generally lives in the uplands of western North America.
This subspecies is thought to descend from Ussuri brown bears which crossed to Alaska from eastern Russia 100,000 years ago, though they did not move south until 13,000 years ago.
around the north mostly...but you can see them all over saskatchewan(in the forest)
they live on the land
the Grizzly bears like to live in the cooler parts of Canada, mainly in the upper forests of Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia, although they can be found in other regions, these are their favourite hangouts.
Grizzly bears are PART of the balance of nature. Please post again with more information if I misunderstood your question.
The fox is not a part of the diet of grizzly bears. Bears subsist mainly on berries, roots, and fish.
Polar bears have a hump on their back because it is part of their characteristics.
Montana
The live in houses, mostly in the middle to southern part of the province.
Coastal areas have the larger Kodiak or Alaskan brown bear, while inland areas have the somewhat smaller race known as the grizzly.
The race normally callled the "grizzly bear", is found in Western North America, though scientists classify them all now as brown bears.
The grizzly bear is endangered in part of its range. It is not in danger of being completely wiped out.The IUCN lists the Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) as 'Least Concern'. The Mexican Grizzly (Ursus arctos nelsoni) is now extinct.
Grizzly bears, black bears, coyotes, cougars, wolves and humans.Depending what part of the world ::: Humans, wolves, coyotes, mountain lions, pumas, wild dogs, cougers,
No, Canada did not trade Saskatchewan for North Dakota. Saskatchewan is still part of Canada and North Dakota is still part of the United States.
There are roughly 250-300 grizzly bears and 500-600 black bears that use Glacier National Park, though many of them spend only part of their time there. The latest numbers come from a two-year DNA study in the park.