This question is vague, however, here is what I came up with: 1. Lions are nocturnal (they will hunt at night) Bears are diurnal (they prefer to hunt during the day due to the amount of other predators during the night). 2. Lions are considered social--which means they travel in prides or they may travel in pairs. During a hunt Lions will hunt their prey in coordinated groups. Bears are considered asocial among all the carniverous animals. The only exception is a mother and her cubs and during seasonal food gathering (salmon runs). 3. Female Lions are considered polyestrous (they will go in heat more than once a year for reproduction), whereas the bear is monoestrous (one reproduction cycle per year usually in spring for the offspring to survive the winter).
This is an easy question (:Lions have manes.Bears Do Not.Hope This Helped At All?:D
cheetahs, lions, tigers, but not BEARS(:
The polar bears would easily win. Even one polar bear has the strength to kill three lions.
mountain lions, cougars, rarely bears...
lions, tigers and bears oh my... :D
it is lions, tigers, and bears
lions, tigers, bears lions, tigers, bears
I would think the lions
No! it would be impossible! bears live in north america while lions live in sout america
bears and lions dont have any common predators besides man
The lions, bears, vikings and packers are in the NFC north division
Lions : Tigers = 3 : 2 so 18 Lions => 12 Tigers. Tigers : Bears = 3 : 4 so 12 Tigers => 16 Bears.
Meat. Bears, unlike lions, also feast on berries and other fruits, since they are omnivores, not carnivores like lions are.
No, there is not. Polar bears are snow animals and lions are jungle or desert animals.
The Lions, Bears, Packers (and the Vikings too) play in the NFC North.
No. But, Siberian Brown Bears do make up 1 to 2% of a Siberian tiger's diet. But lions eating bears? Not likely.
No.