Bears

 

Beginning of the End for the Yellowstone Grizzly?
Doug Peacock, CounterPunch, article — April 2007
I believe this decision will mark the beginning of the end of the grizzly in the contiguous states...

Bear Breeding a Flawed Operation From All Sides
The Hankyoreh, article — November 2006
Breeders have demanded the government classify the bears as a livestock, such as deer and ostriches, so that they can slaughter them regardless of age. "Bears are fully adult in four years. After that, I have to raise them six more years, with feeding costs as much as 800,000 won (US$825) a year," Cho said. The demand for bear's paws and gall bladders, used in traditional medicine, is also falling, another blow to Cho's profitability, he said...

Bear's Fate Sealed Long Before Attack
The Mountain Press, editorial — Animal Sentience, feature — July 2006
The bear's death sentence began when someone began to feed it, a state wildlife officer said of what happened in Gatlinburg. He's right. The end result — the eventual putting down of the bear that attached the man — makes nobody happy...

The Life of a Bear
Victor Watkins, Animal Sentience, feature — January 2006
Each bear species has evolved to adapt to different lifestyles and although there is some specialisation in the diets of each bear species, the general behaviour and motivations of all bear species is very similar...

Illegal Killing Threatens Hunting
Bill Schneider, New West Travel & Outdoors, commentary — November 2005
Most illegal mortality occurs near roads, re-emphasizing the fact that building more roads into backcountry makes grizzly bear recovery more difficult. We only know about a small percentage of illegal kills, he reports, but we know more bears die illegally in roaded areas than in the backcountry...

Bears Crushed in Cages
Brenda Shoss, feature — May 2005
Over two decades, the bear grows beyond the bounds of his cage. Friction wounds scar his face, paws and back. He gnaws iron bars until most of his teeth fall away. In "cage crazy" moments, he slams his head against the metal cell and chews his arms to the bone. Days turn into years. He waits for nothing, the sum of his existence on a bear bile farm in China...

An Interviw with NRDC Grizzly Expert Louisa Willcox
Natural Resource Defense Council, feature — Fall 2004
They're so smart that they never forget where they got a taste of a peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich. Often, when they return to the same spot again and again in search of food, they're eventually killed...

Plight of the Moon Bear
Jill Robinson, Living on Earth, interview — June 2004
And they took bears and placed them in tiny wire cages, again, so small they could hardly move, and began implanting catheters deep inside their gall bladders, from which they could then milk bile on a daily basis...

The Trade in Bear Bile
World Society for the Protection of Animals, investigation — 2000
These animals endure the most appalling levels of cruelty and neglect, and attempts to improve standards at two government-monitored farms in China have not alleviated even basic animal welfare problems...

Bear Dreaming
Susanne Hare, essay
Many indigenous peoples across the continent revere the bear as the guardian, protector, keeper, and spirit helper of the North American continent...

 

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