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{{Taxobox
[[Category:Non-talk pages with subpages that are automatically signed]]
| name = American Black Bear
[[Category:Non-talk pages that are automatically signed]]
| fossil range = early Pleistocene- recent
| status = LR/lc
| status_system = iucn2.3
| image = Black_bear_large.jpg
| regnum = [[Animal]]ia
| phylum = [[Chordate|Chordata]]
| classis = [[Mammal]]ia
| ordo = [[Carnivora]]
| familia = [[bear|Ursidae]]
| genus = ''[[Ursus (genus)|Ursus]]''
| species = '''''U. americanus'''''
| binomial = ''Ursus americanus''
| binomial_authority = [[Peter Simon Pallas|Pallas]], 1780
| range_map = Map_black_bear_1.png
| synonyms = ''Euarctos americanus''
}}
The '''American Black Bear''' (''Ursus americanus'') is the most common [[bear]] [[species]] native to [[North America]]. It lives throughout much of the continent, from northern [[Alaska]] south into [[Mexico]] and from the [[Atlantic Ocean]] to the [[Pacific Ocean]]. This includes 41 of the 50 [[U.S. state]]s, all [[provinces and territories of Canada|Canadian provinces]] except [[Prince Edward Island]], and some of Mexico. Populations in the [[Southern United States]] remain in the protected mountains and woodlands of parks and preserves, though bears will occasionally wander outside the parks' boundaries and have set up new territories, in some cases on the margins of urban environments in recent years as their populations increase. Although there were probably once as many as two million Black Bears in North America long before European colonization, the population declined to a low of 200,000 as a result of habitat destruction and unrestricted hunting. By current estimates, more than 800,000 are living today on the continent.<ref>http://biology.usgs.gov/s+t/noframe/c286.htm{{Dead link|date=October 2008|date=October 2008}}</ref> It is a close relative of the [[Asian Black Bear|Asiatic Black Bear]] with which it is thought to share a European common ancestor.<ref name="Encyclopedia">{{cite book | author = Macdonald, David | url = http://www.amazon.com/Encyclopedia-Mammals-David-W-Macdonald/dp/0871968711 | title = The Encyclopedia of Mammals: 1| year = 1984 | pages = pp.446 | id = ISBN 0-04-500028-x}}</ref>


==Description==
<div style="clear:both;"></div>
The American Black Bear usually ranges in length from 150 to 180&nbsp;[[Centimetre|cm]] (5 to 6&nbsp;[[foot (length)|feet]]) and typically stands about 76 to 91 cm (2.5 to 3 feet) at the shoulder.<ref><http://www.americanbear.org/Size.htm></ref> Standing up on its hind feet, a Black Bear can be up to 7 feet tall (2.12 m).<ref>[http://whozoo.org/Intro2001/natdavis/JNDavis_blackbear.htm Black Bear: WhoZoo<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Males are 33% larger than females.<ref name="Bearalmanac">{{cite book | author = Brown, Gary | title = Great Bear Almanac | year = 1996 | pages = pp.340 | id = ISBN 1558214747}}</ref> Females weigh between 40 and 180&nbsp;[[Kilogram|kg]] (90 and 400&nbsp;[[pound (mass)|pound]]s); males weigh between 115 and 275&nbsp;kg (250 and 600&nbsp;pounds) [http://www.sdnhm.org/fieldguide/mammals/ursu-ame.html]. Adult black bears can reach 300&nbsp;kg (660&nbsp;pounds) [http://animal.discovery.com/news/afp/20031215/bear.html], but exceptionally large males have been recorded from the wild at up to 240&nbsp;cm (95&nbsp;inches) long and at least 365&nbsp;kg (800&nbsp;pounds). The biggest American Black Bear ever recorded was a male from North Carolina that weighed 881 lbs (400 kilograms).<ref>[http://www.helium.com/tm/379331/american-black-lives-north All about the American black bear - Zoology - Helium - by P.H.Rh<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Cubs usually weigh 200 to 450&nbsp;g (between 7&nbsp;[[ounce]]s and 1&nbsp;pound) at birth. The adult has small eyes, rounded ears, a long snout, a large body, and a short tail. It has an excellent sense of smell. Though they generally have shaggy black hair, the coat can vary in color from white through chocolate-brown, cinnamon-brown, and blonde (found mostly west of the [[Mississippi River]]), to black in the east (the same is generally true in [[Canada]], the border being between [[Manitoba]] and [[Ontario]]). They occasionally have a slight ''V''-shaped white chest blaze. The tail is 4.8 inches (12.12 cm) long.<ref name="Bearalmanac" />
=Proposed additions=
{{notice|Please add new entries to the '''bottom''' of this section. Please only use the basic URL ('''google.com''' not http://www.google.com). '''Please provide diffs to prove that there has been spamming!''' Completed requests should be marked with {{tl|Done}} or {{tl|Notdone}} or other appropriate [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist/Indicators|Indicator]] then [[/archives/{{CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{CURRENTYEAR}}#Proposed additions|archived]].}}


Although Black Bears can stand and walk on their hind legs it is more normal for them to walk on all fours. When they do stand, it is usually to get a better scent or to look at something. Their characteristic shuffling gait results from their plantigrade ([[flat feet|flat-footed]]) walk, with the hind legs slightly longer than the forelegs. Another reason for the apparent shuffle is that they commonly walk with a pacing gait. Unlike many [[quadruped]]s, the legs on one side move together instead of alternating, much like a pacer horse.<ref>[http://www.zenwaiter.com/blackbearhuntingguidequebec.htm]</ref> Each [[paw]] has five long, strong claws used for tearing, digging, and climbing. When necessary, they can run at speeds up to 30 miles per hour (48 kph) and are good swimmers.<ref>[http://www.bear.org/website/Bear-Facts/Senses-Abilities.html North American Bear Center - Senses & Abilities<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The ears of a black bear are larger and more erect than those of the brown bear, and it lacks a prominent shoulder hump. <ref name="Animal">{{cite book |last=Kindersley |first= Dorling |year=2001,2005 |title=Animal |location=New York City |publisher=DK Publishing |isbn=0-7894-7764-5}}</ref>
== respectance.com ==
A website where anyone can create a memorial about persons; current listing is at [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3ALinksearch&target=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.respectance.com%2F here]. [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Evan_Tanner&diff=prev&oldid=238278757 One] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Deaths_in_March_2008&diff=prev&oldid=238278596 two] examples of the spamming. [[User:Zscout370]] <small><sup>[[User_talk:Zscout370|(Return Fire)]]</sup></small> 03:10, 14 September 2008 (UTC)


== Flickr.com ==
== Ecology and Behavior ==
[[Image:Tracks of Ursus americanus, the American black bear in Yellowstone.jpg|Tracks of black bear at [[hot spring]], [[Yellowstone National Park]]|thumb|300px]]
Free hosting site for images, not sure about abuse, therefore posting here to monitor:
Black bears are found in a wide variety of habitats across their range. They prefer forested and shrubby areas but they are also known to live on ridgetops, in tidelands, burned areas, riparian areas, agricultural fields, and, sometimes, avalanche chutes. Black bears can be found from hardwood and conifer swamps to the rather dry sage and pinyon-juniper habitats in the western states. Black bears typically "[[hibernation|hibernate]]" during winter in hollowed-out dens in tree cavities, under logs or rocks, in banks, caves, or culverts, and in shallow depressions. Dens are normally not reused from one year to the next. While they do not eat, drink, defecate, or urinate during hibernation, it is not the true hibernation of smaller mammals since their body temperature does not drop significantly and they remain somewhat alert and active. Females give birth and nurse their young while hibernating.
* {{LinkSummary|flickr.com}} --[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 00:13, 25 March 2008 (UTC)


After emerging from their winter dens in spring, they seek carrion from winter-killed animals and new shoots of many plant species, especially wetland plants. In mountainous areas, they seek southerly slopes at lower elevations for forage and move to northerly and easterly slopes at higher elevations as summer progresses. Black bears use dense cover for hiding and thermal protection, as well as for bedding. They climb trees at speeds up to 20 mph to escape danger and use forested areas and rivers as travel corridors.
:'''Comment''' Some images on Flickr are hosted under a Creative Commons Licence. Some of those (not all) are suitable for use on Wikipedia. Blocking of this site could create problems for existing images uploaded to Wikipedia, and prevent future images being used when they may be needed to illustrate an article. [[User:Mjroots|Mjroots]] ([[User talk:Mjroots|talk]]) 11:13, 26 April 2008 (UTC)
::This is not blocking, this is reverting inappropriate additions, which, I am afraid, is true for most of the additions by unestablished editors of domains on this list. If they are needed, they can be re-added by reverting the bot, etc. etc. Also, the image namespace is not reverted by the bot. --[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 10:07, 1 May 2008 (UTC)
:Would support this. [[User:Stifle|Stifle]] ([[User talk:Stifle/wizard|talk]]) 14:30, 7 July 2008 (UTC)


==Reproduction==
::I could narrow this down by adding
[[Image:Bear cub.jpg|thumb|Black Bear cub]]
<pre>
Females generally reach [[reproduction|breeding]] maturity at 3 to 4 years of age and with adequate nutrition can breed every 2 years. In poor quality habitat, they may not mature until 5-7 and may skip breeding cycles. Males are sexually mature at the same age, but may not become large enough to win breeding rights until they are 4-5 years old (they have to be large enough to win fights with other males and be accepted by females). Mating is generally during summer, from mid-June to mid-August with some variation depending on latitude, but with [[embryonic diapause]], the embryos do not begin to develop until the mother dens in the fall to [[Hibernation|hibernate]] through the winter months. Because of this delay, gestation can be 7 to 8 months, but actual development takes about 60 days. However, if food was scarce and the mother has not gained enough fat to sustain herself during hibernation as well as produce and feed cubs, the embryos do not develop.
\bflickr\.com\/photos\b
</pre>
::as the rule (not sure if the '/search' and '/groups' should also be on it, probably). --[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 14:34, 7 July 2008 (UTC)


The cubs are generally born in January or February. They are very small, about 10-14 ounces, and are blind, nearly hairless, and helpless when born. Two to three cubs are most common, though up to four and even five cubs have been documented. First-time mothers typically have only a single cub. The mother nurses the cubs with rich milk, and by spring thaw, when the bears start leaving their dens, the cubs are fur-balls of energy, inquisitive and playful. By this time, they are about 4 to 8 pounds (2-4 kg). When their mother senses danger, she grunts to the cubs to climb high up a tree. They are [[weaning|weaned]] between July and September of their first year and stay with the mother through the first winter. The cubs become independent during their second summer (when they are 1.5 years old). At this time, the sow goes into [[estrous cycle|estrus]] again.
:{{done}}
<pre>
\bflickr\.com\/photos\b
\bflickr\.com\/groups\b
\bflickr\.com\/search\b
</pre>


Cub survival is totally dependent on the skill of the mother in teaching her cubs what and where to eat, how to forage, where to den, and when and where to seek shelter from heat or danger.
--[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 15:02, 7 July 2008 (UTC)


== Piczo.com ==
==Diet==
[[Image:Ursus americanus.jpg|thumb|200px|right|]]
* {{LinkSummary|piczo.com}}
Black bears are omnivores whose diet includes plants, meat, and insects. They are apex predators in North America, with the exception of areas where they coexist with the brown bear. The black bear eats a wide variety of foods, mainly herbs, nuts and berries. In the state of Washington and other parts of the Pacific Northwest, black bears eat a large amount of [[skunk cabbage]], [[horsetail]] and tree bark during the spring.<ref>Efficacy of Black Bear Supplemental Feeding to Reduce Conifer Damage in Western Washington, Georg J. Ziegltrum, ''The Journal of Wildlife Management'', Vol. 68, No. 3 (Jul., 2004), pp. 470-474</ref> They also commonly feed on spring acorns in Massachusetts.<ref>Effects of Spring acorn availability on Black Bear diet, milk composition, and cub survival,
John E. McDonald Jr.A, B and Todd K. Fuller, ''Journal of Mammalogy'' Article: pp. 1022–1028</ref>


They feed on [[carrion]] and [[insect]]s (mainly for the larvae) such as [[carpenter ant]]s, [[yellow jacket]]s, [[bee]]s, [[wasps]] and [[termite]]s. They raid beehives for both [[honey]] and bee larvae as both are easy sources of carbohydrates (honey) and protein (larvae.) They also kill and eat small mammals (such as [[rodent]]s) and [[ungulate]]s, mostly the young. In Michigan<ref>Ozoga, J. J., and R.K Clute. 1988. Mortality rates of marked and unmarked fawns. ''Journal of Wildlife Management 52:549-551.</ref> and the state of New York,<ref>Mathews, N. E., and W. F Porter. 1988. Black bear predation on white-tailed deer neonates in the central Adirondacks, ''Canadian Journal of Zoology'' 66:1241-1242.</ref> black bears prey on [[white-tailed deer]] fawns. In addition they have been recorded preying on [[elk]] calves in Idaho<ref>Schlegal. M. 1976, Factor affecting calf elk survival in north central Idaho. ''Western Association of State Game and Fish Commission'' 56:342-355.</ref> and [[moose]] calves in Alaska.<ref>Franzmann. A. W. C. C, Schwartz and R.O. Peterson, Moose calf mortality in summer at Kenai Peninsula, Alaska. ''Journal of Wildlife Management'' 44:764-768</ref>
--[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 13:21, 4 July 2008 (UTC)


Additionally, black bears will eat [[salmon]], [[Catostomidae|suckers]], [[alligator]] eggs, [[crayfish]], and [[trout]] and will seek out food within [[orchard]]s, [[beehive (beekeeping)|beehives]], and agricultural croplands. They may frequently raid garbage dumps, campsites, or appropriate food from the trash bins of businesses or private homes.
:{{done}} --[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 15:03, 7 July 2008 (UTC)


Black bears often drag their prey to cover, preferring to feed in seclusion and frequently begin feeding on the udder of lactating females, but generally prefer meat from the viscera. The skin of large prey is stripped back and turned inside out with the skeleton usually left largely intact. Unlike wolves and coyotes, black bears rarely scatter the remains of their kills. Vegetation around the carcass is usually matted down by black bears and their droppings are frequently found nearby. Black bears may attempt to cover remains of larger carcasses, though they do not do so with the same frequency as [[cougar]]s and [[grizzly bear]]s.<ref name="Predation">[http://texnat.tamu.edu/ranchref/predator/bears/t-bears.htm Bear Predation - Description<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
== blogfa.com ==
* {{LinkSummary|blogfa.com}}


==Interspecific predatory relationships==
--[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 15:08, 18 July 2008 (UTC)
In some areas, Black Bears share their range with the [[Brown Bear]]. Due to their smaller size, Black Bears are at a competitive disadvantage against Brown Bears in open, non-forested areas. Although displacement of black bears by Brown Bears has been documented, actual interspecific killing of Black Bears by brown bears has only occasionally been reported. The [[diurnality|diurnal]] Black Bear's habit of living in heavily forested areas as opposed to the largely nocturnal brown bear's preference for open spaces usually ensures that the two species avoid confrontations in areas where they are sympatric.<ref>http://www.nrmsc.usgs.gov/products/Predation_Papers.pdf{{Dead link|date=October 2008|date=October 2008}}</ref>


Black Bears are also sympatric with [[cougar]]s and may compete with them over carcasses. Like Brown Bears, they will sometimes steal kills from cougars. One study found that both bear species visited 24% of cougar kills in Yellowstone and [[Glacier National Park]]s, usurping 10% of carcasses.<ref>{{cite paper |author=COSEWIC. Canadian Wildlife Service |title=Assessment and Update Status Report on the Grizzly Bear (Ursus arctos) |publisher=[[Environment Canada]] |year=2002 |url=http://dsp-psd.pwgsc.gc.ca/Collection/CW69-14-166-2002E.pdf |format=PDF |accessdate=2007-04-08 }}</ref> However, Black Bears and cougars rarely engage in violent combat with each other and usually try to scare each other with bluff changes, growls, swipes, etc.
[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:WikiProject_Spam/LinkReports/blogfa.com&oldid=226459088 linkreport], especially the xml dump at the bottom. Although some appropriate additions, quite a number are not appropriate (coi, not directly linked), and the page is not in english. Hence:


Black Bear interactions with wolves are much rarer than with Brown Bears, due to differences in habitat preferences. The majority of Black Bear encounters with wolves occur in the species' northern range, with no interactions being recorded in Mexico. Wolves have been recorded to kill Black Bears on numerous occasions without eating them. Unlike Brown Bears, Black Bears frequently lose against wolves in disputes over kills.<ref name="WOLVES">{{cite book | author= L. David Mech & Luigi Boitani | url = | title=Wolves: Behaviour, Ecology and Conservation | year=2001 | pages= p 448 | id= ISBN 0226516962 }}</ref> Black Bears are generally timid and prefer to flee rather than fight.
{{done}} --[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 15:16, 18 July 2008 (UTC)


==Relationships with humans==
== lulu.com ==
===Livestock and crop damage===
I would like to add www.lulu.com. After contacting wikipedia it says it is blocked here. It is a book site and I would like to add it to external links.
Livestock depredations by Black Bears occur mostly in spring. A limitation of food sources in early spring and wild berry and nut crop failures during summer months are probably major contributing factors. Black Bears can do extensive damage in some areas of the northwestern states by stripping the bark from trees and feeding on the cambium.<ref name="Predation">[http://texnat.tamu.edu/ranchref/predator/bears/t-bears.htm Bear Predation - Description<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
[[User:Egolembiewski|Egolembiewski]] ([[User talk:Egolembiewski|talk]]) 14:36, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
:Not sure what you want .. it is on the blacklist, so it can't be added anyway. Adding it here would not help anyway. {{notdone}} --[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 14:46, 28 July 2008 (UTC)


Though Black Bears will attack adult cattle and horses, they seem to prefer sheep, goats, calves, and pigs. They normally kill by biting the neck and shoulders, though they may break the neck or back of prey with blows from the paws. Evidence of a bear attack includes claw marks are being frequently found on the neck, back, and shoulders of these larger animals. Surplus killing of sheep and goats are relatively common. Bears have been known to frighten livestock herds over cliffs, causing injuries and death to many animals; whether or not this is intentional is not known.<ref name="Predation" />
Lulu.com is not blacklisted, I already requested it to be taken off the blacklist and was told it is not on it. I was told to contact you about this and that adding it here would allow me to post it as an external link on another page.{{unsigned|Egolembiewski}}


===Attacks on humans===
:lulu is here on the list: [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist]] (search for '\blulu\.com\b'), and can not be linked to. It is a (generally) unreliable site, and should not be linked to. Who told you to contact me here? --[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 15:03, 29 July 2008 (UTC)
Like many animals, they seldom attack unless cornered, threatened, or wounded. They are less likely to attack humans than [[Grizzly Bear]]s and typically flee for cover as soon as they identify a human visitor. Deaths by Black Bear, though, are most often predatory, while the more numerous grizzly fatalities on humans are often defensive.<ref>[http://www.mass.gov/dfwele/dfw/dfw_bear_problem_faqs.htm Black Bear Problems and Control - FAQ]</ref> This makes feigning death when a Black Bear attacks ineffective. Although 15 North Americans have been killed since the year 2000, it is estimated that there have been only 56 documented killings of humans by Black Bears in North America in the past 100 years.


=== History and controversy ===
-I was told to come here from a person who answered my question on the whitelist page
[[Image:bearskin.cenotaph.london.arp.jpg|thumb|right|Welsh Guards, wearing bearskins]]
[[Image:White-blackbear.jpg|thumb|right|A stuffed white-furred individual, [[Natural History Museum at Tring|Rothschild Museum]], Tring]]
Because little of their behavior has been understood until recently, Black Bears have been feared and hated. Before the 20th century, these bears were shot intermittently as vermin, food, and trophies, being seen as either a vicious beast or an endless commodity; until recently, in many areas, bounties were paid for Black Bears. Despite conservationists' demands to the contrary, the [[bearskin]] hats made of Black Bear fur are still used by regiments of many nations, including the Queen of England's [[Foot Guards]].


Paradoxically, Black Bears have also been portrayed as harmless and cuddly. For example, the [[teddy bear]] owes its existence to a young Black Bear cub [[Theodore Roosevelt]] refused to shoot, and [[Christopher Robin Milne]] named his teddy [[Winnie-the-Pooh]] after [[Winnipeg the Bear|Winnipeg]], a Black Bear which he and his father often saw at [[London Zoo]]. Today, Black Bears are as much an important game species as they are a point of debate across the continent, especially when many bears are finding life in the suburbs quite comfortable. Given their relatively low reproductive rate, Black Bear hunting must be carefully controlled and is probably inappropriate in areas where populations are feeble or where habitat is no longer intact.
== ccnacertificationguide.com ==


Their tendencies to follow their stomachs and habitat encroachment by humans have created human-bear conflicts. This is especially true in areas where they may have been uncommon or absent for a long time, as in many parts of the eastern [[United States]]. An excellent example is the state of [[New Jersey]]. In New Jersey, now the nation's most densely populated state, bears were quite common before the modern era. Because so much land was cleared for homes and farming and as a result of poor policies regarding hunting and forestry, by 1970 only about 100 bears remained. However, because of changes in land use, management, and bear population increases in neighboring [[Pennsylvania]] and [[New York]], that number increased to an estimated 3,529 by 2003. The result is that the residents increasingly encounter bears near their homes and workplaces. Education and precaution are needed, especially in areas such as New Jersey where bear encounters are a fairly new phenomena in recent history. Fear of bear attacks is a common concern for these residents. Attacks can happen when a bear has lost its fear of humans and has come to associate people with food. This is a cause for concern among civilians and scientists alike. Similar events have unfolded in other states and in Canada. The rate of contact between Black Bears in search of food and humans rose to record levels in the western United States in autumn 2007.<ref>{{cite web|author=Reuters|url=http://www.smh.com.au/news/World/Bear-havoc-at-record-heights-in-US-West/2007/09/25/1190486264789.html|title=Bear havoc at record heights in US West|date=[[2007-09-25]]|accessdate=2007-09-25 |work=Sydney Morning Herald}}</ref> State, provincial, and federal agencies are working to address the issue with trap-and-release programs, limited hunting, and hazing bears with rubber bullets, other aversion techniques, and dogs. In agricultural areas, electric fences have been very effective.
*{{Linksummary|ccnacertificationguide.com}}


== Taxonomy and subspecies ranges ==
Related to ccent.ws and [[Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive450#Spammers using different IPs to add external links]]; it's another link that gets bombed on [[Cisco Career Certifications]]. See [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cisco_Career_Certifications&diff=prev&oldid=227624328] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cisco_Career_Certifications&diff=prev&oldid=227383419]. <span style="font-family: Tahoma; font-size: 8pt;">[[User:x42bn6|<b>x42bn6</b>]] <span style="font-size: 7pt;">[[User talk:x42bn6|Talk]] [[Special:Contributions/x42bn6|Mess]]</span></span> 20:34, 24 July 2008 (UTC)
The American Black Bear is classified in the class [[Mammal]]ia, order [[Carnivora]] and family [[Bear|Ursidae]]. Many subspecies are named, such as the [[Kermode bear]], [[Cinnamon bear]], and Glacier Bear (or American Blue Bear). Currently accepted [[subspecies]] (with their respective ranges) include:


{|
{{done}} --[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 11:48, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
|-----
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus altifrontalis''
| valign="top" | Found in the Pacific Northwest coast from central [[British Columbia]] through northern [[California]] and inland to the tip of northern [[Idaho]] and British Columbia
|-----
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus amblyceps''
| valign="top" | Native to [[Colorado]], [[New Mexico]], west [[Texas]], the eastern half of [[Arizona]] into northern [[Mexico]]; southeastern [[Utah]]
|-----
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus americanus''
| valign="top" | Found in eastern [[Montana]] to the Atlantic coast; from [[Alaska]] south and east through [[Canada]] to the Atlantic and south to [[Texas]]. Thought to be increasing in some regions.
|-----
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus californiensis''
| valign="top" | Found in the mountain ranges of Southern [[California]], north through the Central Valley to southern [[Oregon]]
|-----
| valign="top" | ''[[Ursus americanus carlottae]]''
| [[Queen Charlotte Islands]] and [[Alaska]]
|-----
| valign="top" | ''[[Cinnamon bear|Ursus americanus cinnamomum]]''
| valign="top" | Idaho, western Montana, and Wyoming, eastern Washington and Oregon, northeastern Utah
|-----
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus emmonsii''
| valign="top" | southeastern Alaska. Stable.
|-----
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus eremicus''
| valign="top" | northeastern Mexico
|-----
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus floridanus''
| valign="top" | [[Florida]], southern [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]], and [[Alabama]]. Threatened.
|-----
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus hamiltoni''
| valign="top" | the island of [[Newfoundland (island)|Newfoundland]]
|-----
| valign="top" | ''[[Kermode bear|Ursus americanus kermodei]]''
| valign="top" | the central coast of British Columbia
|-----
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus luteolus''
| valign="top" | eastern Texas, [[Louisiana]], southern [[Mississippi]] Endangered.
|-----
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus machetes''
| valign="top" | north-central Mexico
|-----
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus perniger''
| valign="top" | [[Kenai Peninsula]], Alaska
|-----
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus pugnax''
| valign="top" | [[Alexander Archipelago]], Alaska
|-----
| valign="top" | ''Ursus americanus vancouveri''
| valign="top" | [[Vancouver Island]], British Columbia
|}


==Legal status==
== potsdam.edu/hansondj / alcoholfacts.org / alcoholinformation.org ==
[[Image:Blkbearzoo.jpg|thumb|right|Captive Black Bears at a zoo in Florida]]
Please see [[Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Spam#About 400 links to the two sites of one individual]] for details.
Today, a major threat to the American Black Bear is [[poaching]], or illegal killing, to supply [[Asia]]n markets with bear [[gallbladder|galls]], hearts, and paws, considered to have medicinal value in [[China]], [[Japan]], and [[Korea]]. The demand for these parts also affects grizzly and polar bears. The [[CITES|Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora]] (CITES), a treaty among more than 120 nations, provides measures to curb illegal trade in wildlife and wildlife products across international boundaries, helping to protect the Black Bear from poaching. Perpetrators caught poaching or smuggling either item out of the United States or Canada may face very serious legal ramifications, and park rangers within both countries are charged with the protection of the bears under their jurisdictions up to and including arrest.


[[Image:bear heart.jpg|thumb|right|Bear parts from American Black Bears may wind up illegally in Chinese markets like the heart depicted above as native Asian bears' numbers decline.]]
* {{LinkSummary|potsdam.edu/hansondj/}}
** {{LinkSummary|potsdam.edu}}
* {{LinkSummary|alcoholfacts.org}}
* {{LinkSummary|alcoholinformation.org}}


Black Bears are abundant in most of the western states and in most of Canada, but its presence in the Midwest is uneven by comparison. For example, [[Ontario]] is home to about 100,000 bears, with at least as many in neighboring [[Quebec]], while the Upper Midwest has a very healthy population with 30,000 bears in [[Minnesota]] alone. In contrast, nearby places like [[Iowa]], [[Kansas]], and [[Illinois]] have virtually none. Many Midwestern states have not had a native breeding population of bears since the turn of the 19th century or earlier.<ref>[http://209.85.215.104/search?q=cache:nGkoNVygtzAJ:www.inhs.uiuc.edu/releases/Buhnerkempe_OutdoorIL_1007.pdf+black+bear%2BIllinois&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=9&gl=us&client=firefox-a 403 Forbidden<!-- Bot generated title -->]{{Dead link|date=October 2008|date=October 2008}}</ref><ref>[http://www.ksr.ku.edu/libres/Mammals_of_Kansas/ursus-amer.html Bears (Family Ursidae)<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref><ref>http://www.iowadnr.com/wildlife/pdfs/bear%20log%202003%20complete.pdf</ref>
The site owner makes extensive use of sock puppets to add links to his sites, so XLinkBot could slow down his ability to re-add them. [[User:Nunquam Dormio|Nunquam Dormio]] ([[User talk:Nunquam Dormio|talk]]) 19:59, 25 July 2008 (UTC)


Most populations east of the [[Mississippi River]] are seeing a marked, steady increase in population: bears are moving back into places where they typically have been absent for over a century as suitable habitat has returned. In eastern states with heavily wooded areas, populations are growing rapidly; in [[North Carolina]] there were 11,000 bears at last count in 2004, [[Pennsylvania]] estimates 15,000 bears currently, New Jersey (a heavily urbanized state) estimated 3,529 in 2003, and even tiny [[Rhode Island]] has seen evidence of bears moving into areas where they haven't been in decades. The Florida Black Bear has also seen increases in numbers in recent decades; in 2004, the Florida Fish & Wildlife Commission estimated over 2,400 bears were in the state. Unfortunately, not all is well. Continued development may reduce connectivity between the already separated populations in Florida. The Louisiana subspecies continues to be at critically low levels, although several successful reintroduction projects have added bears to new areas of the state.
{{done}} --[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 11:48, 26 July 2008 (UTC)


In Mexico, the indigenous Black Bear population is listed as endangered and is mostly limited to increasingly fragmented habitat in the mountainous northern parts of the country. Individuals from this area seem to have naturally recolonized parts of southern Texas and along the [[Rio Grande]].<ref>http://www.nps.gov/bibe/naturescience/bears.htm88{{Dead link|date=October 2008|date=October 2008}}</ref>
== indiasite.com ==
[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:Linksearch&limit=50&offset=50&target=http%3A%2F%2F*.indiasite.com&namespace= Link Search] gives 74 links. the site is a commercial tourism site. It does have some ino, but is not a reliable source. request deletion of these links and perhaps a blacklist. If I need to do something else beyond listing it here. please let me know. [[User:ChiragPatnaik|ChiragPatnaik]] ([[User talk:ChiragPatnaik|talk]]) 11:54, 30 July 2008 (UTC)


In 1992, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service listed the Louisiana Black Bear subspecies as "threatened" under the [[Endangered Species Act]], meaning it could be in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range in the near future. The American Black Bear is also protected by legislation in the affected states (Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas), owing to its close resemblance to this subspecies. The Florida Black Bear was denied protection under the Endangered Species Act in 1998 and 2004 due to its adequate protection and management by the State of Florida.
* {{LinkSummary|indiasite.com}}
:I'll monitor it and then have a look. Thanks for reporting. --[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 12:44, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
:It looks like there is a range of IPs, each adding one link. I'll put it on the list. {{done}}. --[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 13:44, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
::Thanks [[User:ChiragPatnaik|ChiragPatnaik]] ([[User talk:ChiragPatnaik|talk]]) 16:27, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
::will this automatically remove it? [[User:ChiragPatnaik|ChiragPatnaik]] ([[User talk:ChiragPatnaik|talk]]) 16:31, 30 July 2008 (UTC)
:Nope, it will now automatically revert it when an unestablished editor (including IPs) are adding it, anyone older than 7 days can add it without problems. As you say that the site does have some info, this seems to be a good site for on this list. I am afraid that someone will have to go through all the pages that now use the link, and clean those which are inappropriate. --[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 13:19, 31 July 2008 (UTC)


== referrals ==
== Miscellaneous ==
<pre>\?refferer=</pre> I don't think anything that tries to set a referrer is good. Diffs: [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kongregate&diff=229066964&oldid=229059006] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Kongregate&diff=228503298&oldid=227062525]. If this is too general then <pre>kongregate\.com.*\?refferer=</pre>. [[User:Taemyr|Taemyr]] ([[User talk:Taemyr|talk]]) 19:49, 1 August 2008 (UTC)
:Added. {{done}}. --[[User:Beetstra|Dirk Beetstra]] <sup>[[User_Talk:Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">T</span>]] [[Special:Contributions/Beetstra|<span style="color:#0000FF;">C</span>]]</sup> 13:00, 2 August 2008 (UTC)


* There has been considerable evidence of Black Bear activity that seems to suggest that the population may be extending its range back into historical territories in Ohio, Kentucky, Texas, and other areas where bears were eradicated and have not been present for a considerable amount of time. It is suspected that adolescent males seeking new territory are wandering far and wide, literally hundreds of miles, by following natural and manmade corridors (rivers and highways) back into their ancestral lands. It has generally been recent policy that if the animal does not become a nuisance, is not a danger, or is not in any imminent peril, that it be allowed to exist unmolested and without hindrance. Most cases remain out of the general public's knowledge until there has been a significant human-bear encounter. Note that while dispersing male bears wander far, females generally stay near where they were born. Because of this, although bears may show up in unexpected places, reproducing populations are slower to expand from core areas.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.kypost.com/2004/07/14/bear071404.html|title=Boone County bear still on the lam|author=David Wecker|first=David|last=Wecker|work=[[The Cincinnati Post|The Kentucky Post]]|publisher=[[E. W. Scripps Company]]|date=2004-07-14|archiveurl=http://web.archive.org/web/20070317120729/http://www.kypost.com/2004/07/14/bear071404.html|archivedate=2007-03-17}}</ref>
==sermonaudio.com==
* The sports teams of the [[University of Maine]] are known as ''Black Bears''; it is also the mascot for [[Baylor University]] where two bears are kept on campus.
*{{spamlink|sermonaudio.com}}
* ''Ursus americanus kermodei'', commonly known as the [[Kermode bear|spirit bear]], is a rare white (not [[albinism|albino]]) subspecies found in [[Pacific temperate rain forests|temperate rain forests]] on the Pacific coast of North America. Native tradition credits these animals with supernatural powers.
* [[Smokey Bear]], mascot of the [[United States Forest Service]] is based on an actual Black Bear cub found in [[New Mexico]] after a forest fire. The Black Bear is also the state animal for New Mexico.
* In August 2004, several news media outlets[http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3580626.stm] reported that a wild Black Bear was found passed out after drinking about 36 cans of [[beer]] in Baker Lake, [[Washington]], USA. The bear opened a camper's cooler and used its [[claw]]s and [[tooth|teeth]] to puncture the [[beverage can|cans]]. It was found the bear selectively opened cans of [[Rainier Brewing Company|Rainier Beer]] and left all but one [[Anheuser-Busch|Busch]] beer unconsumed.
* The largest Black Bear on record was legally harvested in North Carolina in 1999 and was weighed by the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission at 400 kg (880 pounds). It was reported to have been eating hogs from an industrial hog farm.
[[Image:Honey the Bear.jpg|thumb|right|Honey, the world's largest female black bear in [[Captivity (animal)|captivity]], at the North American Bear Center.]]
[[Image:Ted the Bear.jpg|thumb|left|Ted, the world's largest male black bear in [[Captivity (animal)|captivity]], at the North American Bear Center.]]
* The North American Bear Center, located in [[Ely, Minnesota]], is home to the world's largest captive male and female black bears. Ted, the male, weighed 430-453.6 kg (950-1,000 pounds) in the Fall of 2006.<ref>[http://www.bear.org/website/Ted/How-Big-is-Ted.html North American Bear Center - How Big is Ted?<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Honey, the female, weighed 252 kg (555.5 pounds) in the Fall of 2007.<ref>[http://www.bear.org/website/Honey/ North American Bear Center - Honey's Page<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> Both bears have a high [[protein]] diet.
*[[Winnie-the-Pooh]] was named after [[Winnipeg the Bear]] an orphaned black bear cub originally from the Canadian township of [[White River, Ontario]]. During [[World War I]], the bear was adopted by (then) [[Lieutenant]] [[Harry Colebourn]], a member of [[The Royal Winnipeg Rifles]] of the Canadian [[Infantry]]. It later became the mascot for the company and was moved to [[London Zoo]] where it was seen by [[A. A. Milne]] and his son.
*The Black Bear, a two-part 2/4 march, is a famous traditional tune played by [[Pipe band]]s around the world; it is the traditional march for Scottish soldiers returning to barracks at the end of the day. It is traditionally played at the end of each performance of the [[Edinburgh Military Tattoo]].
*The Black Bear is sometimes pursued by smaller animals. In [[newspaper]]s on June 11, 2006, the [[Associated Press]] ran a photograph from [[West Milford, New Jersey]], of a Black Bear treed by a woman's [[cat]], a 15-pound tomcat named Jack. After she called the cat home, the bear descended from its perch, about 25 feet up in the tree, and ran off.


==See also==
Has legitimate uses but repeatedly spammed. {{WPSPAM|232889617#http:.2F.2Fspam.sermonaudio.com}}. [[User:MER-C|MER-C]] 12:19, 19 August 2008 (UTC)
*[[List of fatal bear attacks in North America by decade]]


==References==
::{{Done}} --<font face="Futura">[[User:A. B.|A. B.]] <sup>([[User talk:A. B.|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/A. B.|contribs]])</sup> </font> 01:20, 25 August 2008 (UTC)
{{reflist}}
* {{IUCN2006|assessors=Bear Specialist Group|year=1996|id=41687|title=Ursus americanus|downloaded=12 May 2006}}
* {{ITIS|ID=180544|taxon=Ursus americanus|year=2006|date=18 March}}
* Bears, consulting editor Ian Stirling, Fog City Press, 1993.


==External links==
==fulltilthouse.com/==
{{commons|Ursus americanus}}
*{{spamlink|fulltilthouse.com}}
{{wikispecies|Ursus americanus}}
* [http://www.bearaware.bc.ca/ Bear Aware British Columbia]
* [http://www.mnh.si.edu/mna/image_info.cfm?species_id=415 Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History species account-Black Bear]
* [http://www.bbcc.org/ Black Bear Conservation Committee]
* [http://www.sinapu.org/Pages/Bears/Bears.htm Black Bears in the Southern Rockies]
* [http://species.fws.gov/species_accounts/bio_bear.html US Fish and Wildlife Service]
* [http://www.bear.org North American Bear Center]
* [http://www.wlbt.com/Global/story.asp?S=4141199&nav=2CSf Black Bears Returning to Mississippi]
* [http://www.thomasoneil.com/species2.php?n=503 Black Bear images] from Alaska.
* [http://www.wildernessutah.com/brain/blackbears.html Wilderness Utah] - handling a black bear encounter
* [http://www.fieldtripearth.org/div_index.xml?id=4 Field Trip Earth] - Field Trip Earth is a conservation education website operated by the North Carolina Zoological Society.
* [http://www.theblueridgehighlander.com/Black-Bears-of-the-Blue-Ridge-Smoky-Mountains/index.html Black Bears of the Blue Ridge Smoky Mountains]
{{Ursidae nav}}
{{North American Game}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Bear, American Black}}
continuoas spamming from different IP's over several days. [[User:ChiragPatnaik|ChiragPatnaik]] ([[User talk:ChiragPatnaik|talk]]) 17:36, 28 August 2008 (UTC)
[[Category:Bears]]
[[Category:Mammals of Canada]]
[[Category:Mammals of North America]]
[[Category:Hunting in the United States]]
[[Category:Scavengers]]
[[Category:Mammals of Michigan]]
[[Category:Megafauna]]


[[zh-min-nan:Bí-chiu o͘-hîm]]
==fibre2fashion.com==
[[bg:Черна мечка]]
*{{spamlink|fibre2fashion.com}}
[[ca:Ós negre]]
*{{LinkSummary|infibeam.com}}
[[cs:Medvěd baribal]]
*{{LinkSummary|worldamazingrecords.com}}
[[da:Amerikansk sortbjørn]]
*{{LinkSummary|gkcco.com}}
[[de:Amerikanischer Schwarzbär]]
*{{LinkSummary|seo.meetup.com}}
[[nv:Shash]]
*{{LinkSummary|world-amazing-facts.blogspot.com}}
[[es:Ursus americanus]]
*{{LinkSummary|indian-advertising.com}}
[[eo:Amerika nigra urso]]
*{{LinkSummary|autoblogs.in}}
[[fr:Ours noir]]
*{{LinkSummary|automobileguruexperts.blogspot.com}}
[[ik:Iggabri]]
*{{LinkSummary|autoblogindia.wordpress.com}}
[[it:Ursus americanus]]
*{{LinkSummary|infibeam.blog.com}}
[[he:דוב שחור אמריקני]]
*{{LinkSummary|automobilenews.blogsavy.com}}
[[ka:ბარიბალი]]
*{{LinkSummary|automobileclub.blogtownhall.com}}
[[la:Ursus americanus]]
*{{LinkSummary|autoevents.weebly.com}}
[[lt:Juodasis lokys]]

[[hu:Fekete medve]]
Has legitimate uses but repeatedly spammed. {{WPSPAM|238570916#spam.fibre2fashion.com}}. [[User:MER-C|MER-C]] 12:56, 15 September 2008 (UTC)
[[nah:Tecuanōtl]]
:Busted again, withdrawn in favour of blacklisting. [[User:MER-C|MER-C]] 10:02, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
[[nl:Amerikaanse zwarte beer]]

[[ja:アメリカグマ]]
== ndsuniverse.com ==
[[no:Amerikansk svartbjørn]]
In the article [[Nintendo DS homebrew]], users in two IPv4 address ranges have been adding links to a web site, ndsuniverse.com, which appears to host infringing copies of commercial Nintendo DS games. This appears to violate [[WP:C#Linking_to_copyrighted_works|policy]]. Some recent diffs in chronological order: [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nintendo_DS_homebrew&diff=prev&oldid=236849502] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nintendo_DS_homebrew&diff=prev&oldid=237221864] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nintendo_DS_homebrew&diff=prev&oldid=237225199] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nintendo_DS_homebrew&diff=prev&oldid=237307369] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nintendo_DS_homebrew&diff=prev&oldid=237906837] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nintendo_DS_homebrew&diff=prev&oldid=238518462] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nintendo_DS_homebrew&diff=prev&oldid=238764524] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nintendo_DS_homebrew&diff=prev&oldid=238944791] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nintendo_DS_homebrew&diff=prev&oldid=239367087] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nintendo_DS_homebrew&diff=239868671&oldid=239662746] --[[User:Damian Yerrick|Damian Yerrick]] ([[User talk:Damian Yerrick|talk]] | [[Special:Contributions/Damian Yerrick|stalk]]) 12:47, 21 September 2008 (UTC)
[[pl:Baribal]]
{{tlx|editprotected}}
[[pt:Urso-negro]]
:It's still happening from multiple IPs. Can an administrator help now? --[[User:Damian Yerrick|Damian Yerrick]] ([[User talk:Damian Yerrick|talk]] | [[Special:Contributions/Damian Yerrick|stalk]]) 23:54, 28 September 2008 (UTC)
[[ro:Ursus americanus]]
::[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=MediaWiki%3ASpam-blacklist&diff=242159839&oldid=242024970 Added] to the spam blacklist. --[[User:MZMcBride|MZMcBride]] ([[User talk:MZMcBride|talk]]) 03:53, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
[[ru:Барибал]]

[[simple:American Black Bear]]
==northernstars.ca==
[[sl:Ameriški črni medved]]
{{spamlink|northernstars.ca}}
[[fi:Mustakarhu]]

[[sv:Svartbjörn]]
{{WPSPAM|241116331#http://spam.northernstars.ca}} [[User:MER-C|MER-C]] 12:58, 26 September 2008 (UTC)
[[th:หมีดำ]]

[[tr:Amerika siyah ayısı]]
==epocrates.com==
[[uk:Барибал]]
{{spamlink|epocrates.com}}
[[zh:美洲黑熊]]

Examples: [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chlamydia_infection&diff=242994152&oldid=241678468] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Irritable_bowel_syndrome&diff=242847568&oldid=242815858] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pulmonary_embolism&diff=242848223&oldid=242784897] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Peptic_ulcer&diff=prev&oldid=242858963] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Acute_bronchitis&diff=238033490&oldid=235951534] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dermatophyte&diff=236445746&oldid=234322710] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Syncope_(medicine)&diff=242058964&oldid=240576705] [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Back_pain&diff=238034139&oldid=236015801] There are tons more, but have been removed manually.

Has very limited legitimate uses (for example, Epocrates might deserve an article of its own some day), might be step-up to blacklist.

See [[Wikipedia_talk:MED#Value_of_Epocrates_external_links]]. --[[User:Stevenfruitsmaak|Steven Fruitsmaak]] <small>([[User_talk:Stevenfruitsmaak|Reply]])</small> 18:26, 4 October 2008 (UTC)
:{{done}} --[[User:Versageek|<span style="color:midnightblue">Versa</span>]][[User_talk:Versageek|<span style="color:darkred">geek</span>]] 20:18, 4 October 2008 (UTC)

==phobos.apple.com==
* {{LinkSummary|phobos.apple.com}}

I cannot think of any legitimate reasons why links to commercial iTunes store downloads need to be added to WP articles. I mentioned this a while back at [[MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist]] and it was suggested that I bring it here (I forgot until now). It is currently (but probably shouldn't be) used as a reference in some articles and as a generic source for non-free album covers - but it has been used for spamming in the past and is currently (from a glance at [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special:LinkSearch&target=http%3A%2F%2F*.phobos.apple.com&limit=500&offset=0 this]) being used as a 'buy this album' link in quite a few articles. --[[User:Kurt Shaped Box|Kurt Shaped Box]] ([[User talk:Kurt Shaped Box|talk]]) 18:03, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

=Proposed removals=
{{notice|Use this section to request that a URL be ''unlisted''. Please add new entries to the '''bottom''' of this section. You should show where the link can be useful and give arguments as to why it should be unlisted. Completed requests should be marked with {{tl|Done}} or {{tl|Notdone}} or other appropriate [[MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist/Indicators|Indicator]] then [[/archives/{{CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{CURRENTYEAR}}#Proposed removals|archived]].}}

==Encyclopedia of Alabama==
* The [http://www.encyclopediaofalabama.org/face/Home.jsp Encyclopedia of Alabama] is a peer-reviewed online educational resource published by the Alabama Humanities Foundation covering topics related to Alabama history and culture. Linking to EofA articles from Wikipedia would normally be appropriate under the guidelines of [[WP:EL]] (Specifically, Item 3 under "What should be linked"). In some cases it would be better to incorporate EofA content into WP's article and use it as a reference rather than an external link, but that judgment should not be made by an automated script. --[[User:Dystopos|Dystopos]] ([[User talk:Dystopos|talk]]) 17:25, 7 October 2008 (UTC)

=Troubleshooting and problems=
{{notice|This section is to report problems with the blacklist. Old entries are [[/archives/{{CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{CURRENTYEAR}}#Troubleshooting and problems|archived]]}}

=Discussion=
{{notice|This section is for other discussions involving the blacklist. Old entries are [[/archives/{{CURRENTMONTHNAME}} {{CURRENTYEAR}}#Discussion|archived]]}}
==Archives==
*Started the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:XLinkBot/RevertList/archives archives] w/instruct ect.--[[User:Hu12|Hu12]] ([[User talk:Hu12|talk]]) 13:56, 8 February 2008 (UTC)


== XLinkBot logging ==

By clicking the history date and time (in red) will yield the oldid# (ie. permalink) version; <br>
<blockquote>(cur) (last) <font color="# FF0000 ">15:09, 8 February 2008</font> Hu12 (Talk | contribs | block) (4,241 bytes) (→XLinkBot logging: What is "correct oldid"?) <br>
(cur) (last) 15:06, 8 February 2008 Hu12 (Talk | contribs | block) (4,242 bytes) (→XLinkBot logging: new section) <br>
(cur) (last) 14:46, 8 February 2008 Hu12 (Talk | contribs | block) (3,239 bytes) (archive old) <br>
(cur) (last) 13:56, 8 February 2008 Hu12 (Talk | contribs | block) (12,624 bytes) (→Archives) <br>
(cur) (last) 13:56, 8 February 2008 Hu12 (Talk | contribs | block) (12,595 bytes) (→Discussion: created arch)(undo)<br></blockquote>
Url will read == [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:XLinkBot/RevertList&oldid=189965941 http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:XLinkBot/RevertList&oldid=<font color="# FF0000 ">189965941</font>]


Insert <font color="# FF0000 ">189965941</font># & section name:

<code><nowiki>{{/request|189965941#XLinkBot_ logging}}</nowiki></code>

--[[User:Hu12|Hu12]] ([[User talk:Hu12|talk]]) 15:06, 8 February 2008 (UTC)

== Question ==

Hi. [[MediaWiki talk:Spam-blacklist#Question|See]]. Thanks. ~<font color="blue">[[User:AstroHurricane001/A|A]][[User:AstroHurricane001|H]][[User:AstroHurricane001/D|1]]</font><sup>([[User:AstroHurricane001/T|T]][[Special:Contributions/AstroHurricane001|C]][[User:AstroHurricane001/U|U]])</sup> 15:59, 11 August 2008 (UTC)

== Help with Regex ==

I was trying to get something done with AWB and needed some help with Regex. Would you or someone you know be able to help me with this? Cheers [[User:ChiragPatnaik|ChiragPatnaik]] ([[User talk:ChiragPatnaik|talk]]) 05:15, 18 August 2008 (UTC)

Revision as of 13:23, 10 October 2008

American Black Bear
Temporal range: early Pleistocene- recent
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
U. americanus
Binomial name
Ursus americanus
Pallas, 1780
Synonyms

Euarctos americanus

The American Black Bear (Ursus americanus) is the most common bear species native to North America. It lives throughout much of the continent, from northern Alaska south into Mexico and from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean. This includes 41 of the 50 U.S. states, all Canadian provinces except Prince Edward Island, and some of Mexico. Populations in the Southern United States remain in the protected mountains and woodlands of parks and preserves, though bears will occasionally wander outside the parks' boundaries and have set up new territories, in some cases on the margins of urban environments in recent years as their populations increase. Although there were probably once as many as two million Black Bears in North America long before European colonization, the population declined to a low of 200,000 as a result of habitat destruction and unrestricted hunting. By current estimates, more than 800,000 are living today on the continent.[1] It is a close relative of the Asiatic Black Bear with which it is thought to share a European common ancestor.[2]

Description

The American Black Bear usually ranges in length from 150 to 180 cm (5 to 6 feet) and typically stands about 76 to 91 cm (2.5 to 3 feet) at the shoulder.[3] Standing up on its hind feet, a Black Bear can be up to 7 feet tall (2.12 m).[4] Males are 33% larger than females.[5] Females weigh between 40 and 180 kg (90 and 400 pounds); males weigh between 115 and 275 kg (250 and 600 pounds) [2]. Adult black bears can reach 300 kg (660 pounds) [3], but exceptionally large males have been recorded from the wild at up to 240 cm (95 inches) long and at least 365 kg (800 pounds). The biggest American Black Bear ever recorded was a male from North Carolina that weighed 881 lbs (400 kilograms).[6] Cubs usually weigh 200 to 450 g (between 7 ounces and 1 pound) at birth. The adult has small eyes, rounded ears, a long snout, a large body, and a short tail. It has an excellent sense of smell. Though they generally have shaggy black hair, the coat can vary in color from white through chocolate-brown, cinnamon-brown, and blonde (found mostly west of the Mississippi River), to black in the east (the same is generally true in Canada, the border being between Manitoba and Ontario). They occasionally have a slight V-shaped white chest blaze. The tail is 4.8 inches (12.12 cm) long.[5]

Although Black Bears can stand and walk on their hind legs it is more normal for them to walk on all fours. When they do stand, it is usually to get a better scent or to look at something. Their characteristic shuffling gait results from their plantigrade (flat-footed) walk, with the hind legs slightly longer than the forelegs. Another reason for the apparent shuffle is that they commonly walk with a pacing gait. Unlike many quadrupeds, the legs on one side move together instead of alternating, much like a pacer horse.[7] Each paw has five long, strong claws used for tearing, digging, and climbing. When necessary, they can run at speeds up to 30 miles per hour (48 kph) and are good swimmers.[8] The ears of a black bear are larger and more erect than those of the brown bear, and it lacks a prominent shoulder hump. [9]

Ecology and Behavior

Tracks of black bear at hot spring, Yellowstone National Park

Black bears are found in a wide variety of habitats across their range. They prefer forested and shrubby areas but they are also known to live on ridgetops, in tidelands, burned areas, riparian areas, agricultural fields, and, sometimes, avalanche chutes. Black bears can be found from hardwood and conifer swamps to the rather dry sage and pinyon-juniper habitats in the western states. Black bears typically "hibernate" during winter in hollowed-out dens in tree cavities, under logs or rocks, in banks, caves, or culverts, and in shallow depressions. Dens are normally not reused from one year to the next. While they do not eat, drink, defecate, or urinate during hibernation, it is not the true hibernation of smaller mammals since their body temperature does not drop significantly and they remain somewhat alert and active. Females give birth and nurse their young while hibernating.

After emerging from their winter dens in spring, they seek carrion from winter-killed animals and new shoots of many plant species, especially wetland plants. In mountainous areas, they seek southerly slopes at lower elevations for forage and move to northerly and easterly slopes at higher elevations as summer progresses. Black bears use dense cover for hiding and thermal protection, as well as for bedding. They climb trees at speeds up to 20 mph to escape danger and use forested areas and rivers as travel corridors.

Reproduction

File:Bear cub.jpg
Black Bear cub

Females generally reach breeding maturity at 3 to 4 years of age and with adequate nutrition can breed every 2 years. In poor quality habitat, they may not mature until 5-7 and may skip breeding cycles. Males are sexually mature at the same age, but may not become large enough to win breeding rights until they are 4-5 years old (they have to be large enough to win fights with other males and be accepted by females). Mating is generally during summer, from mid-June to mid-August with some variation depending on latitude, but with embryonic diapause, the embryos do not begin to develop until the mother dens in the fall to hibernate through the winter months. Because of this delay, gestation can be 7 to 8 months, but actual development takes about 60 days. However, if food was scarce and the mother has not gained enough fat to sustain herself during hibernation as well as produce and feed cubs, the embryos do not develop.

The cubs are generally born in January or February. They are very small, about 10-14 ounces, and are blind, nearly hairless, and helpless when born. Two to three cubs are most common, though up to four and even five cubs have been documented. First-time mothers typically have only a single cub. The mother nurses the cubs with rich milk, and by spring thaw, when the bears start leaving their dens, the cubs are fur-balls of energy, inquisitive and playful. By this time, they are about 4 to 8 pounds (2-4 kg). When their mother senses danger, she grunts to the cubs to climb high up a tree. They are weaned between July and September of their first year and stay with the mother through the first winter. The cubs become independent during their second summer (when they are 1.5 years old). At this time, the sow goes into estrus again.

Cub survival is totally dependent on the skill of the mother in teaching her cubs what and where to eat, how to forage, where to den, and when and where to seek shelter from heat or danger.

Diet

Black bears are omnivores whose diet includes plants, meat, and insects. They are apex predators in North America, with the exception of areas where they coexist with the brown bear. The black bear eats a wide variety of foods, mainly herbs, nuts and berries. In the state of Washington and other parts of the Pacific Northwest, black bears eat a large amount of skunk cabbage, horsetail and tree bark during the spring.[10] They also commonly feed on spring acorns in Massachusetts.[11]

They feed on carrion and insects (mainly for the larvae) such as carpenter ants, yellow jackets, bees, wasps and termites. They raid beehives for both honey and bee larvae as both are easy sources of carbohydrates (honey) and protein (larvae.) They also kill and eat small mammals (such as rodents) and ungulates, mostly the young. In Michigan[12] and the state of New York,[13] black bears prey on white-tailed deer fawns. In addition they have been recorded preying on elk calves in Idaho[14] and moose calves in Alaska.[15]

Additionally, black bears will eat salmon, suckers, alligator eggs, crayfish, and trout and will seek out food within orchards, beehives, and agricultural croplands. They may frequently raid garbage dumps, campsites, or appropriate food from the trash bins of businesses or private homes.

Black bears often drag their prey to cover, preferring to feed in seclusion and frequently begin feeding on the udder of lactating females, but generally prefer meat from the viscera. The skin of large prey is stripped back and turned inside out with the skeleton usually left largely intact. Unlike wolves and coyotes, black bears rarely scatter the remains of their kills. Vegetation around the carcass is usually matted down by black bears and their droppings are frequently found nearby. Black bears may attempt to cover remains of larger carcasses, though they do not do so with the same frequency as cougars and grizzly bears.[16]

Interspecific predatory relationships

In some areas, Black Bears share their range with the Brown Bear. Due to their smaller size, Black Bears are at a competitive disadvantage against Brown Bears in open, non-forested areas. Although displacement of black bears by Brown Bears has been documented, actual interspecific killing of Black Bears by brown bears has only occasionally been reported. The diurnal Black Bear's habit of living in heavily forested areas as opposed to the largely nocturnal brown bear's preference for open spaces usually ensures that the two species avoid confrontations in areas where they are sympatric.[17]

Black Bears are also sympatric with cougars and may compete with them over carcasses. Like Brown Bears, they will sometimes steal kills from cougars. One study found that both bear species visited 24% of cougar kills in Yellowstone and Glacier National Parks, usurping 10% of carcasses.[18] However, Black Bears and cougars rarely engage in violent combat with each other and usually try to scare each other with bluff changes, growls, swipes, etc.

Black Bear interactions with wolves are much rarer than with Brown Bears, due to differences in habitat preferences. The majority of Black Bear encounters with wolves occur in the species' northern range, with no interactions being recorded in Mexico. Wolves have been recorded to kill Black Bears on numerous occasions without eating them. Unlike Brown Bears, Black Bears frequently lose against wolves in disputes over kills.[19] Black Bears are generally timid and prefer to flee rather than fight.

Relationships with humans

Livestock and crop damage

Livestock depredations by Black Bears occur mostly in spring. A limitation of food sources in early spring and wild berry and nut crop failures during summer months are probably major contributing factors. Black Bears can do extensive damage in some areas of the northwestern states by stripping the bark from trees and feeding on the cambium.[16]

Though Black Bears will attack adult cattle and horses, they seem to prefer sheep, goats, calves, and pigs. They normally kill by biting the neck and shoulders, though they may break the neck or back of prey with blows from the paws. Evidence of a bear attack includes claw marks are being frequently found on the neck, back, and shoulders of these larger animals. Surplus killing of sheep and goats are relatively common. Bears have been known to frighten livestock herds over cliffs, causing injuries and death to many animals; whether or not this is intentional is not known.[16]

Attacks on humans

Like many animals, they seldom attack unless cornered, threatened, or wounded. They are less likely to attack humans than Grizzly Bears and typically flee for cover as soon as they identify a human visitor. Deaths by Black Bear, though, are most often predatory, while the more numerous grizzly fatalities on humans are often defensive.[20] This makes feigning death when a Black Bear attacks ineffective. Although 15 North Americans have been killed since the year 2000, it is estimated that there have been only 56 documented killings of humans by Black Bears in North America in the past 100 years.

History and controversy

Welsh Guards, wearing bearskins
A stuffed white-furred individual, Rothschild Museum, Tring

Because little of their behavior has been understood until recently, Black Bears have been feared and hated. Before the 20th century, these bears were shot intermittently as vermin, food, and trophies, being seen as either a vicious beast or an endless commodity; until recently, in many areas, bounties were paid for Black Bears. Despite conservationists' demands to the contrary, the bearskin hats made of Black Bear fur are still used by regiments of many nations, including the Queen of England's Foot Guards.

Paradoxically, Black Bears have also been portrayed as harmless and cuddly. For example, the teddy bear owes its existence to a young Black Bear cub Theodore Roosevelt refused to shoot, and Christopher Robin Milne named his teddy Winnie-the-Pooh after Winnipeg, a Black Bear which he and his father often saw at London Zoo. Today, Black Bears are as much an important game species as they are a point of debate across the continent, especially when many bears are finding life in the suburbs quite comfortable. Given their relatively low reproductive rate, Black Bear hunting must be carefully controlled and is probably inappropriate in areas where populations are feeble or where habitat is no longer intact.

Their tendencies to follow their stomachs and habitat encroachment by humans have created human-bear conflicts. This is especially true in areas where they may have been uncommon or absent for a long time, as in many parts of the eastern United States. An excellent example is the state of New Jersey. In New Jersey, now the nation's most densely populated state, bears were quite common before the modern era. Because so much land was cleared for homes and farming and as a result of poor policies regarding hunting and forestry, by 1970 only about 100 bears remained. However, because of changes in land use, management, and bear population increases in neighboring Pennsylvania and New York, that number increased to an estimated 3,529 by 2003. The result is that the residents increasingly encounter bears near their homes and workplaces. Education and precaution are needed, especially in areas such as New Jersey where bear encounters are a fairly new phenomena in recent history. Fear of bear attacks is a common concern for these residents. Attacks can happen when a bear has lost its fear of humans and has come to associate people with food. This is a cause for concern among civilians and scientists alike. Similar events have unfolded in other states and in Canada. The rate of contact between Black Bears in search of food and humans rose to record levels in the western United States in autumn 2007.[21] State, provincial, and federal agencies are working to address the issue with trap-and-release programs, limited hunting, and hazing bears with rubber bullets, other aversion techniques, and dogs. In agricultural areas, electric fences have been very effective.

Taxonomy and subspecies ranges

The American Black Bear is classified in the class Mammalia, order Carnivora and family Ursidae. Many subspecies are named, such as the Kermode bear, Cinnamon bear, and Glacier Bear (or American Blue Bear). Currently accepted subspecies (with their respective ranges) include:

Ursus americanus altifrontalis Found in the Pacific Northwest coast from central British Columbia through northern California and inland to the tip of northern Idaho and British Columbia
Ursus americanus amblyceps Native to Colorado, New Mexico, west Texas, the eastern half of Arizona into northern Mexico; southeastern Utah
Ursus americanus americanus Found in eastern Montana to the Atlantic coast; from Alaska south and east through Canada to the Atlantic and south to Texas. Thought to be increasing in some regions.
Ursus americanus californiensis Found in the mountain ranges of Southern California, north through the Central Valley to southern Oregon
Ursus americanus carlottae Queen Charlotte Islands and Alaska
Ursus americanus cinnamomum Idaho, western Montana, and Wyoming, eastern Washington and Oregon, northeastern Utah
Ursus americanus emmonsii southeastern Alaska. Stable.
Ursus americanus eremicus northeastern Mexico
Ursus americanus floridanus Florida, southern Georgia, and Alabama. Threatened.
Ursus americanus hamiltoni the island of Newfoundland
Ursus americanus kermodei the central coast of British Columbia
Ursus americanus luteolus eastern Texas, Louisiana, southern Mississippi Endangered.
Ursus americanus machetes north-central Mexico
Ursus americanus perniger Kenai Peninsula, Alaska
Ursus americanus pugnax Alexander Archipelago, Alaska
Ursus americanus vancouveri Vancouver Island, British Columbia

Legal status

Captive Black Bears at a zoo in Florida

Today, a major threat to the American Black Bear is poaching, or illegal killing, to supply Asian markets with bear galls, hearts, and paws, considered to have medicinal value in China, Japan, and Korea. The demand for these parts also affects grizzly and polar bears. The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), a treaty among more than 120 nations, provides measures to curb illegal trade in wildlife and wildlife products across international boundaries, helping to protect the Black Bear from poaching. Perpetrators caught poaching or smuggling either item out of the United States or Canada may face very serious legal ramifications, and park rangers within both countries are charged with the protection of the bears under their jurisdictions up to and including arrest.

File:Bear heart.jpg
Bear parts from American Black Bears may wind up illegally in Chinese markets like the heart depicted above as native Asian bears' numbers decline.

Black Bears are abundant in most of the western states and in most of Canada, but its presence in the Midwest is uneven by comparison. For example, Ontario is home to about 100,000 bears, with at least as many in neighboring Quebec, while the Upper Midwest has a very healthy population with 30,000 bears in Minnesota alone. In contrast, nearby places like Iowa, Kansas, and Illinois have virtually none. Many Midwestern states have not had a native breeding population of bears since the turn of the 19th century or earlier.[22][23][24]

Most populations east of the Mississippi River are seeing a marked, steady increase in population: bears are moving back into places where they typically have been absent for over a century as suitable habitat has returned. In eastern states with heavily wooded areas, populations are growing rapidly; in North Carolina there were 11,000 bears at last count in 2004, Pennsylvania estimates 15,000 bears currently, New Jersey (a heavily urbanized state) estimated 3,529 in 2003, and even tiny Rhode Island has seen evidence of bears moving into areas where they haven't been in decades. The Florida Black Bear has also seen increases in numbers in recent decades; in 2004, the Florida Fish & Wildlife Commission estimated over 2,400 bears were in the state. Unfortunately, not all is well. Continued development may reduce connectivity between the already separated populations in Florida. The Louisiana subspecies continues to be at critically low levels, although several successful reintroduction projects have added bears to new areas of the state.

In Mexico, the indigenous Black Bear population is listed as endangered and is mostly limited to increasingly fragmented habitat in the mountainous northern parts of the country. Individuals from this area seem to have naturally recolonized parts of southern Texas and along the Rio Grande.[25]

In 1992, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service listed the Louisiana Black Bear subspecies as "threatened" under the Endangered Species Act, meaning it could be in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range in the near future. The American Black Bear is also protected by legislation in the affected states (Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas), owing to its close resemblance to this subspecies. The Florida Black Bear was denied protection under the Endangered Species Act in 1998 and 2004 due to its adequate protection and management by the State of Florida.

Miscellaneous

  • There has been considerable evidence of Black Bear activity that seems to suggest that the population may be extending its range back into historical territories in Ohio, Kentucky, Texas, and other areas where bears were eradicated and have not been present for a considerable amount of time. It is suspected that adolescent males seeking new territory are wandering far and wide, literally hundreds of miles, by following natural and manmade corridors (rivers and highways) back into their ancestral lands. It has generally been recent policy that if the animal does not become a nuisance, is not a danger, or is not in any imminent peril, that it be allowed to exist unmolested and without hindrance. Most cases remain out of the general public's knowledge until there has been a significant human-bear encounter. Note that while dispersing male bears wander far, females generally stay near where they were born. Because of this, although bears may show up in unexpected places, reproducing populations are slower to expand from core areas.[26]
  • The sports teams of the University of Maine are known as Black Bears; it is also the mascot for Baylor University where two bears are kept on campus.
  • Ursus americanus kermodei, commonly known as the spirit bear, is a rare white (not albino) subspecies found in temperate rain forests on the Pacific coast of North America. Native tradition credits these animals with supernatural powers.
  • Smokey Bear, mascot of the United States Forest Service is based on an actual Black Bear cub found in New Mexico after a forest fire. The Black Bear is also the state animal for New Mexico.
  • In August 2004, several news media outlets[4] reported that a wild Black Bear was found passed out after drinking about 36 cans of beer in Baker Lake, Washington, USA. The bear opened a camper's cooler and used its claws and teeth to puncture the cans. It was found the bear selectively opened cans of Rainier Beer and left all but one Busch beer unconsumed.
  • The largest Black Bear on record was legally harvested in North Carolina in 1999 and was weighed by the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission at 400 kg (880 pounds). It was reported to have been eating hogs from an industrial hog farm.
Honey, the world's largest female black bear in captivity, at the North American Bear Center.
Ted, the world's largest male black bear in captivity, at the North American Bear Center.
  • The North American Bear Center, located in Ely, Minnesota, is home to the world's largest captive male and female black bears. Ted, the male, weighed 430-453.6 kg (950-1,000 pounds) in the Fall of 2006.[27] Honey, the female, weighed 252 kg (555.5 pounds) in the Fall of 2007.[28] Both bears have a high protein diet.
  • Winnie-the-Pooh was named after Winnipeg the Bear an orphaned black bear cub originally from the Canadian township of White River, Ontario. During World War I, the bear was adopted by (then) Lieutenant Harry Colebourn, a member of The Royal Winnipeg Rifles of the Canadian Infantry. It later became the mascot for the company and was moved to London Zoo where it was seen by A. A. Milne and his son.
  • The Black Bear, a two-part 2/4 march, is a famous traditional tune played by Pipe bands around the world; it is the traditional march for Scottish soldiers returning to barracks at the end of the day. It is traditionally played at the end of each performance of the Edinburgh Military Tattoo.
  • The Black Bear is sometimes pursued by smaller animals. In newspapers on June 11, 2006, the Associated Press ran a photograph from West Milford, New Jersey, of a Black Bear treed by a woman's cat, a 15-pound tomcat named Jack. After she called the cat home, the bear descended from its perch, about 25 feet up in the tree, and ran off.

See also

References

  1. ^ http://biology.usgs.gov/s+t/noframe/c286.htm[dead link]
  2. ^ Macdonald, David (1984). The Encyclopedia of Mammals: 1. pp. pp.446. ISBN 0-04-500028-x. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  3. ^ <http://www.americanbear.org/Size.htm>
  4. ^ Black Bear: WhoZoo
  5. ^ a b Brown, Gary (1996). Great Bear Almanac. pp. pp.340. ISBN 1558214747. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  6. ^ All about the American black bear - Zoology - Helium - by P.H.Rh
  7. ^ [1]
  8. ^ North American Bear Center - Senses & Abilities
  9. ^ Kindersley, Dorling (2001,2005). Animal. New York City: DK Publishing. ISBN 0-7894-7764-5. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |year= (help)
  10. ^ Efficacy of Black Bear Supplemental Feeding to Reduce Conifer Damage in Western Washington, Georg J. Ziegltrum, The Journal of Wildlife Management, Vol. 68, No. 3 (Jul., 2004), pp. 470-474
  11. ^ Effects of Spring acorn availability on Black Bear diet, milk composition, and cub survival, John E. McDonald Jr.A, B and Todd K. Fuller, Journal of Mammalogy Article: pp. 1022–1028
  12. ^ Ozoga, J. J., and R.K Clute. 1988. Mortality rates of marked and unmarked fawns. Journal of Wildlife Management 52:549-551.
  13. ^ Mathews, N. E., and W. F Porter. 1988. Black bear predation on white-tailed deer neonates in the central Adirondacks, Canadian Journal of Zoology 66:1241-1242.
  14. ^ Schlegal. M. 1976, Factor affecting calf elk survival in north central Idaho. Western Association of State Game and Fish Commission 56:342-355.
  15. ^ Franzmann. A. W. C. C, Schwartz and R.O. Peterson, Moose calf mortality in summer at Kenai Peninsula, Alaska. Journal of Wildlife Management 44:764-768
  16. ^ a b c Bear Predation - Description
  17. ^ http://www.nrmsc.usgs.gov/products/Predation_Papers.pdf[dead link]
  18. ^ COSEWIC. Canadian Wildlife Service (2002). "Assessment and Update Status Report on the Grizzly Bear (Ursus arctos)" (PDF). Environment Canada. Retrieved 2007-04-08. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  19. ^ L. David Mech & Luigi Boitani (2001). Wolves: Behaviour, Ecology and Conservation. pp. p 448. ISBN 0226516962. {{cite book}}: |pages= has extra text (help)
  20. ^ Black Bear Problems and Control - FAQ
  21. ^ Reuters (2007-09-25). "Bear havoc at record heights in US West". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2007-09-25. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help); Check date values in: |date= (help)
  22. ^ 403 Forbidden[dead link]
  23. ^ Bears (Family Ursidae)
  24. ^ http://www.iowadnr.com/wildlife/pdfs/bear%20log%202003%20complete.pdf
  25. ^ http://www.nps.gov/bibe/naturescience/bears.htm88[dead link]
  26. ^ Wecker, David (2004-07-14). "Boone County bear still on the lam". The Kentucky Post. E. W. Scripps Company. Archived from the original on 2007-03-17. {{cite news}}: More than one of |author= and |last= specified (help)
  27. ^ North American Bear Center - How Big is Ted?
  28. ^ North American Bear Center - Honey's Page

External links

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