Most national parks have black bears. Do not feed them, however. They are still wild and dangerous animals.
No, because a black bear can see very well at night.
The Kermode bear, or spirit bear, is a subspecies of the black bear. Because of its limited range, it is not considered an endangered species. Never been a common animal.
No, they are colorblind.
Yes, Polar Bears have black skin, but most people do not know this because they have colorless fur (not white...). You can see this is true by looking at the nose of a polar bear, where the fur is thinnest, and you will see that it is black.
There's a website that shows a selection of various animal droppings. Here you can see an image of black-bear droppings on a shovel, which gives you a good perspective of the size of the droppings. See the Related Link.
No. The black bear would see the deer as an easy prey for it to kill.
I see you are not a bear like me, because every bear knows that answer, thats our secret,
Yes, Polar Bears have black skin, but most people do not know this because they have colorless fur (not white...). You can see this is true by looking at the nose of a polar bear, where the fur is thinnest, and you will see that it is black.
First, you must know what biotic and abiotic factors are. For this, see the Related Questions below. In this case (for the Black Bear), the biotic factors could be the predators of a black bear [1], and the abiotic factors could be Forest Fires. Note: [1] I do not know what a predator of a black bear would be. So I asked the following question on WikiAnswers: "What animal hunts black bears?". I added the question as a Related Question below, so that you can see if it gets answered.
no because bears can only smell blood and blood is red
Place on auction and see what the market will bear.
The Kermode, or Spirit bear, is a genetic subset of the American black bear. It faces the same dangers as any black bear. Grizzlies have occasionally killed black bears, but the main danger any bear faces is loss of habitat, human encroachment, poaching. The Kermode is protected from human hunting in British Columbia. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kermode_bear