ablsolutly not! the last thing you would want to do is wake up a hibernating bear. they can be very harmful and will attack.
Does it ever wake up?? But its still breathing??if it is but it is not waking up then it could be hibernating Where do you place your hamster's cage?? it it is too cold?? then they are hibernating..
With a hot cup of coffee and a smile.
If it's hibernating, you won't see it. It will have buried itself in a place where it can't easily be found in the slightest. If it's sleeping, it may be just under the surface of the sand and if you poke it, it will wake up.
They do not die from your touch, but the consequences of this can kill them. As with all hibernating animals, they do this mainly in order to preserve energy resources when there is little food around. If you wake up an hibernating animal, then it will most likely extend its energy on trying to find food and if it can not find food then it will most likely die.
Nothing probably. Unless you were seriously accosting it. Provided you could successfully wake it up, A hibernating bear (in most cases) would lack the physical energy to even move around, much less defend itself.
they can not because they are in a deep sleep and imagine a bear hibernating does he wake up and find lots of poo and wee no so The ansew is no
They will most likely go back to sleep and be fine. It is difficult to wake a hibernating bat, as their heart rate has slowed. However, if they do wake up they can go back to sleep. If disturbed too much then they will burn calories, which are needed to survive the winter months, and die.
No, but they eat alot before hibernating
That is the correct spelling of "hibernating" (seasonal inactivity).
The suffix in the word "hibernating" is "-ing."
Animals that hibernate in the winter are called hibernators. This includes a wide range of animals. Marmots, a bird called Common Poorwill, bears, bats, lemurs, turtles, bumblebees, snakes, snails, and hedgehogs are all hibernators.