Mexican grizzly bear

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Mexican grizzly bear
Mexico grizzlies.png
Scientific classification
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Synonyms
  • Ursus horribilis nelsoni
  • Ursus nelsoni

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The Mexican grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) is an extinct population of the Brown bear. All grizzly bears are brown bears. Only the notable distinctions of this population from other populations are discussed here.

The holotype was shot by H. A. Cluff at Colonia Garcia, Chihuahua in 1899.[1] The extinct California grizzly extended slightly south into Baja California Norte. The bears in Durango, Chihuahua, and Sonora and central Mexico were likely more related to the bears of Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas than to those of California.

Description

Known in the Opatas language as the pissini,[2] the Mexican grizzly bear was one of the heaviest and largest mammals in Mexico. It reached a length up to 1.83 metres (6.0 ft) and an average weight of 318 kilograms (701 lb).[citation needed] Due to its silver fur it was often named "el oso plateado" (the silver bear).[3] The Mexican grizzly bear was smaller than the grizzly bears in the United States and Canada.[4] The general color was pale buffy yellowish[4] varying to grayish-white, grizzled from the darker color of the underfur. Specimens in worn pelage varied to yellowish-brown and reddish.[2] The longest fur hairs were on the throat and the flanks. The belly was sparsely haired lacking the thick underfur of the back and the flanks.[1]

Range and habitat

The Mexican grizzly bear inhabited the northern territories of Mexico, in particular the temperate grasslands and mountainous pine forests. Its previous range reached from Arizona to New Mexico and Mexico.

Biology

Like all brown bears, Mexican grizzly bears were omnivores. Their diet mainly consisted of plants, fruits and insects and it is reported that it was very fond of ants, like most brown bears.[5][6] Occasionally it fed also on small mammals and carrion. Females produced one to three cubs every three years or so.[5]

Pfefferkorn, Ignaz. Sonora: A description of the province. Vol. 12. University of New Mexico Press, 1949.

Extinction

The first Europeans to come in contact with the Mexican grizzly bear were the conquistadors in the 16th century when Francisco Vásquez de Coronado went on an expedition to find the Seven Cities of Gold. His trudge began in Mexico City in 1540 and went north to New Mexico and the Buffalo Plains in the modern-day U.S. states of Texas and Kansas.

Because bears hunted the cattle from time to time they were considered a pest by farmers. The Mexican grizzly bear was trapped, shot and poisoned, and had already become scarce in the 1930s. Its former range decreased to the three isolated mountains Cerro Campana (Mexico)| Cerro Campana, Cerro Santa Clara (Mexico)| Santa Clara, and Sierra del Nido 80 km north of Chihuahua in the state of Chihuahua. By 1960 only 30 of them were left. Despite its protected status the hunting continued. By 1964 the Mexican grizzly bear was regarded as extinct.[5] After rumours of some surviving individuals on a ranch at the headwaters of the Yaqui River in the state of Sonora in 1968, American biologist Dr. Carl B. Koford went on a three-month survey but without success.[7] A grizzly was shot in 1976 in Sonora, the fourth confirmed in Sonora and the first in many decades.[8] The Mexican grizzly is now presumed to be extinct, or perhaps only extirpated.[9]

References

Citations

  1. 1.0 1.1 Clinton Hart Merriam: Descriptions of New Bears of North America In: Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington (1914), p.190-191.
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  3. David Day: The Doomsday Book of Animals. Ebury Press, London
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  7. Koford, C.B. 1969. The last of the Mexican grizzly bear. IUCN Bulletin 2:95.
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Further reading

  • Julian Huxley, Martyn Bramwell et al.: The Atlas of World Wildlife, 1973
  • David Day: The Doomsday Book of Animals. Ebury Press, London 1981, ISBN 0-670-27987-0.
  • Jane Thornbark and Martin Jenkins: The IUCN Mammal Red Data Book. Part 1: Threatened mammalian taxa of the Americas and the Australasian zoogeographic region (excluding Cetacea). International Union for the Conservation of Nature, Gland Switzerland, 1982. p. 339
  • Walton Beacham: World Wildlife Fund Guide to Extinct Species of Modern Times, 1997, ISBN 0-933833-40-7
  • A. Starker Leopold: Wildlife of Mexico – The Game Birds and Mammals, 1959

External links