This multi-member research team used a new data set (mostly
Scandinavian brown bears and Greenland polar bears, for a change) to add not much of anything new on the evolutionary insight front except yet another estimate of when polar bears came to be.1
Hunters have caused
Scandinavian brown bears to change their behaviors when it comes to raising their cubs.
A new study published in Nature Communications shows that
Scandinavian brown bears are adapting their behavior to hunters.
She has spent the past three years researching what
Scandinavian brown bears eat, and how their foraging behavior is influenced by hunting.
Female grizzly bears and
Scandinavian brown bears move away from male territory after giving birth, often choosing areas far from the best bear habitats.
In a recent paper published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, Karen Gjesing Welinder at Aalborg University in Denmark and colleagues set out to understand how wild
Scandinavian brown bears protect their health and save energy during hibernation.