There are no species of bear called a "seal bear." There are bears that feed on seals, however.
Bear-the leopard seal is still just a seal after all.
a seal is different from a polar bear because a seal has flippers and blubber a polar bear has 4 legs and has fur and a polar bear eats the seal but the seal doesn't eat the polar bear so the seal is prey to the polar bear k
No, leopard seals are found in Antarctica and the polar bear in the Arctic. Even if they lived in the same habitat, they would not be enemies. The polar bear would consider the seal to be a potential meal, not an enemy.
That would be the polar bear.
polar bear,black bear,seal.
Yes, polar bears are EXCELLENT swimmers. They can swim for Miles at a time. They travel to "better" locations to hunt for food. When there is open water between them and their destination, they swim. Their favorite food, the Seal, however, can outswim a polar bear, or dive deep to evade them. So it would be very rare for a bear to catch a Seal in the water. They usually surprise a Seal at its breathing hole.
Yes, it's possible that a polar bear on land would eat a harlequin duck, though it's main prey is the seal.
The polar bear wins because it is bigger and faster
A polar bear is the ring seal's most likely predator, in the icy habitat of the Arctic circle. The chances are that a seal can avoid the jaws of a polar bear quite often. They can hold their breath under the water for up to fourty-five minutes, but the polar bears are of the most patient predators on earth. When the ring seal goes under the water, it has the choice of which breathing hole to take a breath from. But what if that is where the polar bear is waiting? The ring seal can hear the loud sounds of the polar bear's paws on the surface of the ice, so can move away from the breathing hole it is waiting at. But when the polar bear stops moving, the ring seal has to make a choice. Out of all the breathing holes, it is most likely that a seal will choose the one the polar bear isn't waiting at. Brilliant. This proves they may be tasty prey, but are good at avoiding the ferocious, deadly jaws of the deadly predator, Polar bear.
the enemie is a polar bear
No. Not even close.
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