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The segregation of black bear and grizzly bear populations is possibly due to competitive exclusion. In certain areas, grizzly bears outcompete black bears for the same resources. [109] For example, many Pacific coastal islands off British Columbia and Alaska support either the black bear or the grizzly, but rarely both. [110]
Shared food sources — army cutworm moths and white bark pine nuts — could be responsible for drawing so many wolverines and the bears to the same location, Jeff Copeland, founder of The ...
One of the earliest pieces of evidence supporting the existence of a grizzly bear in Labrador is a map of the region drawn in 1550 by French cartographer Pierre Desceliers, which depicts three bears on the coast. One bear is white and is certainly a polar bear, while the other two are brown. [4] In the late 1700s, Labrador area trader George ...