The polar bear belongs to the family ursidae. It is part of the animal kingdom and the phylum chordata.
they are both mammals
Polar bears are not found in the South Pole; they are typically found in the Arctic regions. The South Pole is uninhabitable for polar bears due to the lack of ice, their primary habitat for hunting and survival.
They haven't. Polar bears are now a threatened species. If the polar ice cap goes, then so do the polar bears, as they rely on oceanic ice to secure their food.
No, they don't.
Penguins are birds, they are black and white, and they eat small fish.Polar bears are mammals, they weight approx 300kg or more, and they eat variable size of fish and seals.The polar bear is a mammal, the penguin is a birdThe polar bear is a predator, the penguin is both predator and preyThe polar bear lives in the Arctic, the penguin lives in the southern hemisphere (many around the Antarctic)The Polar bear hibernates, the penguin is active all year round.
By visiting to see them at locals zoos, and showing support for them by supporting wild-life reservations which support polar bears.
Yes Polar BEAR
Ursidae. The same family that black bears, grizzly bears and brown bears are classified in.
No. Koalas are not bears, but marsupials. It is incorrect to refer to them as "koala bears".
Ursidae.
ew why would they?!
there are no different sorts of polar bears, like there are different sorts of cats. There are only the stages of life a polar bear goes through, from cub to adult.
polar bears are related to bears.
Polar bears do.
They reproduce.
Polar bears are solitary creatures; normally the only group of polar bears is a mom and some cubs, a family group. However, when several polar bears do end up together, the collective nouns are an aurora of polar bears or a pack of polar bears. Although pack is one of the collective nouns given, I believe that it's a misnomer since a pack infers a group working together like a pack of dogs, wolves, or coyotes. But even when polar bears are together, they don't work together.
POLAR BEARS Polar bears actually grow pretty fast.