The American black bear (
Ursus americanus) is a medium-sized bear native to
North America. It is the continent's smallest and most widely distributed bear species.
Black bears are omnivores with their diets varying greatly depending on season and location. They typically live in largely forested areas, but do leave forests in search of food.
Sometimes they become attracted to human communities because of the immediate availability of food. The American black bear is the world's most common bear species.
It is listed by the
IUCN as a "least concern" species, due to its widespread distribution and a large global population estimated to be twice that of all other bear species combined. Along with the brown bear, it is one of only two of the eight modern bear species not considered globally threatened with extinction by the IUCN.
American black bears often mark trees using their teeth and claws as a form of communication with other bears, a behavior common to many species of bears.
Despite living in North America, American black bears are not closely related to brown bears and polar bears; genetic studies reveal that they split from a common ancestor 5.05 million years ago (mya). Both
American and
Asian black bears are considered sister taxa, and are more closely related to each other than to other species of bear. Reportedly, the sun bear is also a relatively recent split from this lineage.
A small primitive bear called
Ursus abstrusus is the oldest known
North American fossil member of the genus Ursus, dated to 4.95 mya. This suggests that U. abstrusus may be the direct ancestor of the
American black bear, which evolved in North America.
Although Wolverton and Lyman still consider U. vitabilis an "apparent precursor to modern black bears", it has also been placed within
U. americanus.
The ancestors of American black bears and
Asiatic black bears diverged from sun bears 4.58 mya. The American black bear then split from the
Asian black bear 4.08 mya. The earliest American black bear fossils, which were located in
Port Kennedy, Pennsylvania, greatly resemble the Asiatic species, though later specimens grew to sizes comparable to grizzlies.] From the
Holocene to present, American black bears seem to have shrunk in size,[3] but this has been disputed because of problems with dating these fossil specimens.
The American black bear lived during the same period as short-faced bears (
Arctodus simus and A. pristinus) and
the Florida spectacled bear (Tremarctos floridanus). These Tremarctine bears evolved from bears that had emigrated from
Asia to North America 7–8 ma. The short-faced bears are thought to have been heavily carnivorous and the
Florida spectacled bear more herbivorous,[13] while the American black bears remained arboreal omnivores, like their
Asian ancestors.
The black bear's generalist behavior allowed it to exploit a wider variety of foods and has been given as a reason why, of these three genera, it alone survived climate and vegetative changes through the last ice age while the other more specialized North American predators became extinct. However, both
Arctodus and Tremarctos had survived several other ice ages. After these prehistoric ursids became extinct during the last glacial period
10,000 years ago, black bears were probably the only bear present in much of North America until the migration of brown bears to the rest of the continent.
American black bears are reproductively compatible with several other bear species, and have occasionally produced hybrid offspring. According to
Jack Hanna's
Monkeys on the
Interstate, a bear captured in
Sanford, Florida, was thought to have been the offspring of an escaped female Asian black bear and a male American black bear. In 1859, a black bear and a
Eurasian brown bear were bred together in the
London Zoological Gardens, but the three cubs died before they reached maturity. In The Variation of
Animals and Plants under Domestication
Charles Darwin noted:
In the nine-year
Report it is stated that the bears had been seen in the zoological gardens to couple freely, but previously to
1848 most had rarely conceived
. In the reports published since this date three species have produced young (hybrids in one case),
...
A black bear shot in autumn
1986 in
Michigan was thought by some to be a black bear/grizzly bear hybrid, due to its unusually large size and its proportionately larger braincase and skull.
DNA testing was unable to determine whether it was a large black bear or grizzly.
- published: 02 Jun 2016
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