There is a world somewhere between reality and fiction. Although ignored by many, it is very real and so are those living in it. This forum is about the natural world. Here, wild animals will be heard and respected. The forum offers a glimpse into an unknown world as well as a room with a view on the present and the future. Anyone able to speak on behalf of those living in the emerald forest and the deep blue sea is invited to join.
--- Peter Broekhuijsen ---

  • 2 Vote(s) - 4 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Big cat and Bear tale

Australia GreenGrolar Offline
Regular Member
***


*This image is copyright of its original author



*This image is copyright of its original author


Another size comparison between an Amur tiger and Ussuri brown bear.
Reply

United Kingdom Apex Titan Offline
Regular Member
***

(08-19-2022, 01:23 PM)GreenGrolar Wrote:




@Apex Titan @peter looks like this video has an Asiatic Black bear visiting a tiger carcass in Thailand (the tiger has already left long before the bear arrived). Video is credited to @Rage2277. Not trying to start a debate but I like to hear your comments on this one: do you guys think it is a similar interaction between Ussuri brown bears and Siberian tigers? in the end the tiger did drag away its kill at night.

The Asiatic black bear in Thailand is smaller than the Ussuri black bear while the tiger in Thailand/ South East Asia is smaller than both the Bengal and Amur tiger.

Yes, this is a typical occurrence in the wild. Predators or omnivores like bears and wild boars, will scavenge on kills made by other predators. Same thing happens between Siberian tigers and Ussuri brown bears. Even birds will scavenge on tiger kills. When tigers have eaten their fill and left the vicinity, other animals will come in and scavenge on the carcass or left-overs.

Here is two interesting videos showing a variety of different species of animals scavenging on the remains of a Amur tigress's roe deer and wild boar kills:

"Based on the materials received, it was possible to establish that the remains of roe deer and wild boar caught by Elena attracted at least 5 species of birds (nuthatch, jay, big-billed crow, blue magpie, golden eagle) and 9 species of mammals (squirrel, Manchurian hare, sable, harza, raccoon dog, fox, wolf, brown bear and wild boar)."












Due to the structure of the jaws, the tiger, unlike hyenas or wolves, does not gnaw bones thoroughly, preferring to lick and bite the flesh of the muscles, so there is always something to chew on the remains of its victims. It is also important that the tiger regulates the number of other predators - wolves, bears and others who fall under the paw. You should not be surprised at the appearance of a hare and a squirrel on the video, because protein food is very important for life, but these animals themselves cannot get anyone, but if they are already available, then why not eat, since the table is set”, - comments Sergey Aramilev , General Director of the Amur Tiger Center.

http://amur-tiger.ru/ru/press_center/news/1460/
1 user Likes Apex Titan's post
Reply

United States Pckts Offline
Bigcat Enthusiast
******

Hicks account of a large male Tiger killing a Male Bear

*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author
1 user Likes Pckts's post
Reply

L-954 Offline
Member
**

Hello @GuateGojira Im a new member to this forum and i recently saw this Table from Tiger extinction, do you have the source for it? Thanks 
*This image is copyright of its original author
Reply

United Kingdom Apex Titan Offline
Regular Member
***

Remains of a fully-grown, large adult male black bear that was killed and eaten by a tiger (2021):


*This image is copyright of its original author



*This image is copyright of its original author




*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author
5 users Like Apex Titan's post
Reply

Bitishannah Offline
Regular Member
***

Actually who is dominant between a Siberian tiger and a Brien bear?
Reply

GuateGojira Offline
Expert & Researcher
*****

(10-31-2022, 08:37 PM)L-954 Wrote: Hello @GuateGojira Im a new member to this forum and i recently saw this Table from Tiger extinction, do you have the source for it? Thanks 
*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author

Hi, nice to meet you and wellcome to the forum.

The source of the image is this document: Goodrich et al., 2012. Tooth breakage in tigers: cause for conflict?

You can found it for free in Researchgate.net
1 user Likes GuateGojira's post
Reply

Australia GreenGrolar Offline
Regular Member
***
( This post was last modified: 01-15-2023, 02:13 PM by GreenGrolar )

(11-09-2022, 08:32 PM)Apex Titan Wrote: Remains of a fully-grown, large adult male black bear that was killed and eaten by a tiger (2021):


*This image is copyright of its original author



*This image is copyright of its original author




*This image is copyright of its original author

*This image is copyright of its original author

Nice pictures, I have no doubt that black bears of both get preyed upon. Unable to post on edge of extinction so I will respond to the latest account here. The account you posted of Odyr killing a male brown bear is impressive. Male Ussuri brown bears being killed (two modern day accounts) is still rare (probably as rare as the tigress killing a shantun bear in one of the hunting accounts) in comparison to Siberian tigers killing female Ussuri brown bears (as well as some 200kg bears of unspecified gander). Adding a bit of my opinion, since I believe the male Ussuri wins 7/10 at average weights - higher than that if the weight difference increase (but not 10/10), I am not surprise that the tiger is able to win at times. Still there are no confirm accounts on tigers preying on the smaller male Ussuri brown bears, some which can be 400 pounds.

The same account also says that the tiger confidently defeats Himalayan bears up to the age of three which is surprising as Linda Kerley says even adult male Himalayan bears fall prey to tigers, something I agree with.

I have also seen the accounts saying that male bears chase away cubs from their mothers and the cubs took advantage of the situation. Alexander Batolov said tigers avoid male Ussuri brown bears during mating season yet Chamlid was killed by the bespectacled tiger. 

Hope we see more accounts and interactions in the future :).


*This image is copyright of its original author


From this chart, both a 211kg and 270 kg male Ussuri brown bear has a 16cm and 16.5 cm palm width respectively while a 600kg male Ussuri brown bear has an 18 cm palm width. Not much difference in palm width.

The average palm width of an Ussuri brown bear and Siberian tiger is surprisingly not much different.

I wonder why the bear did not hibernate early. Shatun bears do not hibernate but that bear was going to hibernate (so it could not be a shatun). Either this bear was below par in weight and hibernated late or there is an abundance of food?

Lately two different emails have showed up. One says the bear is only three years old:
Q:Здравствуйте, я недавно слышал, что в заповеднике была битва тигра с медведем У вас есть больше информации об этом медведе?

Reserve:Здравствуйте!Медведя звали Миша, кличка «Косолапый», возраст примерно 3 года Подвид бурый. В ходе сражения тигр не пострадал. Начальник отдела охраны Милежик М.П.
С Уважением,
филиал Большехехцирский ФГ БУ"Заповедное Приамурье'

Translation: Q:Hello, I heard recently that there was a tiger-bear fight in the reserve Do you have any more information about this bear?

Reserve: Hello, the bear's name was Misha, and he was about 3 years old. The tiger wasn't hurt in the battle.

M.P. Milezhik, Head of Protection Department.
Sincerely yours,
Bolshekhetsirskiy branch of the Federal Wildlife Refuge of the Priamur'e Nature Conservation Area.

https://ibb.co/VJrpVm4

The other (already posted in the edge of extinction thread) says the 18 palm width is confirmed. 
Reply

Australia GreenGrolar Offline
Regular Member
***


*This image is copyright of its original author



An interesting painting of Chlamid and Ochkarik
2 users Like GreenGrolar's post
Reply

United Kingdom Apex Titan Offline
Regular Member
***

@GreenGrolar 

Quote:Nice pictures, I have no doubt that black bears of both get preyed upon. Unable to post on edge of extinction so I will respond to the latest account here. The account you posted of Odyr killing a male brown bear is impressive. Male Ussuri brown bears being killed (two modern day accounts) is still rare (probably as rare as the tigress killing a shantun bear in one of the hunting accounts) in comparison to Siberian tigers killing female Ussuri brown bears (as well as some 200kg bears of unspecified gander). Adding a bit of my opinion, since I believe the male Ussuri wins 7/10 at average weights - higher than that if the weight difference increase (but not 10/10), I am not surprise that the tiger is able to win at times. Still there are no confirm accounts on tigers preying on the smaller male Ussuri brown bears, some which can be 400 pounds.

There's no doubt that smaller male Ussuri brown bears (weighing 400 - 450 lbs) fall prey to tigers. You have to remember, the vast majority of bear kills made by tigers are never found by people.

Also, considering the fact that recently, some of the largest male brown bears (Chlamid was described by Batalov as "Incredibly huge") have fallen victim to tigers, proves that the smaller male brown bears must definitely be getting hunted and killed by tigers at times, because it would be completely illogical for tigers to avoid hunting the smaller male brown bears and only attack and kill the huge males.

The fact that tigers hunt and kill the largest male black bears (150 - 250 kg), also strongly suggests that 400 - 450 lb adult male brown bears must be getting hunted by tigers.

Of course, when tigers hunt adult brown bears, they will more often prey on the adult females, but these two modern day accounts confirm that even the largest male Ussuri brown bears are vulnerable to predation by even moderate-sized male tigers, and do get killed and eaten at times. There's likely been many more cases that have gone unnoticed by humans in the vast and remote Russian taiga.

Quote:The same account also says that the tiger confidently defeats Himalayan bears up to the age of three which is surprising as Linda Kerley says even adult male Himalayan bears fall prey to tigers, something I agree with.

That statement must have been referring to those young black bears that were killed and eaten by tigers, due to the large male bears driving them away from their mothers. Its a well known fact in Russia amongst all experts and specialists, that tigers prey on Himalayan black bears of all ages, sizes and genders. This is common knowledge.

Krechmar stated that the tiger confidently crushes even large Himalayan black bears. Tkachenko observed and reported that adult Himalayan bears of all ages and sexes are repeatedly killed by tigers. And Linda Kerley, based on her own field observations, said she's seen tigers prey on black bears of all shapes and sizes. 

Biologist Sergey Kolchin told me that even large, old male black bears (which can exceed 200 kg in weight and are similar in size to large tigers) also fall prey to tigers:



*This image is copyright of its original author



Due to tiger predation, large bears are frightened by very fresh marks/trails of tigers:



*This image is copyright of its original author




Quote:I have also seen the accounts saying that male bears chase away cubs from their mothers and the cubs took advantage of the situation. Alexander Batolov said tigers avoid male Ussuri brown bears during mating season yet Chamlid was killed by the bespectacled tiger. 


Yes, large male bears chased away the cubs from their mothers and tigers took advantage of the situation and killed them. I posted this report in the tiger extinction thread. These cases had nothing to do with tigers deliberately targeting young bears to hunt. It was just the usual cases of large predators eliminating the cubs of other large predators.

In the same report, it mentions that tigers have decreased the number of bears in the Khekhtsir reserve:




*This image is copyright of its original author



*This image is copyright of its original author

https://www.dvnovosti.ru/khab/2022/10/27/147618/

As to Batalov's remarks, what this shows is that the relationship between tigers and adult male brown bears is quite complex. Tigers usually avoid conflict with large male brown bears during the mating season, but in other seasons, large male brown bears can get hunted and killed by tigers.

In the same article, Batalov also reports that in summer, tigers regularly prey on bears, and some male tigers can attack almost any bear. Which indicates that some adult male tigers will attack and kill large adult male brown bears. Hence why Kolchin wasn't even surprised that the tiger Odyr killed an adult male brown bear.


Quote:
*This image is copyright of its original author

From this chart, both a 211kg and 270 kg male Ussuri brown bear has a 16cm and 16.5 cm palm width respectively while a 600kg male Ussuri brown bear has an 18 cm palm width. Not much difference in palm width.

The average palm width of an Ussuri brown bear and Siberian tiger is surprisingly not much different.

Thats not data on Ussuri brown bears, thats weight/size data on East Siberian brown bears. Ussuri brown bears are only found in the Amur-Ussuri regions, Sakhalin (Russian Far East), Northeast China and the Korean peninsula. Ussuri/Amur brown bears don't live in Northeast Siberia.

There are 3 different subspecies of brown bears in Russia. The Kamchatka bear, Ussuri or Amur brown bear, and the East Siberian brown bear. The Kamchatka and Ussuri brown bears are the largest brown bears in Russia. 

Quote:I wonder why the bear did not hibernate early. Shatun bears do not hibernate but that bear was going to hibernate (so it could not be a shatun). Either this bear was below par in weight and hibernated late or there is an abundance of food?

Its most likely because there was an abundance of food. In 2022 (when the bear was killed), in the Khekhtsir reserve, there was a good harvest of acorns for bears in the forest. Due to this, some bears will continue to roam the forests until mid-December. So the big male brown bear had plenty of food to eat in the forest.

You can read this in the report/screen-shot I posted above.

The specialists also specifically noted that the killed male brown bear was of "impressive size".

Quote:Lately two different emails have showed up. One says the bear is only three years old:
Q:Здравствуйте, я недавно слышал, что в заповеднике была битва тигра с медведем У вас есть больше информации об этом медведе?

Reserve:Здравствуйте!Медведя звали Миша, кличка «Косолапый», возраст примерно 3 года Подвид бурый. В ходе сражения тигр не пострадал. Начальник отдела охраны Милежик М.П.
С Уважением,
филиал Большехехцирский ФГ БУ"Заповедное Приамурье'

Translation: Q:Hello, I heard recently that there was a tiger-bear fight in the reserve Do you have any more information about this bear?

Reserve: Hello, the bear's name was Misha, and he was about 3 years old. The tiger wasn't hurt in the battle.

M.P. Milezhik, Head of Protection Department.
Sincerely yours,
Bolshekhetsirskiy branch of the Federal Wildlife Refuge of the Priamur'e Nature Conservation Area.

https://ibb.co/VJrpVm4

The other (already posted in the edge of extinction thread) says the 18 palm width is confirmed. 

There's no way that the bear could have possibly been a 3 year old brown bear, due to the size of the palm callus width of the front paw. Only the largest male brown bears have paw widths of that size. Even Krechmar (Russian bear specialist) said that an 18 cm palm callus width belongs to a very large bear. 



*This image is copyright of its original author

I assume that email was faked by a bear fan. Mikhail Milezhik confirmed that the killed male brown bear was an adult bear with a palm callus width of 18 cm. So how can the bear possibly be a 3 year old? Makes no sense, whatsoever.

Q: I saw a news report in your reserve about a northeast tiger killing an adult brown bear, which said that it had a palm width of 18 centimeters. This is true? Thank you, wish you all the best!

Mikhail Milezhik: Hello, yes the information is valid.



*This image is copyright of its original author



All the reports and the specialists who found the killed bear, specifically noted that the bear was "large" and of "impressive size". Even the partially-eaten carcass of the bear looks too large to be a young 3 year old brown bear.

It was definitely a large adult male brown bear killed by the tiger.
Reply

LandSeaLion Offline
Banned

I can't post in the Edge of Extinction thread because it is invitation only, so I'm replying in this thread instead.

@Matias

Quote:    It certainly is fully confirmed that a large male brown bear was killed by a tiger!!!

A lot of information has indeed been laid out in that thread, and I do think it's a possibility, but I can't really say that I agree it has been fully confirmed. Let me explain.

@Apex Titan


Quote:    A bear poster from Carnivora also contacted Mikhail Krechmar (Bear specialist & hunting biologist) about this incident. Even Mikhail Krechmar accepts this case.

    Read the full discussion here:

    https://kiowa-mike.livejournal.com/75407...l#comments


    Both Sergey Kolchin (leading expert on tigers and bears in Russia) and Krechmar believe and accept this account to be confirmed.

    Krechmar also stated that the tiger confidently crushes even large black bears. Confirming what biologist Sergey Kolchin told me, that even large male black bears (weighing 200+kg and body length of 2 meters), also fall prey to tigers.

    Krechmar was also asked if it was a "very large bear" killed, and he said - "Yes, healthy."  So Krechmar agrees that the bear was 'very large' and 'healthy.'  Which also confirms all the information I posted about this incident.


*This image is copyright of its original author

Thanks for posting that link. I think it's much more useful to read the full conversation translated from Russian into English (using Google Translate and DeepL), rather than just the small snippet you've highlighted here. This conversation occurred between a poster with pseudonym "vip_everyday" and biologist/writer Mikhail Arsenievich Krechmar (pseudonym "kiowa_mike") in the personal comments of his blog.

Quote:    vip_everyday: Good evening, Mikhail Arsenievich! Can you comment on this information? Thank you!


    "The place of battle between two taiga giants, the Amur tiger and the brown bear, was discovered by inspectors during a raid on the protected area in the southern part of the Bolshekhetsirsky Nature Reserve in Khabarovsck Krai, says the press service of the FSBI "Priamur'e Reserve."

    Not having had time to lie down in hibernation, the clubfoot became prey to the striped master of the taiga," the report says.

    Morever, the bear was of impressive size - the width of his front paw callus is 18 cm.

    "Judging by the footprints, the fight here was a serious one. The animals fought for a long time, but the tiger won. Probably it was Odir, a male tiger that lives mostly in this area of the Reserve and visits tigress Zlata, whose favorite habitat is the northern part of our Reserve," the press service quotes Yury Kya, chief engineer on forest protection and forestry activities of the Bolshekhetsir Nature Reserve.

    According to him, the tiger was not injured. Such conclusions can be made due to absence of blood stains on its resting place, which was found next to the bear's half-eaten carcass.

    "The tiger will probably come back here later to continue his meal for a few more days," the chief engineer clarified."

    kiowa_mike: So. This is a pretty common story. They devour each other and devour each other. The tiger got lucky this time. It doesn't always happen that way.

    vip_everyday: I was referring to the size of the bear. It says that the palmar callus is 18cm wide. That's a very large bear, isn't it?

    kiowa_mike: Yes, a big one*. But the tiger, I suspect, is not small either.

    [*Google Translate gives "healthy" here, but DeepL gives "big." I think it's fair to say from context he was not talking about the condition of the bear, but rather that it was "a healthy size." Remember, he is only a second-hand source of information himself.]

    vip_everyday: About the tiger on Vkontakte video (the original news) the employee of the reserve says that the track is 10-11cm. That's what surprised me. The tiger is an average male (sometimes > 13cm), and the bear is clearly larger than average. On the trail. If a tiger crushed a female brown bear, I would not be surprised.

    kiowa_mike: Well, everyone usually overestimates the size of a tiger's footprints. Everybody loves big cats, and the bigger the cat, the more they love it. Vladimir Aramilev, who's been doing it all his life, told me that he hadn't seen a tiger's footprint bigger than 13cm de facto. I am not Vladimir, but I have* seen them too. I, too, am inclined to relegate footprints of 15cm to the realm of mythology.

    [*He probably made a typo here and meant to say "haven't"]

    vip_everyday: What are the biggest footprints you've ever seen? A tiger and a bear.

    kiowa_mike: Tiger - 13 (moreover, it is always easier to make a mistake with a tiger than with a bear - because of the substrate); bear - 19.5.

    vip_everyday: Oh, I see. So, 13cm for the tiger is a maximum. The largest tiger in Ivan Seredkin et al. ("Tigers of the Sikhote-Alin Nature Reserve," 2005) had a footprint of 12.5cm.

    The news story I started with says that tiger preys on Himalayan bears. "According to Yuri Kya, more often than not, they were one-year-old individuals, i.e., 'cubs.' The tiger confidently defeats Himalayan bears up to the age of three years." Seredkin and his co-authors write about adult female brown bears harvested by adult male tigers. And here all of a sudden - a bear with a palmar callus of 18cm, and, judging by the resting place, the tiger, which had killed him, got off easy, because the resting place was not bloody. I was surprised and decided to ask a specialist. What is wrong with them?

    kiowa_mike: Well, I trust Seredkin more than I trust myself. He is a very good specialist.

    And with the tiger against the bear - well, the opportunity arose, and the mattress* took it. Each case cannot be considred out of the context of details. The tiger also crushes big white-chested bears** with confidence.

    [*I am not sure why the word "mattress" is used here - I can only assume that this is either a typo and there was a similar word in Russian that meant something akin to "predator" or the like, or that it's Russian slang/idiom that neither of the two translators I used picked up on. Someone else here who actually speaks Russian could probably correct this.

    **Asiatic black bears/moon bears]


    vip_everyday: "The tiger also crushes big white-chested bears with confidence."

    I've seen it with large Himalayan bears, too. For example, in the same sources as in Seredkin's. As for the "white-chested" bear, I was just quoting the above-mentioned news.

    We do not know the details, of course. Until a good expert like Seredkin examines the place, we will not know? Thanks a lot for the answers!

    kiowa_mike: "Until a good expert" - and even then we won't know. He is not clairvoyant.

When I read this, honestly, I did not walk away with the same impression as you, Apex. Instead, I came away with these conclusions:

a) Krechmar doesn't actually have any first hand information about the event, only what had been given to him via the news report (just like the rest of us).

b) He believes that bears and tigers kill and devour each other, and that it just so happened that this time it was the tiger who was the fortunate victor. He seems to have an open mind about it, and doesn't seem to think one is dominant over the other.

c) He didn't actually say that it was a healthy bear, but simply repeated from the information that he was given (the paw size) that it was big.

d) Krechmar considers Seredkin (co-author of a paper on Amur tiger predation, which reported tigers preying on brown bears only up to the size of adult females) to be a more knowledgeable expert on tiger-bear predation activity than himself.

e) He comments that it's easy to misjudge the size of tiger paw prints made in snow. I'll say more about this later.

f) Finally, he points out that even a highly knowledgeable expert will not be able to know exactly what happened by examining the scene - the tracks give some ideas, but not a conclusive picture. People are not clairvoyant.

That's a far more nuanced picture than "a biologist confirmed that a huge, healthy bear was killed by a tiger."

I have similar remarks to make about this conversation:


Quote:    Q: Hello, sir. You are an expert on bears, and in Russia, I want to ask whether it is true that brown bears were killed and eaten by tigers. Thank you, sir.

    Sergey Kolchin: Hello. Yes, it's true. Why not? This is a common prey for adult male tiger. Bear was not so bigger.

    Q: Oh! Thank you for your reply! thank you! This bear has a front palm pad width of 18 cm. Is he an adult?

    Sergey Kolchin: I'm not sure that the size of the paw is determined correctly. 18 cm is a big male. but the bear didn't look like that.


*This image is copyright of its original author



*This image is copyright of its original author


There you go!  Even a biologist has confirmed this account.


    Of course the killed bear won't "look like" a large male to Kolchin, because the tiger had already eaten a large portion of the bears carcass, and its hard to judge the size of a partially-eaten bear from a video filmed on a phone or pictures.

    But all 3 experienced forest rangers were able to determine that the tiger killed a large male brown bear of impressive size, with a palm callus width of 18 cm. This is undeniable.

From my perspective, Kolchin's observation that it was a small bear isn't a throw-away comment based on a mistaken belief that a half eaten bear was actually a small bear. It's conditional to his "confirmation" that the incident occurred in the first place. He was ready to believe that the incident happened because it only looked like a small bear, and such predation events are commonplace. He suspects that the 18cm measurement made by the trackers was actually a mistake.

Like Krechmar, he also doesn't appear to have first hand knowledge of the event beyond the link to the report that he was given. So, all in all, I can't take this as "biologist confirmation that a tiger killed a large bear" either.

The Amur Tiger Center (also only a second-hand source) made the same observation - that, contradicting the reports of the 18cm paw size, the bear was "not the biggest."


*This image is copyright of its original author

(Above is the Google Translate version, which includes the amusing translation "beetroot" instead of "brown bear" - it's a pretty funny mental picture, heh. DeepL offers this translation:

"An Amur tiger crushed/ran over a brown bear in the Bolshekhetsir Nature Reserve in Khabarovsk Krai.

Read more about the incident in the publication of the protected area.

We can add that tigers in general often kill bears. Brown bears less often, but Himalayan bears more often. In this case the brown bear was not the biggest, so the tiger was initially the favorite in this fight.")

Personally, I'm not convinced by the explanation that Kolchin and the Amur Tiger Center couldn't tell the difference between a half eaten large bear and a small bear. When I saw the video myself, I also didn't think the carcass looked like it belonged a large bear at all - if it was, then surely the shape would be quite different, right? But, how on earth do we reconcile that very valid observation with the report of an 18cm size paw, indicating a large bear? Something that wasn't clear to me at all from reading the information given in the thread, including the original news report: was the 18cm measurement taken directly from the bear's carcass, or from paw prints in the snow? It's a pretty important distinction to make, because as Krechmar pointed out, determining the size of paw prints made in snow is an uncertain process, owing to the softness of the substrate. More information can be found about that here:


Quote:    Central to tracking is knowing how large a footprint is. This is a simple question until you think about it. One animal moving on a progressively softer surface will leave progressively larger tracks. What is the size of the animal s track?

    Try this experiment. Place your hand on a hard surface, a table for instance. Feel the contact area of your hand with that surface. Imagine that contact area as your first contact with a mud surface. As your hand goes deeper into the mud, your hand print enlarges. Your hand can create an infinite number of track sizes, the deeper it goes into the mud.

    Mountain lion and grizzly bear researchers jointly recognized the problem of variable track size and tried to develop means of over coming it. During their lion research, Fjelline and Mansfield (1989) developed a method for measuring tracks, we call the minimum outline method.

    Remember the first contact area of your hand with the surface. If your hand went no deeper into that surface, your hand print would have only one size - the MINIMUM OUTLINE. If your hand sank deeper into the surface it would create a series of variable outlines as the mud flowed around the curved surface of your hand and fingers. All footprints have a minimum outline, but only prints that sink into a surface have variable outlines. Therefore, minimum outlines are the only constant and consistent size in tracking.

    To measure the minimum outline, study the bottom of a print to determine where the rounded pad turns upward (see Footprint Cross-section figure). The break point where the pad turns upward would be the minimum outline edge. Use this edge to measure tracks.


*This image is copyright of its original author



    While the variable outline of a footprint may only be several millimeters wider than the minimum outline, those few millimeters have a large visual effect (see Area Exaggeration figure). The human eye sees area and area increases with the square of a linear measurement. In short, a few millimeters of width adds a lot of area to a footprint.


*This image is copyright of its original author


    Minimum outline size does not change for different surfaces (assuming you have a clear track) and therefore provides cross-surface comparison, for example from snow to sand. While an animal may leave may sizes of footprints depending on surface, slope and speed, there is only one minimum outline for every print.


    Assigning the break point is a subjective judgement and no two people will always mark it at exactly the same point. However, experimentation has shown that an individual tracker can reduce personal variation in measurements and that groups of trackers trained in minimum outline methods will become more consistent in their measurement of tracks. Quality measurements are the trackers goal and using minimum outline methods greatly reduces over-exaggeration and variability of track size.


    Whenever someone tells you they have measured an especially large track, determine if they understand the effect of sinking into a surface. Be very cautious of any measurements where the measurer does not specify that an effort has been made to control for the foot sinking into the surface.


    To report the track size for an individual animal, it is best to measure several different tracks and average them. A good report would also include a measure of variation (e.g. standard deviation). To do a good job of describing track size for a species, minimum outline measurements of several individuals should be averaged and variation measurements reported for both individuals and the species.


    For your personal research and learning effort, develop a minimum outline set of measurements for species that you can easily access. Remember to measure different ages, and sexes. Even doing this for common pets, cats and dogs, would be worthwhile. I am not aware of any such data sets for household pets. Be the first on your block and send a copy to TRAcks. Also, once you have several measurements of different age animals, you can
    develop growth curves for footprint size.

    A parting thought, be careful of any data set that lists only one measurement for a species. If it is an average, how many tracks and animals were averaged? What were their ages? What were their sexes? What was the variation in the data set? A range of measurements would be better, but the same questions still apply. Trackers must do quality work now days! You can help by developing good data sets and quality data sets take time to develop.

    REFERENCE: Fjelline, D.P. and T.M. Mansfield. 1989. Method to standardize the procedure
    for measuring mountain lion tracks. In Smith, R.H. (Ed.). Proceeding of the third mountain
    lion workshop. 1988, Dec.6-8. Prescott, AZ. Arizona Game and Fish Department.

    REPRINTED FROM:TRAcks, 2(1):3, the journal of the Tracker s Research
    Association, http://www.tracknature.com, (406) 848-9458 PO Box 989, Gardiner, MT 59030.
    By Jim Halfpenny, Ph.D.

https://www.tracknature.com/x/fun3.html

(We actually do see the trackers measure the tiger's paw print, by the way...from what I saw, they don't seem to have made any attempt to find the minimum outline.

Furthermore, I also wonder: if they did measure a paw print, is it not possible that it could even have belonged to a different bear? The bear carcass is covered with a thick layer of snow, which makes me think that some time may have fallen since its death. However, those paw prints around it look quite new, not covered by snow at all - could they have possibly been made by the tiger scrapping with an even bigger bear that was trying to scavenge the carcass's remains at some point later? Counterpoint against this line of reasoning though: if it did belong to another bear which survived, then we'd expect to see bear tracks leading away from the site of the conflict. There was no mention of this, and it doesn't seem like the kind of thing that would be easily overlooked.)

Some more information can be found elsewhere on the Internet though, as GreenGrolar has already alluded to above. I was prompted to go looking because honestly, it has struck me that for a very long time, the Edge of Extinction thread has not really been a neutral source of interesting information about tigers, but the platform for one side of an extremely extended "tiger vs bear" debate waged between two warring factions, with the other side being platformed on a bear-focused board which keeps being addressed, but only rarely named ("Domain of the Bears"). Peter's posts have also mentioned that much animosity towards the Edge of Extinction thread has been coming from members of that board.

Well, I'm a curious cat, so I searched out this board so that I could see the other side of the story, so to speak, and lurked on it without participating. While there was indeed a ridiculous amount of bias towards bears and an extremely distasteful focus on "animal vs animal" fights there (of the kind that you would see in Carnivora), there was also some pretty important information in one recent post that I think is actually highly relevant. The first is this observation of a big bear paw print in the snow (which the trackers unfortunately appear to have stomped on):


*This image is copyright of its original author


This makes me think that it is entirely possible that the trackers didn't actually directly measure the bear's paw (which may have been consumed by the tiger), but measured instead the paw print in the snow.

The second, and more important piece of information though is this email, which was apparently received from Mikhail Milezhik, Head of the Protection Department of the Bolshekhtsirsky Reserve where the incident took place. GreenGrolar has already posted this.

Quote:
*This image is copyright of its original author


    Q:Здравствуйте, я недавно слышал, что в заповеднике была битва тигра с медведем У вас есть больше информации об этом медведе?

    Reserve:Здравствуйте!Медведя звали Миша, кличка «Косолапый», возраст примерно 3 года Подвид бурый. В ходе сражения тигр не пострадал. Начальник отдела охраны Милежик М.П.
    С Уважением,
    филиал Большехехцирский ФГ БУ"Заповедное Приамурье'

    DeepL translation:

    "Hello! The bear's name was Misha, nicknamed "Kosolapy", about 3 years old. The subspecies is brown. The tiger was not harmed in the battle. M.P. Milezhik, head of the patrol."

    Sincerely,
    Bolshekhetsirsky Branch of FSBI
    "Priamur'e Reserved (4212) 491869 - accounting department
    (4212) 491872 - General Department

This looks like a pretty confident and definitive statement from someone who would presumably be intimately familiar with the status of animal populations and territories in the reserve - such information may have been gleaned from the bear's remains (ie. skull and teeth). It is, however, also entirely inconsistent with any claim that it was a huge bear - a three year old bear is a juvenile or subadult, nowhere near close to being fully grown. Brown bears do not reach their full size until they are 10-11 years old.

However Apex, you've also shown evidence that Milezhik replied to another user, "goodhope683", to say that the information about the bear having 18cm-sized paws is valid:


Quote:   Anyways, a Chinese poster 'goodhope683' received an email from the reserve. The person who replied to the email was Mikhail Milezhik (head of the security department of the Bolshekhekhtsirsky reserve of the Federal State Budgetary Institution "Reserved Amur Region")

    Mikhail Milezhik confirmed that the killed male brown bear was indeed an adult brown bear with a palm callus width of 18 cm.

    Q:Я видел в вашем заповеднике новость о том, что северо - восточный тигр убил взрослого бурого медведя, в которой говорилось, что у него ширина ладони 18 сантиметров. Это правда? Спасибо, желаю вам всего наилучшего!

    This report was sent to him:

    http://www.zapovedamur.ru/news/kse

    Mikhail Milezhik:Здравствуйте, да информация действительна


    English translation:

    Q: I saw a news report in your reserve about a northeast tiger killing an adult brown bear, which said that it had a palm width of 18 centimeters. This is true? Thank you, wish you all the best!

    Mikhail Milezhik: Hello, yes the information is valid.


*This image is copyright of its original author

So. How can this be? Which is correct? Was one (or both) of these emails fabricated?

If both are actually real, then the only ways that I can think of to reconcile them would be these:

- The bear was a three year old juvenile
- The tracks belonged to the juvenile, but were incorrectly measured by the trackers due to the softness of the substrate (snow)

Or:

- The bear was a three year old juvenile
- The tracks were correctly measured but belonged to a different, larger bear, which the trackers failed to pick up on

Or:

- The bear was not a juvenile, Milezhik is misinformed and can't be taken as a credible expert in this particular case (morever, both Kolchin and the Amur Tiger Center made wrong observations)
- The paw size was directly and correctly measured by the trackers, and indeed belonged to the very large bear

All three of these scenarios require some degree of human error, which honestly isn't that far fetched - even the best experts do get things wrong sometimes. No one is infallible. And yes, that includes the trackers.

It's a real shame that you left the second email from Milezhik out of the Edge of Extinction thread though, as it is obvious that you are actively reading the board where it was posted, even if only to formulate rebuttals - I noticed that your last post in the Edge of Extinction thread actually responded to the "Domain of the Bears" post that contained that email, but only to the bit about the bear being referred to in the comment section of the video as "Misha" (apparently a common generic nickname for bears in Russia). Not the actually relevant and contradictory information, which was the "Misha" in question potentially being only three years old.

Quote:I assume that email was faked by a bear fan. Mikhail Milezhik confirmed that the killed male brown bear was an adult bear with a palm callus width of 18 cm. So how can the bear possibly be a 3 year old? Makes no sense, whatsoever.

...instead, you've chosen to dismiss it outright as a fabrication. Hey, this could very well be the case - it's a screenshot posted on a message board after all, not an email attachment, and people can and do tell lies on the Internet. I haven't contacted Milezhik myself to verify - I don't even have his contact email. But for heaven's sake, if you truly want to be a neutral source of information Apex, then don't just include the one screenshot of an email from Milezhik (the one to goodhope683) as evidence to support the case that you clearly want to make while neglecting the one that doesn't support your argument, without at least explaining why you've done this. If one is fake, then that raises the possibility of the other one being fake too.

Just to reiterate - I don't actually think it's out of the realm of possibility that the tiger successfully preyed upon a large male bear. I'm keeping an open mind about it, not dismissing it. But by declaring, by fiat, that the original story is absolutely infallible and that the bear having an 18cm sized paw is "god's truth", you're doing the opposite of keeping an open mind - you're automatically dismissing any additional information that contradicts this picture, without further thought. This assumption also heavily slanted the way you interpreted each of the biologists whose commentary you have included - including Kolchin, who quite explicitly said that he believes that the paw size may have been measured incorrectly. 

Whether you intended it or not, this annoyingly selective editing and filtering of information, with the end result showing one side of a story that is not at all clear, was what finally triggered me to write down this massive compilation of my thoughts and doubts about the whole thing. The Edge of Extinction thread is ostensibly meant to be a place where good, neutral information about tiger behaviour and biology is posted, unbiased by subjective opinion...but I don't think it has achieved that goal, for all the reasons I've posted (sorry Peter).

I will say though, that I did like these comments you made later:

Quote:    But then there are rare cases of tigers getting injured in fights by smaller sloth bears. Why is this? How comes in some cases sloth bears can manage to injure a tiger in a serious fight, whereas the much larger brown bears and large male Asiatic black bears fail to do so in some cases?? 

    What this shows, is that every fight is different. Maybe Odyr is a highly adept bear-killer who was able to avoid any serious injuries in the fight. Or maybe, he did get slightly injured from the fight, but not bad enough for him to leave clear traces of his blood on the ground. Maybe his injuries were minor? Who knows.

Quote:There are also cases of tigers killing 'large' and 'very large' male (Ussuri) wild boars in prolonged fights without sustaining any injuries whatsoever. But then there are rare cases of other tigers getting injured in fights with large male wild boars, and even in extremely rare cases, even killed. So again, it depends.

    Even the first-hand reports from the "Reserved Amur region" only noted how the killed bear was of "impressive size" and had a palm callus width of 18 cm. But no mention/assumptions of the bear possibly being already weakened or sick etc, prior to his death by the tiger.

Here, you are being open-minded enough to acknowledge that there could at least be another perspective to the story. That was something that had been sorely missing, up until that point.

Final note, and a bit of a rant (with my own very opinionated voice):

I don't think any biologist worth their salt actually cares overly much about the question "who would win in a fight, a tiger or a bear?" beyond the science of tiger predation/tiger and bear conservation. There's a thin line between the former (a pop culture "spectator sport" type of question, and a bloodthirsty one at that) and the latter, which actually has important ecological ramifications.

I also don't believe that language like "the tiger crushes the bear" belongs in any kind of reputable scientific conversation about predation and interspecific conflict.  Perhaps this is a language translation issue, but I'm genuinely surprised and more than a bit concerned to see this language ("run over"/"crushed"/"flattened") being repeatedly used not only here on Wildfact, but also by the Amur Tiger Center and by one of the biologists quoted (although in that last case, at least it was only in the comment section of his informal blog).

It is this kind of disrespect for animals, and the downright toxic and tribal nature of "my favourite animal beats your favourite animal" debates plaguing the Internet, that puts me off wanting to participate in a forum like Carnivora. I can't help but notice that several of the images that were posted in the Edge of Extinction thread are hosted on a group called "Animal Fight Club"...that's not exactly encouraging. Is Wildfact also an "animal vs animal" board, or is it a wildlife enthusiast board focused on scientific information? I joined because I thought it was the latter, but from my perspective, it also comes dangerously close to being the former...I can't help but feel that Wildfact's Edge of Extinction thread and the bear forum are each playing host to a selectively edited version of a story that supports a favourite animal, in a wholly unscientific debate based more on "spectator sport" entertainment than genuine respect for nature. It's disappointing.

End rant.
3 users Like LandSeaLion's post
Reply

United Kingdom Apex Titan Offline
Regular Member
***

@LandSeaLion 

Quote:When I read this, honestly, I did not walk away with the same impression as you, Apex. Instead, I came away with these conclusions:

a) Krechmar doesn't actually have any first hand information about the event, only what had been given to him via the news report (just like the rest of us).

b) He believes that bears and tigers kill and devour each other, and that it just so happened that this time it was the tiger who was the fortunate victor. He seems to have an open mind about it, and doesn't seem to think one is dominant over the other.

c) He didn't actually say that it was a healthy bear, but simply repeated from the information that he was given (the paw size) that it was big.

d) Krechmar considers Seredkin (co-author of a paper on Amur tiger predation, which reported tigers preying on brown bears only up to the size of adult females) to be a more knowledgeable expert on tiger-bear predation activity than himself.

e) He comments that it's easy to misjudge the size of tiger paw prints made in snow. I'll say more about this later.

f) Finally, he points out that even a highly knowledgeable expert will not be able to know exactly what happened by examining the scene - the tracks give some ideas, but not a conclusive picture. People are not clairvoyant.

That's a far more nuanced picture than "a biologist confirmed that a huge, healthy bear was killed by a tiger."

I have similar remarks to make about this conversation:

It seems that you clearly didn't understand my post. I only posted Krechmar's opinion because the bear fans kept spouting nonsense about "no biologists have confirmed this account" which is nonsense. My point was to show that even Krechmar accepts this case, he never denied it, period.

Krechmar said its easy to misjudge the size of TIGER paw prints, NOT bear paw prints. Making the 18 cm palm callus width of the killed bear even more reliable. And Krechmar said that an 18 cm palm callus width belongs to a very large bear, he also never disputed the size of the bear's paw prints.

No, only tigers are known to kill and devour brown bears, not vice versa. Krechmar is clearly wrong about that. When's the last time a brown bear killed any tiger?  There's not a single reliable account of a brown bear killing even a little tiger cub in the last 30 years. There are only those 12 old, outdated cases from the last century, but even those accounts can be disputed, as there are zero modern day equivalents to those cases.

Krechmar is referring to head-on fights between tigers and brown bears, in which both can be the victor and then eat their opponent.

Krechmar said: "Yes, healthy", now what did he mean by saying "healthy"??

Krechmar's comments about Seryodkin are completely irrelevant, what's that got to do with anything here?  Seryodkin studies tiger-bear relations in the Primorye region, not the Khabarovsk territories, in which this male brown bear was killed. Seryodkin is not some ultimate tiger-bear expert, so why mention him? Seryodkin is irrelevant in this case.

Sorry, but Krechmar stated nonsense here. Of course a highly knowledgeable expert will easily be able to determine what happened. Judging and reading animal traces in the snow is the easiest way to determine what happened. Why do you think most Amur tiger prey studies took place by winter snow-tracking? because its easy to track and follow tigers in the snow.

The forest inspectors, guards and rangers like Yuri Kya (who examined the kill-site) are highly trained and experienced experts in judging the traces of wild animals in the forest. They spend their whole life in the taiga, more so than biologists like Seryodkin. These same specialists, who found the killed bear, oversee and also take part in the census of animals in the Khekhtsir reserve. Meaning, they know the animals very well and are able to accurately judge and read their traces. In the snow, it will be no problem for them.

Now tell me, if you were walking in a forest clearing in the snow, and you saw that the entire clearing (snow) had been trampled up with paw prints which clearly showed that a tiger and big brown bear were fighting, and then you find a carcass of a large male brown bear, with clear evidence of the tiger feeding on it and resting near the bear carcass, what would you conclude??

What obviously happened?  And Krechmar should have been asked this same question!  But of course he wasn't, because he was talking to a bear fan who's desperately trying to find any excuse to "debunk" this account, which he can't.

Quote:From my perspective, Kolchin's observation that it was a small bear isn't a throw-away comment based on a mistaken belief that a half eaten bear was actually a small bear. It's conditional to his "confirmation" that the incident occurred in the first place. He was ready to believe that the incident happened because it only looked like a small bear, and such predation events are commonplace. He suspects that the 18cm measurement made by the trackers was actually a mistake.

Like Krechmar, he also doesn't appear to have first hand knowledge of the event beyond the link to the report that he was given. So, all in all, I can't take this as "biologist confirmation that a tiger killed a large bear" either.

Why are you twisting Kolchin's words for??  He never said, nor implied that it was a "small bear", so what are you on about?  You clearly made that up.

All he said is that it doesn't look like a "big male", that's all. He never said that it wasn't an adult male brown bear, or that it doesn't look like an "adult male". There's a clear difference between an 'average adult male' brown bear (250 - 264 kg) and a 'big male' brown bear (300 - 400+kg).

In fact, Kolchin clearly stated that the "Bear was not so bigger", which clearly implies that he thinks the killed bear was bigger than the tiger, but not much bigger. He said absolutely nothing about a "small bear" killed. He only mentioned that brown bears are common prey for adult male tigers.

Of course the partially-eaten carcass of the brown bear might not look like a "big male" to Kolchin or some people, especially from a video filmed on a phone/and some pictures. Its hard to judge the actual size of a bear like this.

Here's a perfect example. Here is a large male (healthy) grizzly bear that weighs close to 500 lbs (492 lb), but many people can easily mistake this large bear for a small male grizzly weighing around 330 - 350 lbs:


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


*This image is copyright of its original author


Even though the killed male brown bear was partially eaten by the tiger, its body length still looked longer than this healthy, fully-intact, 223 kg adult male grizzly bear.

I would have never estimated this 492 lb grizzly bear to weigh even 430 lbs, let alone 492 lbs. My guess would have been somewhere between 170 - 175 kg. But look how wrong I would have been, that bear is much heavier than I would have guessed.

Also note, the tiger had already eaten a large, significant portion of the bear, so Kolchin's remarks about the bears size prove nothing, he could easily be mistaken by the pictures. Kolchin wasn't there at the scene, he never saw the carcass of the brown bear up close in real-life like the forest rangers did. Big difference.

I can post many more examples of large bears that look relatively smallish in size.

Quote:The Amur Tiger Center (also only a second-hand source) made the same observation - that, contradicting the reports of the 18cm paw size, the bear was "not the biggest."

(Above is the Google Translate version, which includes the amusing translation "beetroot" instead of "brown bear" - it's a pretty funny mental picture, heh. DeepL offers this translation:

"An Amur tiger crushed/ran over a brown bear in the Bolshekhetsir Nature Reserve in Khabarovsk Krai.

Read more about the incident in the publication of the protected area.

We can add that tigers in general often kill bears. Brown bears less often, but Himalayan bears more often. In this case the brown bear was not the biggest, so the tiger was initially the favorite in this fight.")

Personally, I'm not convinced by the explanation that Kolchin and the Amur Tiger Center couldn't tell the difference between a half eaten large bear and a small bear. When I saw the video myself, I also didn't think the carcass looked like it belonged a large bear at all - if it was, then surely the shape would be quite different, right? But, how on earth do we reconcile that very valid observation with the report of an 18cm size paw, indicating a large bear? Something that wasn't clear to me at all from reading the information given in the thread, including the original news report: was the 18cm measurement taken directly from the bear's carcass, or from paw prints in the snow? It's a pretty important distinction to make, because as Krechmar pointed out, determining the size of paw prints made in snow is an uncertain process, owing to the softness of the substrate. More information can be found about that here:

There's a big difference between the words: "large" and "largest", you do realise that, right?

Where's the contradiction?  Who said an 18 cm palm callus width belongs only to the biggest brown bear in the forest?  An 18 cm paw size no doubt belongs to a large bear, but that doesn't mean it's the "largest" bear. 

The Amur Tiger Center clearly stated: "was not the largest". They never said, nor implied that it "wasn't a large bear."  You're either deliberately twisting their words, or simply misunderstood what they said.

According to the experts, they found traces all over the forest clearing of the tiger and bear fighting, which clearly indicated that the tiger killed the brown bear. Now, how exactly were the 18 cm paw prints measured? I don't know. You'll have to contact Yuri Kya to find that out. But all the reports mention that the killed bear was of "impressive size" and had a palm callus width of 18 cm.

Your whole arguments are based on pure guesswork.


Quote:Furthermore, I also wonder: if they did measure a paw print, is it not possible that it could even have belonged to a different bear? The bear carcass is covered with a thick layer of snow, which makes me think that some time may have fallen since its death. However, those paw prints around it look quite new, not covered by snow at all - could they have possibly been made by the tiger scrapping with an even bigger bear that was trying to scavenge the carcass's remains at some point later? Counterpoint against this line of reasoning though: if it did belong to another bear which survived, then we'd expect to see bear tracks leading away from the site of the conflict. There was no mention of this, and it doesn't seem like the kind of thing that would be easily overlooked.)

Some more information can be found elsewhere on the Internet though, as GreenGrolar has already alluded to above. I was prompted to go looking because honestly, it has struck me that for a very long time, the Edge of Extinction thread has not really been a neutral source of interesting information about tigers, but the platform for one side of an extremely extended "tiger vs bear" debate waged between two warring factions, with the other side being platformed on a bear-focused board which keeps being addressed, but only rarely named ("Domain of the Bears"). Peter's posts have also mentioned that much animosity towards the Edge of Extinction thread has been coming from members of that board.

Well, I'm a curious cat, so I searched out this board so that I could see the other side of the story, so to speak, and lurked on it without participating. While there was indeed a ridiculous amount of bias towards bears and an extremely distasteful focus on "animal vs animal" fights there (of the kind that you would see in Carnivora), there was also some pretty important information in one recent post that I think is actually highly relevant. The first is this observation of a big bear paw print in the snow (which the trackers unfortunately appear to have stomped on):

This makes me think that it is entirely possible that the trackers didn't actually directly measure the bear's paw (which may have been consumed by the tiger), but measured instead the paw print in the snow.

Are you an expert in judging the paw prints and traces of bears?  Are you an expert in determining what a fresh bear track is?  Based on what exactly does that bear track look "quite new"?

It's a fact that even older tracks can remain frozen into the ground, and remain there for several days. How? because I've seen this happen with my dog's tracks in the snow. His older tracks remained frozen into the ground even several days later.

The entire battle-ground/kill-site was not filmed on video, it was just a short video filmed on a phone. They must have measured the bears tracks after they stopped filming and continued to examine the scene. Looking for specific details in that short video is pointless.

Just like you pointed out, if there was any possibility that another bigger brown bear was at the scene, then the specialists would have clearly seen the bears trail leaving the kill-site as well. But they found nothing, they only found tracks and traces of a tiger and big male brown bear fighting in the snow, and then the killed bears partially-eaten carcass. That says it all.

Quote:The second, and more important piece of information though is this email, which was apparently received from Mikhail Milezhik, Head of the Protection Department of the Bolshekhtsirsky Reserve where the incident took place. GreenGrolar has already posted this.

This looks like a pretty confident and definitive statement from someone who would presumably be intimately familiar with the status of animal populations and territories in the reserve - such information may have been gleaned from the bear's remains (ie. skull and teeth). It is, however, also entirely inconsistent with any claim that it was a huge bear - a three year old bear is a juvenile or subadult, nowhere near close to being fully grown. Brown bears do not reach their full size until they are 10-11 years old.

However Apex, you've also shown evidence that Milezhik replied to another user, "goodhope683", to say that the information about the bear having 18cm-sized paws is valid:

So. How can this be? Which is correct? Was one (or both) of these emails fabricated?

If both are actually real, then the only ways that I can think of to reconcile them would be these:

- The bear was a three year old juvenile
- The tracks belonged to the juvenile, but were incorrectly measured by the trackers due to the softness of the substrate (snow)

Or:

- The bear was a three year old juvenile
- The tracks were correctly measured but belonged to a different, larger bear, which the trackers failed to pick up on

Or:

- The bear was not a juvenile, Milezhik is misinformed and can't be taken as a credible expert in this particular case (morever, both Kolchin and the Amur Tiger Center made wrong observations)
- The paw size was directly and correctly measured by the trackers, and indeed belonged to the very large bear

All three of these scenarios require some degree of human error, which honestly isn't that far fetched - even the best experts do get things wrong sometimes. No one is infallible. And yes, that includes the trackers.

It's a real shame that you left the second email from Milezhik out of the Edge of Extinction thread though, as it is obvious that you are actively reading the board where it was posted, even if only to formulate rebuttals - I noticed that your last post in the Edge of Extinction thread actually responded to the "Domain of the Bears" post that contained that email, but only to the bit about the bear being referred to in the comment section of the video as "Misha" (apparently a common generic nickname for bears in Russia). Not the actually relevant and contradictory information, which was the "Misha" in question potentially being only three years old.

..instead, you've chosen to dismiss it outright as a fabrication. Hey, this could very well be the case - it's a screenshot posted on a message board after all, not an email attachment, and people can and do tell lies on the Internet. I haven't contacted Milezhik myself to verify - I don't even have his contact email. But for heaven's sake, if you truly want to be a neutral source of information Apex, then don't just include the one screenshot of an email from Milezhik (the one to goodhope683) as evidence to support the case that you clearly want to make while neglecting the one that doesn't support your argument, without at least explaining why you've done this. If one is fake, then that raises the possibility of the other one being fake too.

How did the Amur Tiger Center make "wrong observations"??  They never once said that it wasn't a 'large' bear, at all. All they said is that the bear was "not the biggest". There's a clear difference! You're just twisting their words. And Kolchin is merely suspecting thats all, that proves nothing. Like I showed above, even a fully-grown, healthy adult male grizzly bear weighing almost 500 lbs, can look fairly small or medium-sized and be easily mistaken for a 330-350 lb bear. So Kolchin's observation means nothing. He was obviously mistaken, especially by a partially-eaten carcass on video/pictures.

The reason why I never posted that other alleged email from Milezhik, is because I honestly don't trust that email. Why? All I know is that it was posted by some bear fan. Whereas the email I posted, I trust, because I know and trust the source (goodhope683).

Also, Milezhik not only said that the information about the bears 18 cm paw width is valid, but also about the bear being an ADULT brown bear killed. Why didn't you mention that part? And why did Yuri Kya not mention in his statements/reports about this incident, that the killed bear was called "Misha"??  If the bear was really a "juvenile" and called "Misha", then that definitely would have been mentioned in all those numerous reports about this incident. And Yuri Kya never mentioned anything about a 3 year old bear called "Misha" killed in any of his statements!

There are around 18 - 20+ news reports about this incident, even the governor of the Khabarovsk territory mentioned this case in his Telegram channel. It was also reported in the TV News channels in Russia, and not a single source, article or report mentions anything about a "juvenile" 3 year old brown bear called "Misha" that was killed by the tiger in Khekhtsir, nothing. All the reports consistently note that the killed brown bear was of "impressive size" and had a palm callus width of 18 cm. Which means it was a large adult male brown bear killed, and Milezhik confirms this in his email to 'goodhope683'.

Whenever a particular individual animal has been named, and dies for any reason, the reports will ALWAYS mention the killed animal's name. Because the experts identify that individual, but in this case, specialists only mentioned about a tiger who killed an impressive-sized bear, but absolutely no mention or hint of a 3 year old brown bear called "Misha" killed. Why?

Experienced and highly trained experts like Yuri Kya (who are very familiar and knowledgeable about the animals in the forest) would easily be able to determine by the bears carcass if it was a juvenile brown bear, easily. But they reported the exact opposite, they noted the bear was of "impressive size" and large. So how can it possibly be a juvenile brown bear killed, when the specialists who found the killed bear and examined the scene, reported nothing of the sort??  Makes no sense, whatsoever. And thats another reason why I never posted that other "email" from Milezhik because it doesn't correspond with all the reports and statements from the experts like Yuri Kya and the forest rangers.

I only posted information in the extinction thread that corresponds with all the original reports and statements from the experts/specialists.

Here, you can contact the reserve and ask them these questions: (Contact the Bolshekhehtsirsky Branch)

http://www.zapovedamur.ru/contacts


Quote:Just to reiterate - I don't actually think it's out of the realm of possibility that the tiger successfully preyed upon a large male bear. I'm keeping an open mind about it, not dismissing it. But by declaring, by fiat, that the original story is absolutely infallible and that the bear having an 18cm sized paw is "god's truth", you're doing the opposite of keeping an open mind - you're automatically dismissing any additional information that contradicts this picture, without further thought. This assumption also heavily slanted the way you interpreted each of the biologists whose commentary you have included - including Kolchin, who quite explicitly said that he believes that the paw size may have been measured incorrectly. 

Whether you intended it or not, this annoyingly selective editing and filtering of information, with the end result showing one side of a story that is not at all clear, was what finally triggered me to write down this massive compilation of my thoughts and doubts about the whole thing. The Edge of Extinction thread is ostensibly meant to be a place where good, neutral information about tiger behaviour and biology is posted, unbiased by subjective opinion...but I don't think it has achieved that goal, for all the reasons I've posted (sorry Peter).

I will say though, that I did like these comments you made later:

Selective editing and filtering of information??  Are you serious?  Here's the big difference, my posts about this incident in the extinction thread, is solely based on the reports and statements made by the actual real experts and specialists who found the killed bear and examined the kill-site.

Unlike the bear fans, I don't deal with guesswork, personal opinions, assumptions and wild speculations. I like to post EVIDENCE and accounts. Your response to me, was highly based on guesswork, and you even clearly twisted the words of both Sergey Kolchin and the Amur Tiger Center. By doing this, we'll keep going around in circles about this case, which is pointless. You have zero evidence to back-up your speculations and personal opinions.

Your response is all about you wondering about this and that. No evidence though.

There is no shred of evidence that proves that the specialists measured the bears paw size incorrectly, nothing. Its all pure guesswork. I have no reason to doubt the conclusions of highly trained and experienced experts like Yuri Kya, who are far more experienced in the forest than most biologists are! People like Yuri Kya know how to accurately judge the traces of wild animals, they're specifically trained to do so, as they take part in the census of animals in the reserve.

The edge of extinction thread is where you post actual EVIDENCE, DATA & REPORTS to back up your arguments and claims. Which is exactly what Peter wants. The last thing the edge of extinction thread needs is posts full of guesswork, biased opinions and speculations etc. You learn nothing from that.

Thats exactly why I posted all that large abundance of information about this incident in the extinction thread. So the general public can read the actual reports and see what the true experts stated, and not the highly biased opinions and excuses of bear fans who ignorantly dismiss this account because it doesn't suit their agenda's.

Quote:Final note, and a bit of a rant (with my own very opinionated voice):

I don't think any biologist worth their salt actually cares overly much about the question "who would win in a fight, a tiger or a bear?" beyond the science of tiger predation/tiger and bear conservation. There's a thin line between the former (a pop culture "spectator sport" type of question, and a bloodthirsty one at that) and the latter, which actually has important ecological ramifications.

I also don't believe that language like "the tiger crushes the bear" belongs in any kind of reputable scientific conversation about predation and interspecific conflict.  Perhaps this is a language translation issue, but I'm genuinely surprised and more than a bit concerned to see this language ("run over"/"crushed"/"flattened") being repeatedly used not only here on Wildfact, but also by the Amur Tiger Center and by one of the biologists quoted (although in that last case, at least it was only in the comment section of his informal blog).

It is this kind of disrespect for animals, and the downright toxic and tribal nature of "my favourite animal beats your favourite animal" debates plaguing the Internet, that puts me off wanting to participate in a forum like Carnivora. I can't help but notice that several of the images that were posted in the Edge of Extinction thread are hosted on a group called "Animal Fight Club"...that's not exactly encouraging. Is Wildfact also an "animal vs animal" board, or is it a wildlife enthusiast board focused on scientific information? I joined because I thought it was the latter, but from my perspective, it also comes dangerously close to being the former...I can't help but feel that Wildfact's Edge of Extinction thread and the bear forum are each playing host to a selectively edited version of a story that supports a favourite animal, in a wholly unscientific debate based more on "spectator sport" entertainment than genuine respect for nature. It's disappointing.

End rant.

The word: "Crushes" or "Crush" is a word often used by the Russian biologists, zoologists, naturalists and hunters. Its just part of their lingo. If you read the scientific literature/popular literature books from Russian biologists, you'll see that they often use the word "Crush" instead of "kill".  Thats not a "disrespect towards animals", thats ridiculous, your being way too sensitive.

Did you read any of Peter's posts on why I post about tigers vs bears in the tiger extinction thread??  I guess not.


Once again, the reason why I post about tigers vs bears in the extinction thread is because this particular topic is of great interest to many people, including me and Peter. Its a fascinating subject because nowhere else on earth do two massive, similar-sized terrestrial predators of a different species, live alongside each other in the same forest. And nowhere else on earth does such a powerful carnivore as a brown bear get actively hunted, killed and eaten by another huge predator.

Interspecific relationships/conflicts between large predators fascinates many wildlife experts and biologists. There's a good reason why a Chief scientist & biologist like John Goodrich wrote this article:

https://panthera.org/blog-post/dance-dea...heast-asia

And there's a reason why the Amur Tiger Center published this video:







If you're not interested in this particular topic, then fine, everyone has their interests and preferences. But don't knock other people for liking something you don't. Don't people debate all the time, about who would win in a fight between two boxers, MMA fighters, Martial artists etc??  Is that being "toxic" and disrespect towards all those fighters??  Of course not. And large wild predators are the most formidable and ultimate fighters on earth, so its natural and human nature for most people to be interested in who would win in a fight between two powerful predators.

Since I started posting about tigers vs bears in the edge of extinction thread, that thread has had more views than ever before!  That shows that many people are interested in this topic.

Of course Wildfact is not an "Animal vs Animal" forum, and I also don't want it to become that. However, the tiger vs bear topic is an exception, because even the co-owner of this forum is very interested about the relationship/interactions between these two huge predators. What's wrong with that?
2 users Like Apex Titan's post
Reply

Matias Offline
Regular Member
***
( This post was last modified: 01-20-2023, 12:36 AM by Matias )

Until then, despite the grueling months that this subject dominated the tiger's thread, saw no problem with @Apex Titan  synthesizing and including narratives that favor his point of view. After all, always wanted to prove that Siberian tigers beat big brown bears. 

Every narrative of unwitnessed predation generates plentiful interpretations and deductions, and possibly all of them are capable of fostering a good story; the question: facts x interpretations (including contexts that cannot be properly measured) give rise to multiple insights. Apex has been free to post what he wants for all this time - This is what happens when discussing themes that cannot be built into a concrete reality where Science finds support. All your need to “have the last word” is too revealing and shows that you don't accept disagreements. Not only do you dismiss all the considerations of those who try to place themselves within this subject, as @LandSeaLion . You just want your narrative to prevail.

The subject became too polluted… we can't find the best points, they were lost in pages and more pages saying basically the same thing.

"He who needs to post more than 30 times on the same subject, will not be able to prove his point the next time"

Wildfact, this discussion needs to have an end.

At least, for me, it's over!
1 user Likes Matias's post
Reply

United Kingdom Apex Titan Offline
Regular Member
***
( This post was last modified: 01-20-2023, 10:22 PM by Apex Titan )

(01-20-2023, 12:35 AM)Matias Wrote: Until then, despite the grueling months that this subject dominated the tiger's thread, saw no problem with @Apex Titan  synthesizing and including narratives that favor his point of view. After all, always wanted to prove that Siberian tigers beat big brown bears. 

Every narrative of unwitnessed predation generates plentiful interpretations and deductions, and possibly all of them are capable of fostering a good story; the question: facts x interpretations (including contexts that cannot be properly measured) give rise to multiple insights. Apex has been free to post what he wants for all this time - This is what happens when discussing themes that cannot be built into a concrete reality where Science finds support. All your need to “have the last word” is too revealing and shows that you don't accept disagreements. Not only do you dismiss all the considerations of those who try to place themselves within this subject, as @LandSeaLion . You just want your narrative to prevail.

The subject became too polluted… we can't find the best points, they were lost in pages and more pages saying basically the same thing.

"He who needs to post more than 30 times on the same subject, will not be able to prove his point the next time"

Wildfact, this discussion needs to have an end.

At least, for me, it's over!

Once again Matias, you have failed to understand. How many times do I, or Peter have to explain this to you?  Why doesn't it sink in?  

Did I invade the (well-moderated) tiger extinction thread and start posting about tigers and bears? NO. Who let me? Peter did. Who invited me? Peter did. And why? because he's also interested in this topic as well. Stop pointing the finger only at me. Why do you keep failing to comprehend this?

If you really think my posts were just trying to prove that "Siberian tigers beat big brown bears", then you are absolutely wrong. The reason for my posts was to provide plenty of information on tigers hunting bears, so we can get a clearer picture on this particular topic and also debunk some old myths and misconceptions. Thats why!

Just because the vast majority of information, accounts and reports from biologists and various other experts, overwhelmingly favors the tiger, doesn't mean I'm trying to prove tigers dominate or beat large brown bears. The information will naturally favour the tiger most of the time, because its the tiger who is the pure predator, it is the tiger who deliberately seeks out and kills brown bears, it is the tiger who is the hunter, and it is the brown bear who is the hunted, not vice versa. So when I post all this info on tiger and bear interspecific relations etc, obviously the accounts will generally favor the tiger. But you automatically assume that I'm trying to "prove" something, which is ridiculous. Its just that most of the info heavily favors tigers, thats all. Is that my fault? NO.

Its not that I "don't accept disagreements" or dismiss all other considerations, its just that I like to deal with evidence and facts. Whereas people like you and 'LandSeaLion' love to post only your speculations and guesswork most of the time.

Once a debate or discussion gets heavily involved in speculation, wild assumptions and opinions of others, then that road leads to nowhere. We'll keep going around and around in circles wondering about this and that, which is pointless. I can easily speculate that flying pigs exist somewhere, but what does that prove? Nothing.

And thats what you offer most of the time, is guesswork. Thats the big difference between me and you, I deal with evidence and what the actual real, highly trained and experienced experts reported and concluded, whereas your just making guesses about other possibilities and offering your personal (which proves nothing) opinion.

I didn't dismiss you or 'LandSeaLion', I just don't agree with your lots views and opinions, which is mostly based on guesswork. Is there something wrong with that?

Next time you have a problem with my posts on tigers and bears, just contact Peter and complain to him. He'll explain it to you, once again! Don't bother me.
Reply

United States Bruceenzo Offline
Banned

Warsaw(waveriders) should come from Poland, because Warsaw is the capital of Poland. He seems to be able to write papers. He even wrote rumors into his papers. This paper has tampered with Dale's original text to quote, which is crazy.

Attached Files Image(s)
           
Reply






Users browsing this thread:
1 Guest(s)

About Us
Go Social     Subscribe  

Welcome to WILDFACT forum, a website that focuses on sharing the joy that wildlife has on offer. We welcome all wildlife lovers to join us in sharing that joy. As a member you can share your research, knowledge and experience on animals with the community.
wildfact.com is intended to serve as an online resource for wildlife lovers of all skill levels from beginners to professionals and from all fields that belong to wildlife anyhow. Our focus area is wild animals from all over world. Content generated here will help showcase the work of wildlife experts and lovers to the world. We believe by the help of your informative article and content we will succeed to educate the world, how these beautiful animals are important to survival of all man kind.
Many thanks for visiting wildfact.com. We hope you will keep visiting wildfact regularly and will refer other members who have passion for wildlife.

Forum software by © MyBB