Like many
animals, grizzly bears spend a good part of their lives looking for
food. You will never see a grizzly bear on a diet; in fact, they try
to gain a few hundred pounds of fat in the fall to prepare for winter
hibernation. Fortunately, grizzly bears are omnivores and will eat just
about whatever they can find. Their long claws make great tools to dig
insects from logs, roots and bulbs from the ground, and small mammals
from their burrows. Grizzlies are big enough to take down large mammals
like a bison or elk and quick enough to trap fish with their big front
feet. They will eat grasses, berries, and even dead animals, which their
sensitive noses can smell from miles away.
Though hundreds of pounds of extra fat may seem
like a lot, grizzlies need it. During the cold winter, they sleep for
five or six months without eating or drinking. Instead, they get their
energy from this extra fat. By the time spring comes around, they are
lean and hungry again!
Grizzlies may use their long claws and strong muscles
to excavate a den they can sleep in for the winter, but they often prefer
caves or hollow trees. Even though they do sleep most of the winter,
they can be easily awakened and may go for a short walk on warmer days,
so they are not true hibernators. |