The Florida Black Bear - Status: Threatened

Florida's Wildlife Needs You
If you are a wild animal living on a planet with human beings who are changing your living area, your home, your habitat, there is very little you can do to protect yourself. But as a human being there is a lot you can do to make sure our animal neighbors survive in health and safety.
In our state, 39 resident forms of wildlife are listed by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service as either endangered or threatened. This means that some day, there could be none of them left at all.
Legal Status: Threatened - Approximately 1,00 to 1,500 remaining.
(In 2004 The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service won their case in court and denied the black bear
endangered status. The Sierra Club and Defenders of Wildlife had challenged
that decision in Court because of the many threats and loss of habitat.)
Distribution - Most live in our four largest national parks in North
and Central Florida and Big Cypress.
Habitat - Prefer forested areas with dense understory vegetation
and swamps.
Threats - Fragmentation of habitats by roads and development and
road kills. (75 bears were killed in 1997).
Family - Black bears are the smallest of North American bears. They
are black with a brown muzzle and are very shy, nocturnal, animals. Some
people are afraid of black bears because they have heard stories of some
of their more aggressive cousins like the polar and grizzly bears. Unlike
those bears, however, black bears will not attack humans..They are the
only bears in North America that are able to climb trees as adults. Other
bears get too heavy.
Food - Bears eat virtually anything that is edible. They are omnivorous.
80% of their diet is vegetable matter. They like tubers, bulbs, berries,
nuts, young shoots, fruits, insects. acorns, eggs. small animals, flowers,
grasses, carrion, .and honey. It is the liking of honey and berries that
gets the black bears in trouble with Florida farmers.Black bears like to
feed early in the morning or evening while it is cool. During the day they
rest in large circular beds of palmetto leaves and other vegetation which
they use as resting sites. They leave scratch marks on trees to signal
their presence to other bears and to keep them away.
Winter Activity - Florida's black bears do not hibernate as bears
do in the winter months up north. Instead they go through a period called
"winter denning" between the months of late December and early
May. Baby bears are born at this time.
Babies - Baby bears are called cubs and they are blind, hairless
and very tiny at birth. They are born to the mother while she is in a dormant
period. Usually only two cubs are born in a premature state weighing between
6 to 10 ounces each. The mother cares for them alone.Their home is a cavity
in a tree, log or cave.
Do Not Feed the Bears
Never feed bears or leave your food out for bears to get beacuse if a bear starts to get tasty food from humans he will go after humans looking for food and either the bear or the people might get hurt.
You can find more information at Black Bears in Florida The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission website.
You should also visit the Defenders of Wildlife website at The Black Bear
If you have comments or suggestions, email the webmaster at Miami Group Webmaster