Polar BearConservation status
Vulnerable (IUCN 3.1)[1]Scientific classificationKingdom:AnimaliaPhylum:ChordataClass:MammaliaOrder:CarnivoraFamily:UrsidaeGenus:UrsusSpecies:U. maritimus
This category is for various types of places intended for human residence, as opposed to and often in addition to e.g., places of work, study, or entertainment. The term habitat comes from ecology, and includes many interrelated features, especially the immediate physicalenvironment, the urban environment or the social environment.
At the individual and family levels, one's habitat is one's home and the buildings in which one goes about daily life.
polar bears share the same icy habitat polar bears share the same icy habitat
Grizzly bears. They share some habitat areas. Eat alot of the same things, and even cross-breed occasionally. Grizzlies can also swim, but they can't tolerate the frigid waters as well. Their closer habitat companions, seals, are also mammals that share habitat areas. Both hunt for fish, but the seal is also a prey animal for the Polar bear.Grizzlies and Polar Bears interbreed. That makes them pretty closely related. See linkGrizzlies and Polar Bears interbreed. That makes them pretty closely related. See link
no
No, polar bears and penguins live on opposite ends of the earth and do not share the same habitat. While polar bears primarily hunt seals for food in the Arctic, penguins are found in the Southern Hemisphere, mainly in Antarctica, where they are preyed upon by other animals like seals and birds.
yes the cubs would starve if they didnt
Nothing is exactly the same. Grizzly bears are similar, but not classed as Marine mammals, as Polar bears are.
No. All other bears that share the same Genus name Ursa, are related to the polar bear. This includes grizzly bears, black bears, sloth bears and sun bears. The Giant Panda is also related, however distantly.
Polar bears share many of the same traits as other bears, in particular their cousins the brown bear, to which they are closely related. Every creature is adapted to its environment, and the polar bear when it split from the brown bear group several thousand years ago, adapted to life in the Arctic, feeding mainly on seals, which makes the polar bear the most carnivorous of all bears.
Pandas, though they don't share the same genus name as other bears, are still considered bears even though they are mainly herbivorous, not carnivorous/omnivorous like polar bears, grizzly bears and black bears.
Pandas, though they don't share the same genus name as other bears, are still considered bears even though they are mainly herbivorous, not carnivorous/omnivorous like polar bears, grizzly bears and black bears.
Pandas, though they don't share the same genus name as other bears, are still considered bears even though they are mainly herbivorous, not carnivorous/omnivorous like polar bears, grizzly bears and black bears.
Yes. Both are bears, and both share the same Genus, being Ursa.