5 ft.
Well the father bear now has to feed the cubs and the mother bear has to stay home and take care of them.
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.
A bear cub lives with its mother wherever she goes.
Yes. By mimicking their mother, the cubs learn to be self-sufficient.
In the North Pole, with their mother.
Just the mother, not the father.
Good question. To feign means 'to pretend'. So you're asking would a mother bear 'fake' an injury to protect her cubs? No, but a mother bear would protect her cubs so fiercely that she would risk death for them.
No, they are solitary unless the bear is a mother with cubs.
yes. as long as you don't hurt her or her cubs.
Polar bear cubs have nothing to do with their dad. They stay with their mother until they're old enough to manage on their own.
The mother polar bear leaves her cubs to fend for themselves when they are around 3 years old. Then the mother bear would probably rear another litter in the same year or the subsequent year.
A mother bear is very protective of her cub. She can get very aggressive and attack if someone or other animals get close to them.Mother bears are dedicated to their cubs, yet stern so they learn to survive out on their own when they are old enough.