She's back.
And majorly transformed. The 2019 Fat Bear Week champion, bear 435 "Holly," returned to Katmai National Park and Preserve's Brooks River a few days ago, hundreds of pounds lighter — and with a cub. Her dramatic weight loss underscores that these wild Alaskan bears — while regularly seen peacefully munching on salmon or sleeping on the explore.org live-streamed bear cams — live harsh lives and often exhibit what us humans might call impressive resilience.
"Holly's transformation is the product of an extreme fast," Mike Fitz, the resident naturalist for explore.org and a former park ranger at Katmai, told Mashable.
After online voters crowned Holly the fattest of the fat bears in October 2019, she went into hibernation during the long winter famine, subsisting on her ample fat reserves. What's more, Holly also gave birth and nursed a cub during hibernation (female bears are the only animals known to give birth and lactate while hibernating, noted Fitz).
"All that fat paid off," Naomi Boak, the media ranger at Katmai National Park and Preserve, told Mashable. "She’s one-third the bear she was," Boak, who's currently stationed at the Brooks River in Katmai, added.
Holly and her cub are now expectedly skinny, but they survived the brutal winter and are now exploring the Brooks River in search of 4,500-calorie sockeye salmon.
It was far from guaranteed that Holly would come back at all this year, let alone with a cub. She's certainly proven to be both healthy and exceptionally resilient in the past, but Holly is over 20 years old. Twenty is the life expectancy of these brown bears.
"We were wondering if she would come back because she was an older bear," said Boak.
Tweet may have been deleted
Tweet may have been deleted
Raising a bear in a den is a taxing endeavor. Holly relied fully on her salmon-derived fat stores to nurse her cub, who grew rapidly underground from about one pound to some 15 pounds. After emerging, the largely helpless cub is almost certainly eager for more food.
"It is probably more ravenous than ever," said Fitz.
It's unlikely that Holly will spend much time at the famous Brooks River waterfall this summer, due to the presence of dangerous and dominant large bears. As Holly has done in the past, she'll likely stick to the mouth of the river (visible on the lower river web cams), a place that doesn't have as fruitful of fishing spots during the summer, but is safer.
"She's sacrificing potential fishing opportunities to give her cub a greater level of security," explained Fitz.
"All that fat paid off."
Overall, the 2020 bear cam season is off to a lively start. Perhaps the most famous bear on Earth, bear cam favorite "Otis" (bear 480) has arrived, along with dominant bear 856 and multiple sows with cubs (and the main surge of salmon has still yet to arrive). Many of these bears will grow enormous this summer, but Holly likely won't enlarge as impressively as last year, because she's fishing for two hungry bears now.
This cub is in good hands. Holly is known to be an exceptional parent. In the summer of 2014, Holly adopteda 1.5-year-old bear abandoned by his mother, who has since grown into a large, healthy bear (bear 503).
Life as a bear, though, generally isn't too romantic. But Holly is an example of an Alaskan brown bear showing profound success in the precarious wilds, even with added burdens.
"Living as a bear can be a very tough life and the energetic burdens of raising cubs adds an additional challenge," Fitz said.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Fat bear cam champ returns in 2020 with a major transformation-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
24
浏览
9965
获赞
26
Holocaust denial is now banned on Facebook
Facebook is expanding its recent crackdown on dangerous conspiracy theories to include Holocaust denGoing without headphones showed me you can't silence the world, or yourself, forever
I love music. But as far as first date questions, Tinder bios, and networking conversations go, talkNow you can virtually explore Disney parks without spending a buck
It's no secret that Disney vacations are crazy expensive these days.There's some good news—ifSamsung might launch a phone with a graphene battery next year
Samsung is working to launch a smartphone with a graphene battery as soon as next year, leaker of phInstagram will let you livestream for up to 4 hours and archive for a month
Instagram is taking several steps to make life for creators on the platform easier during the COVID-Read the Obamas' heartwarming letter to the survivors of the Parkland school shooting
While it's been over a month since the deadly mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High SchoolFacebook wants to hire journalists, but where does that leave News Feed?
Facebook's news plans are starting to take shape.After months of rumors, the company has confirmed pHow CPU Cores & Cache Impact Gaming Performance
At some point you may have heard someone say that for gaming you need X amount of cores. Typical exaGoogle buys Fitbit for $2.1 billion
Apple Watch needs to watch out.Well, that remains to be seen, but the competition is about to get aCybersecurity conference attendees possibly exposed to IRL virus
They, perhaps more than any other gathered group of industry professionals, know how to defend againTurns out your office printer is a huge cybersecurity risk
Consider the office printer.Massive, hulking things — the devices looming in the corner of worWhy Twitter took action against parody Trump account @RealPressSecBot
Twitter suspended developer platform access to a popular bot account poking fun at President Trump,Don't freak out about the latest scary screen time study
There's a new study out about child brain development and screen time. So naturally, there is panic.I have never once 'liked' anything on Facebook. And I never will.
I've never been one to take the easy way out.I'd rather use stairs than an escalator, I'd rather walCybersecurity conference attendees possibly exposed to IRL virus
They, perhaps more than any other gathered group of industry professionals, know how to defend again