Grizzly bears are a type of brown bear that live in North America. The name "grizzly bear" is typically given to members of the subspecies Ursus arctos horribilis, but the scientific classification of American brown bears is not settled, and some people use "grizzly bear" and "brown bear" interchangeably.
Grizzly bears are named after their grizzled hair, which can be streaked with strands of gray or silver. However, people commonly believe the word "grizzly" comes from "grisly," which means to cause horror, according to the Center for Biological Diversity. Despite their imposing size and appearance, grizzly bears rarely attack humans.
Grizzly bear taxonomy
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Ursidae
Genus and species: Ursus arctos
Subspecies: horribilis
Source: ITIS
Grizzly bears can be grouped together under the subspecies Ursus arctos horribilis, but some sources recognize multiple subspecies. For example, the Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS) recognizes eight brown bear subspecies in North America, including extinct California grizzly bears (Ursus arctos californicus). These grizzlies inhabited California until humans wiped them out in the 1920s, according to the Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History in California.
"Grizzly bear" is a common (rather than a scientific) name, so it doesn’t necessarily correspond to a specific subspecies. According to the NWF, many North Americans use "grizzly bear" to describe smaller and lighter-colored bears that live in interior areas, and "brown bear" for larger and darker bears in coastal areas. Regardless of how the name is used, all grizzly bears are members of the only brown bear species.
Related: Mountain goat kills grizzly bear by stabbing it with razor-sharp horns
Grizzly bears’ coat color can be anything from blond to black, according to the National Park Service. This wide variation in size and coat color means that these two features alone aren't surefire ways to tell grizzly bears apart from American black bears (Ursus americanus), which are typically smaller and darker — but not always.
A more reliable method to distinguish grizzly bears from black bears is to look at a bear's body shape and tracks. All brown bears, including grizzly bears, have a pronounced shoulder hump that is higher than their rump. Black bears lack a hump, and their rumps are higher than their shoulders. Furthermore, grizzly bears have dish-shaped faces and short, round ears, while black bears have straight faces and taller, more oval-shaped ears, according to the NPS. Brown bears also have longer and straighter claws that leave marks in tracks more often than black bear claws do.
The NPS recommends that people keep their distance from bears, make an effort to be noticeable when in a bear's environment and avoid surprising them. Bear behavior can be unpredictable, and there isn't a strategy to deal with bear attacks that will work in every situation.
According to the NPS, if attacked by a grizzly or brown bear, you should leave your backpack on (if you have one) and play dead by lying flat on your stomach with your hands clasped on the back of your neck and legs spread — this makes it harder for the bear to turn you over. Grizzlies usually attack with greater intensity if you fight back, so it's best to stay still until the bear leaves you alone. However, you should fight back vigorously if the attack persists by striking the bear in the face with anything available to you, according to the NPS. The NPS advice differs for black bear attacks: During a black bear attack, it is never advisable to play dead. Victims of black bear attacks should try to escape or fight back if no escape is possible.
People who are in a tent when attacked by any bear, or stalked and then attacked, should not play dead and should instead immediately fight back. In this scenario, the bear sees humans as prey, the NPS says.
Related: Woman killed in unusual grizzly bear attack
Grizzly bears are adaptable and occupy different habitats across their range, including coastal areas, mixed-conifer forests, grasslands, mountainous forests and Arctic tundra, according to the Center for Biological Diversity. Individual bears live within home ranges that cover 50 to 150 square miles (130 to 390 square kilometers) for females and up to 600 square miles (1,555 square km) for males, and their ranges can overlap with other bears’ territories, according to the University of Montana's Grizzly Bear Recovery Program.
Grizzlies are solitary but do sometimes interact with other bears. When grizzly bears rub trees with their backs, they're not trying to scratch an unbearable itch. Rather, they are communicating with one another by leaving their scent. They also use urine to mark their territory, and they communicate with other bears using sounds and movement, according to the Pacific Grove Museum of Natural History.
Grizzlies can be diurnal (active during the day) or nocturnal (active during the night), and they may switch their activity patterns if disturbed by humans. A 2013 study of bears in Yellowstone National Park, published in the Journal of Mammalogy, found that grizzly bears' peak period of activity varied from midday to evening depending on the season, suggesting that they also change their activity patterns based on food availability.
The 2013 study of Yellowstone bears found that 70% of the bears’ elk calf kills took place at dusk or night, when the calves were likely easier to catch; the bears were therefore nocturnal during the calving season in late spring and early summer and became diurnal during the summer and early fall, when their diet shifted to roots, berries and nuts. A 2006 study into grizzly bear diet published in the Canadian Journal of Zoology found that grizzly bears eat more meat in areas where ungulates and spawning salmon are more abundant.
Grizzly bears eat as much food as they can in the summer and fall to build up fat reserves before they enter dens and hibernate over winter. Grizzlies are excellent diggers and use their front claws to dig dens into hillsides, or they make their dens in rock caves, tree hollows or brush piles, according to San Diego Zoo. During hibernation, a grizzly's heart rate slows from 70 beats per minute to only 10 beats per minute; metabolic activity also decreases, and the bear stops defecating. Hibernation time varies with the length of winter across the grizzlies' range, but they can stay in their dens for up to seven months living off their fat reserves. Captive grizzly bears that have access to food all year round, such as the bears in San Diego Zoo, may not hibernate at all.
Mothers stay with their cubs for at least two years before separating. Most grizzly bears live for up to 25 years in the wild, according to the NWF. However, some bears may live beyond 30 years. In 2020, a 34-year-old male grizzly bear monitored by scientists was caught in the Yellowstone region — although it was subsequently euthanized as it was in extremely poor physical condition and had begun attacking cattle, the Jackson Hole News & Guide, a newspaper in Wyoming, reported.
Related: During Fat Bear Week, bears compete in a battle of the bulge
There were an estimated 50,000 grizzly bears spread across what is now the western U.S. until they were annihilated en masse in the 1800s by settlers, who tried to eradicate the bears. Thousands of grizzlies were shot, poisoned and trapped, and by the 1930s they were restricted to about 2% of their former range, according to the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service.
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Grizzly bears became protected as a threatened species in the Lower 48 states in 1975, and it is illegal to kill them unless a person is defending themselves or another person. Grizzly bear hunting is legal but regulated in Alaska, where licensed hunters are permitted to kill bears with certain restrictions, such as not being allowed to target bears with cubs, according to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Today, there are about 31,000 grizzly bears in Alaska and less than 1,500 in the contiguous U.S. and Canada, according to the NWF.
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This article was originally written by Live Science contributor Alina Bradford and has since been updated.