What is a grizzly bear
or grizzly?
A large, powerful North American brown
bear, characterized by gray-streaked, or grizzled, fur. Grizzlies are 6 to
8 ft (180–250 cm) long, stand 31⁄2 to 4 ft
(105–120 cm) at the humped shoulder, and weigh up to 800 lb (360 kg).
Primarily omnivorous, they are excellent hunters and prey on large mammals
such as deer; they relish ants and other insects and depend on plants,
roots, and berries to supplement their diet. Once widespread in the
western half of North America, from the Arctic Circle to central Mexico,
habitat destruction and hunters have nearly exterminated the grizzly.
Classified as threatened under the U.S. Endangered Species Act, small
groups can be found in protected regions of Alaska, Western Canada, and
the U.S. Rocky Mts. The grizzly is a subspecies, Ursus arctos
horribilis, of the brown bear, Ursus horribilis, which has
small populations throughout North America and N Eurasia. It is classified
in the phylum Chordata, subphylum Vertebrata, class Mammalia, order
Carnivora, family Ursidae.
