cubs (usually a pair of cubs). She will suckle the cubs while hibernating in a den dug into the snow.
They are for their cubs.
It is the mother polar bear that teaches her cubs (usually two cubs) by example. Cubs often hamper their mother's hunting, but eventually the cubs become able to exist on their own. A mother polar bear will try to avoid meeting an adult male polar bear, as there is a danger the male may kill and eat her cubs.
Polar bears usually like seals, their cubs, and their ice. The ice keeps the polar bears cold, because polar bears live in an environment where they are surrounded by ice. Their cubs because they have to feed their cubs daily, and their cubs have to stay warm, because they are young, and they have to be fed. The seals because seal is what polar bears eat. Seal contains all the nourishment that a polar bear needs to survive in its habitat.