Speaking of brown bears, we are all familiar with them, almost every zoo is kept, and some circuses have bears in the show.


The brown bear is a very fierce animal.


Throughout nature, the brown bear has few natural enemies due to its size and strength.


Brown bears are huge. The adult brown bear is more than two meters long, the shoulder is one and a half meters high. Generally, they are weighing more than 500 pounds, and the heaviest brown bears weigh up to a thousand pounds.


Brown bears have golden-yellow faces and their eyes are like black beans.


The brown bear has long body hair, which can withstand the cold in winter.


Its forelimbs are thick and strong, and swinging at a target object can cause serious damage.


It moves slowly, but when it meets food, it will capture it at a very fast pace and then slow down to enjoy it.


The brown bear is not a picky eater at all.


Although it is a carnivore, it will also eat the roots and leaves of plants with great pleasure. Brown bears also eat fish and ants.


Sometimes, when they can't find food, they will visit herders' homes and eat their rice and noodles.


After eating, they stay and play for a while. For the Tibetan mastiff barking at the door, the bears simply choose to ignore it.


In addition to eating and drinking, brown bears are also unusually large eaters.


It can eat almost a dozen rabbits or mice every day. Don't look at the brown bear's clumsy movements, it is very smart.


Whenever they need to hunt for food, brown bears generally skulk and look around.


If it comes across leftover rotten meat eaten by other animal predators, it will finish it and never waste it.


If it is full, it will go back to sleep slowly and leisurely.


Brown bears have a hobby, which is digging mouse holes.


Standing in the grass and looking around for a week to find where there are mouse holes. If the brown bears find the holes, they will go forward to mash the holes in a very violent way.


As there are many channels inside the rat hole, the bears use their stout paws to dig. Then mash it up, scaring the rats to rush out.


The brown bear is not a picky eater, so after eating the rat, it also eats the food stored with the rat.


The brown bear is very often reluctant to take the initiative, especially for some larger animals, and it likes to pick up the leftovers.


Smart brown bears also like to store food. Every year after winter, some animals starve or freeze to death on the grassland.


The bears put them in a relatively secluded place and bury them in the snow to prevent other animals from grabbing food until they are hungry.


Brown bears also hibernate in winter, but there is some difference between other animals.


Many small animals hibernate by sleeping all winter and not eating or drinking, but brown bears can walk around normally.


The brown bear is a fierce animal, often found in grasslands, forests, and other places, and has almost no interactions with humans.


But human beings are very cruel in capturing them, by all means, to get bear paws.


Brown bears have an important role in the natural ecosystem, and we should also protect them.