
verage lifespan in the wild: 25 years

Size: 5 to 8 ft (1.5 to 2.5 m)
Weight: 700 lbs (318 kg)
Size relative to a 6ft (2m) man:
The awe-inspiring brown bear lives in the forests and mountains of northern
North America, Europe, and Asia. It is the most widely distributed bear in the
world.
These omnivorous giants tend to be solitary animals, except for females and
their cubs, but at times they do congregate. Dramatic gatherings can be seen at
prime Alaskan fishing spots when the salmon swim upstream for summer spawning.
In this season dozens of bears may gather to feast on the fish, craving fats
that will sustain them through the long winter ahead. In fall a brown bear may
eat as much as 90 pounds (40 kilograms) of food each day, and it may weigh twice
as much before hibernation as it will in spring.
Brown bears dig dens for winter hibernation, often holing up in a suitable
hillside. Females, or she-bears, den while pregnant and give birth during this
winter rest, usually to a pair of cubs. Brown bear cubs nurse on their mother's
milk until spring and stay with her for some two and a half years—so females
only reproduce once every three years.
Adult brown bears are powerful, top-of-the-food chain predators, but much of
their diet consists of nuts, berries, fruit, leaves and roots. Bears also eat
other animals, from rodents to moose.
The world's largest brown bears are found in coastal British Columbia and
Alaska, and on islands such as Kodiak.
Despite their enormous size, brown bears are extremely fast, having been clocked
at speeds of 30 miles per hour (48 kilometers per hour). They can be dangerous
to humans, particularly if surprised or if a person gets between a mother bear
and her cubs.