Importance to humans

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Also known as: Ursidae

If taken when young, bears can be tamed quite easily, and they were once used commonly in circus animal acts. This practice often caused people to consider bears as tame and harmless rather than as potentially dangerous creatures deserving wariness and respect. This mistake has frequently resulted in tragedy for both humans and bears. Grizzly and polar bears are the most dangerous, but Eurasian brown bears and American black bears have also been known to attack humans. Some species depredate livestock on occasion, and some ursids, such as Asiatic and American black bears, may destroy fruit or other crops, especially corn.

The pelts of bears have been used for a number of purposes. Perhaps most popular has been the bearskin rug. Skins also have been used for fashionable articles of clothing. The meat of black and polar bears often is consumed. The teeth and claws of bears have been favourite ornaments among Native American peoples, and the fat furnishes “bear grease,” which is used for cooking. The gall bladders of Asian bears are greatly valued in Asia for pharmaceutical purposes.

Form and function

In most species, the male is larger than the female. Unlike cats and canids such as dogs and wolves, bears walk in plantigrade fashion (on the soles of their feet with the heels touching the ground). Each foot has five digits ending in large nonretractile claws that are sometimes adapted for digging, as in the Asian sloth bear. The claws on the front feet are usually better developed than those on the rear, and they are especially adapted for digging out small rodents or nutritious plant roots. The feet generally have hairless soles, but those of the polar bear are covered with hair, enabling the animal to walk on ice with a firm footing. Bears lack a clavicle but have a baculum (penis bone). Their lips are protrusible and mobile. All have a short stubby tail.

Bears have an elongate skull that is especially heavy in the back portion, and their jaws are controlled at the hinge by a powerful set of muscles. The teeth of the omnivorous bears are unspecialized. The first three premolars are usually either missing or extremely small. Except for variability as to the presence of premolars, the ursid dental formula is that of the Carnivora generally, but the sloth bear lacks one pair of upper incisors. The shearing teeth (carnassials) are poorly developed, and the molars have broad, flat crowns.

Conservation status

Most bears are considered vulnerable species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources. Only the American black bear and the brown bear are considered species of least concern. The other six species are under threat because people hunt them for various reasons and their habitats have been reduced to fractions of their historical extent. Poachers seek out some species, such as Asiatic black bears and sun bears, for their gallbladders and other parts, which are sold in wildlife markets. Live Asiatic black bears are captured for the pet trade and circus acts. Other bears, such as sloth bears and spectacled bears, are under threat because they have either attacked people directly or have come into conflict with humans over crops and livestock.

Evolution and classification

The bear family is the most recently evolved lineage of carnivores. Its ancestral line appears to have diverged from canid stock during the late Miocene Epoch (23 million to 5.3 million years ago) and to have developed into modern species through such Pliocene (5.3 million to 2.6 million years ago) forms as Hyaenarctos of Europe, Asia, and North America. Studies of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) performed during the early 21st century showed that black bears, brown bears, and polar bears diverged from one another some 4 million to 5 million years ago, early in the Pliocene Epoch. Additional genetic evidence suggests that polar bears and brown bears bred extensively with one another as late as 100,000 years ago and that nearly 10 percent of the genomes of modern brown bears can be traced to polar bears.

There was much disagreement over the classification of giant pandas. Mammalogists placed giant pandas with bears (family Ursidae), with raccoons (Procyonidae), or with the red, or lesser, panda (Ailurus fulgens) in Ailuridae. However, molecular analyses performed during the 1990s revealed a close evolutionary relationship between giant pandas and bears.

Howard James Stains Serge Lariviere The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica