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The Black Bear Mother and Her Cubs;
Cubs are born in January after a gestation
period of approximately 7 months. Although mating occurs in June, fetal
development takes place mainly in the last 2 months of pregnancy after
the fertilized egg implants in the uterus in November (delayed
implantation). Fetuses develop only if the mother has stored enough body
fat and other nutrients to survive overwinter and provide milk for her
cubs until she resumes feeding in spring (natures way of bear birth
control). At birth, the cubs weigh less than a pound, have only a light
covering of fur, and can barely crawl. The mother eats the birth
membranes, licks the cubs, and warms them against her thinly furred
belly. She moves in response to the cubs' cries and comfort sounds,
making it easy for them to nurse and shifting her weight so as not to
rest too heavily on them. With the full time babysitting job keeping the
mother bear awake, nursing mothers often lose a third or more if their
body weight overwinter, while non-nursing bears lose only 15 to 25
percent.By the time the cubs toddle out of the den at 2 to 3 months of age, they weigh 4 to 10 pounds, depending on how much milk their mother produced and how many littermates they shared it with. The better developed cubs cab immediately climb trees but cannot outrun wolves or other bears. Their mother defends them, warms them, and nurses them, sometimes sitting and cradling them in her forelegs while licking their heads and nursing them. Foraging mothers come immediately when their cubs cry. If need be, a mother will carry a cub in her mouth to a new location or will gently grasp a crying cub in her mouth to help is down from a tree. Spanking cubs toward trees in time of danger is uncommon.
Cubs taste what their mothers eat in the
month after emerging from dens, but they do not begin eating solid food
until their chewing teeth erupt later in spring. They continue to
suckle nearly until they hibernate in fall. Father bears do not help in
raising the cubs and would probably be more competition than help if
they tried.
In fall, mothers do most of the den
construction, but the cubs help rake leaves and twigs for bedding. They
sleep snuggled together for warmth and protection with the mother
nearest to the entrance. Orphaned cubs instinctively make dens and can
survive overwinter alone if they weigh 27 pounds or more in fall.
The next spring, mothers continue to lead
and protect their cubs until June, when the cubs are about 17 months old
and the mother becomes ready to mate again. Then she suddenly becomes
intolerant of her yearlings and threatens (chases) them away. She
recognizes them for several years, possibly indefinitely, allowing them
to remain in parts of her territory which she then avoids. She ejects
trespassing bears that could compete with her offspring and herself.
Female offspring use even larger portions of their mother's territory
until they reach maturity. Meanwhile, the mother shifts her territory to
include new adjacent areas if such areas are available, or tolerates
overlap with her daughters if other areas are not available. Young males
voluntarily leave their mothers' territories before reaching maturity,
traveling up to 137 miles or more before settling down and establishing
mating ranges.
Credits - University of Minnesota Dr. Lynn Rogers Photo's - Mike McIntosh
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