Atlantic WalrusSorry, but you do not have ...BelugaSorry, but you do not have ...Bowhead WhaleSorry, but you do not have ...View more > Media releasesAviso steps up for wildlife as presenting sponsor of the 2025 WWF Climb for NatureAviso employees will also be climbing and volunteering at th ...WWF-Canada welcomes Ryan Baillargeon, David Oxtoby and Thao Pham to its Board of DirectorsWorld Wildlife Fund Canada is proud to announce the appointm ...Government failure to recommend emergency order to protect endangered orcas prompts legal challenge from conservation groupsConservation groups filed a legal challenge over the failure ...View more > This is Wild podcastNature-Based Climate SolutionsDemo Description - t non deserunt ullamco est sit aliqua amet sint. Beyond targetsDemo Description - t non deserunt ullamco est sit aliqua amet sint. CARBON-MAPPING Demo Description - t non deserunt ullamco est sit aliqua amet sint. View more >
Aviso steps up for wildlife as presenting sponsor of the 2025 WWF Climb for NatureAviso employees will also be climbing and volunteering at th ...
WWF-Canada welcomes Ryan Baillargeon, David Oxtoby and Thao Pham to its Board of DirectorsWorld Wildlife Fund Canada is proud to announce the appointm ...
Government failure to recommend emergency order to protect endangered orcas prompts legal challenge from conservation groupsConservation groups filed a legal challenge over the failure ...
Meet our Species of the Month: the grizzly bear! WWF February 10, 2014 Share: Share This Page: Share with Facebook Share via Twitter Share via Linkedin Share in email Written By Joanna Barrington, Manager, Strategic Partnerships This blog series on Canadian wildlife will explore key facts, threats and what WWF is doing to conserve these species. These Canadian species are also featured in the TELUS 2014 calendar. Check out the digital calendar and you can follow along with fun activities, download beautiful desktop wallpapers, colouring pages and more. Large, powerful and sometimes deadly, the grizzly bear has fascinated man for centuries. Yet despite its formidable size and fearsome claws and teeth, its shaggy appearance and appealing features make it a favourite species with many people the world over. A Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis) with salmon catch in a river in the Great Bear Rainforest, British Columbia, Canada. © Garth Lenz / WWF-Canada It has traditionally been treated as a subspecies, Ursus arctos horribilis, of the brown bear living in North America. Its fur ranges from a cream or silver color to an almost black color, and is often tipped in a lighter color, giving it a grizzled look and hence its name! You can distinguish a grizzly from a black bear by the large muscular hump on its shoulder that provides exceptional digging ability and powerful striking force to its forepaws. The grizzly bear calls the uplands of western North America home and has the widest distribution of any bear species. They are omnivores, with plants making up 80-90% of their diet, but eating everything including mammals, fish and berries, and so able to occupy a wide range of habitats, from the coast to dense forests, to sub alpine meadows and arctic tundra. Did you know? Solitary creatures, grizzly bears are diurnal but become nocturnal when near human activity. They are not true hibernators: although they do sleep in dens during the winter months, they can be easily awakened. The average male weighs 550-770 lbs and the female 275-385 lbs.. It’s the 2nd largest land carnivore in North America after the polar bear. The bears have a life span of 25-30 years in the wild. Grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis), Lardeau River, British Columbia, Canada © Tim Stewart / WWF-Canada Why is the grizzly at risk? Although the grizzly bear has no natural enemies, it is classed as Threatened in the lower 48 states of the United States and of Special Concern in Canada. This is mainly due to poaching and loss of habitat. Also, with females averaging two cubs per pregnancy, population sizes are not rebounding as fast as they are dwindling. What is WWF doing? WWF is working to conserve bear populations and protect vital habitat for the bears. One of the actions we are taking to ensure that wide-ranging species such as the grizzly bear have the vast spaces they need to survive is through our work to conserve B.C. estuaries and northern rivers. WWF-Canada and TELUS are partnering to support the conservation of Canadian wildlife and their habitats through a new $1 million, four-year partnership. Visit www.givewherewelive.ca to learn more.