Probably not. A bear, no matter what species, can easily kill and eat a gorilla.
Definitely the bear would win. A gorilla would only throw stones or sticks, and punch its chests to frighten off the bear. But the bear would swat the gorilla to death with its muscles and sharp claws. But if the gorilla threw stones or sticks at the bear, it would have a chance to injure it. Bears have larger canines, heavier weight, and stronger muscles with very powerful sharp, large claws. A gorilla does not punch or smash like humans do, which makes the bear kill the gorilla without too much pain.
Because of size, the bear would win. The bear also has claws and a better bite for killing than the gorilla. This would cause the grizzly to be able to hurt the gorilla better. If the gorilla was the same size as the grizzly, it would be a different matter. The gorilla would certainly be stronger in that case.
Silverback gorilla vs grizzly bear. Thats not a hard question.Grizzly is to big, it has thick fur, and is very powerful,with a nice hard swipe, the grizzly could kill it.It has claws, deadly teeth, a strong crushing force, and kills other animals.The only thing the gorilla has is super strength.The bear is also faster, and has quick reflexes.
Yes they can kill a grizzly bear. I think they can kill it because its on your property i guess
A grizzly bear, a crocodile, a rhinoceros, an elephant, a hippo, a large enough gorilla, a bull, a polar bear, a kodiak bear, a poacher armed with a gun or a knife, and a hippo.
The bear, probably, but the gorilla would make him earn it, as they are very powerful.
gorilla, grizzly bear
Yes: both grizzlies and gorillas are mammals.
They use multiple hounds to kill a grizzly bear.
3 wolves will win if the gorilla gets frightened, and 3 wolves are enough to take down a lion. A silverback gorilla is pretty good at killing a wild dog, but 3 wolves will get the gorilla at the end.
No way a hyena can kill a grizzly bear unless it hunt with packs
Yes, it is illegal to kill a grizzly bear in most circumstances due to their protected status under the Endangered Species Act.