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Sloth Bear

Incogray Offline
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(10-29-2019, 11:28 PM)Pckts Wrote: A large looking Sloth Bear w/a Shorter Coat than I'm used to seeing

Ram Kumar Yadav Kanha
Sloth bear

25 October 2019

*This image is copyright of its original author
>That is a Himalayan black bear.
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Ashutosh Offline
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@Incogray, Nope. That is a sloth bear itself. The snout of the Himalayan or Asiatic Black bear is shorter. Plus, their build isn’t so “hunched”. Not to mention, this photo was taken in Kanha, nowhere near the habitat of a Himalayan Black bear.
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United States Pckts Offline
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(11-19-2021, 01:07 PM)Incogray Wrote:
(10-29-2019, 11:28 PM)Pckts Wrote: A large looking Sloth Bear w/a Shorter Coat than I'm used to seeing

Ram Kumar Yadav Kanha
Sloth bear

25 October 2019

*This image is copyright of its original author
>That is a Himalayan black bear.

No it’s not, it’s a sloth Bear.
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Incogray Offline
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(11-19-2021, 10:59 PM)Ashutosh Wrote: @Incogray, Nope. That is a sloth bear itself. The snout of the Himalayan or Asiatic Black bear is shorter. Plus, their build isn’t so “hunched”. Not to mention, this photo was taken in Kanha, nowhere near the habitat of a Himalayan Black bear.
Idk man. that bear looks awfully similar to a Himalayan black bear. Everything about that screams black bear to me. Short hair, short claws, micky mouse type ear, snout is also darker like Himalayan black bear. Snout length and spinal arc also looks similar. But it doesn't add up with where the photo was captured.
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United States Pckts Offline
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(11-20-2021, 04:26 PM)Incogray Wrote:
(11-19-2021, 10:59 PM)Ashutosh Wrote: @Incogray, Nope. That is a sloth bear itself. The snout of the Himalayan or Asiatic Black bear is shorter. Plus, their build isn’t so “hunched”. Not to mention, this photo was taken in Kanha, nowhere near the habitat of a Himalayan Black bear.
Idk man. that bear looks awfully similar to a Himalayan black bear. Everything about that screams black bear to me. Short hair, short claws, micky mouse type ear, snout is also darker like Himalayan black bear. Snout length and spinal arc also looks similar. But it doesn't add up with where the photo was captured.
It’s a standard Sloth bear, quite a few are short haired. Seems to be more prevalent in the males.

*This image is copyright of its original author



*This image is copyright of its original author
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Incogray Offline
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( This post was last modified: 11-21-2021, 12:16 PM by Incogray )

(11-20-2021, 10:30 PM)Pckts Wrote:
(11-20-2021, 04:26 PM)Incogray Wrote:
(11-19-2021, 10:59 PM)Ashutosh Wrote: @Incogray, Nope. That is a sloth bear itself. The snout of the Himalayan or Asiatic Black bear is shorter. Plus, their build isn’t so “hunched”. Not to mention, this photo was taken in Kanha, nowhere near the habitat of a Himalayan Black bear.
Idk man. that bear looks awfully similar to a Himalayan black bear. Everything about that screams black bear to me. Short hair, short claws, micky mouse type ear, snout is also darker like Himalayan black bear. Snout length and spinal arc also looks similar. But it doesn't add up with where the photo was captured.
It’s a standard Sloth bear, quite a few are short haired. Seems to be more prevalent in the males.

*This image is copyright of its original author



*This image is copyright of its original author
Nah! Man. A standard sloth bear looks like a homeless person. That is a peculiar looking sloth bear. Wiki says that the characteristics of nominal subspecies of srilankan sloth bear is and i quote "The Sri Lankan sloth bear is smaller than the nominate subspecies, has a smaller skull with a condylobasal length of about 250 mm (9.8 in) in females and about 264 mm (10.4 in) in males. It has much shorter body hair, and sometimes lacks the characteristic white chest mark." all which i observe in this sloth bear except size, of which there is no way to be sure of. May be the same traits are also present in sloth bears of central india? Also isn't the parallel resemblance of this sloth bear with Himalayan black bear obvious? Or are my eyes playing tricks!
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Virgin Islands, U.S. Rage2277 Offline
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 same male from kanha @Incogray  @Pckts
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Virgin Islands, U.S. Rage2277 Offline
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Australia GreenGrolar Offline
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How to mHow to make peace with the world's deadliest bears.

Pinky Baiga slowly pulls back the white scarf that covers her dark hair. Her eyes are cautious, and her anguish is palpable: There are deep gashes across her scalp, ragged pink lines extending from forehead to crown. Two months ago, Pinky was mauled by a sloth bear.

The teenager had been gathering firewood with her parents in a forest near Bandhavgarh National Park, in central India. When she turned a corner, wood balanced on her head, she came face to face with a sloth bear. The frightened animal attacked and nearly scalped her before running off. She received stitches to close her wounds and spent 10 days in the district hospital recovering.

As Pinky tells her story, dusk settles. Outside the mud and brick house that she shares with her parents and ten siblings, men of the village herd their dirt-covered cows down the narrow lane. At 17, she should be getting married soon, according to local custom. But now she can barely leave her bed.
“I hate the bear,” she says.

Stories like Pinky’s are common. Over the past two decades, sloth bears have mauled thousands of people, killing hundreds. Though the Indian government doesn’t tally up attacks at the federal level, it’s fair to say from state data that the sloth bear is one of the deadliest animals in India, and is responsible for more human fatalities per capita than any other type of bear.

The bears, found in 19 of India’s 36 states and territories, are being squeezed on all sides by a growing human population. In 1990, the International Union for Conservation of Nature listed sloth bears as “vulnerable.” Today, the bears’ status remains unchanged, though they have since been extirpated in Bangladesh, and presumably Bhutan. India serves as the final stronghold for the species, with small populations in Nepal and Sri Lanka.

Behind the name.

Few Westerners have even heard of a sloth bear, perhaps one of the greatest misnomers in the animal kingdom. The bears aren’t slow—they can run faster than humans—and they aren’t related to sloths. They also weigh a couple hundred pounds, on average.
It’s thought that early European explorers spotted the animals hanging from trees and reasoned they must be related to the sloths of South America. In 1791, European zoologist George Shaw bestowed the erroneous name “bear sloth” (which was later reversed). A more accurate designation might have been “anteater bear,” as the creature feeds on termites and ants, slurping the insects up through its long bulbous snout and extended lower lip.

It’s estimated that fewer than 20,000 sloth bears remain in the wilds of Asia—and yet the species typically kills more than a dozen people each year. By comparison, brown bears, which outnumber their cousins about ten-fold, kill an average of 6.3 people annually in a huge range that spans more than 40 countries.

Across India, forestry officials report a steady increase in bear-human conflict. In the southwestern state of Karnataka, home to the burgeoning tech city of Bengaluru, officials recorded 300 attacks between 2014 and 2018. During a single day in 2017, sloth bears mauled 11 people, one fatally.

Scientists offer various theories to explain the bears’ behavior. Perhaps they’re used to dealing with tigers and leopards and thus unleash the same ferocity on humans. Perhaps they choose fight over flight because, though their long claws are ideal for digging, they don’t allow adult sloth bears to escape danger by climbing trees. Perhaps their violent toll on humans is greater because they don’t bluff charge humans as much, but initiate a physical attack almost immediately.

Another factor is the sheer number of people who live alongside sloth bears. India’s population has nearly doubled since 1980; the country is expected to become the world’s most populous nation within the decade, and to reach a population of 1.5 billion by 2050. Urbanization is gobbling up what precious wilderness remains, and sloth bears haven’t benefited much from the conservation projects protecting other dynamic species.

Many of India’s newer protected areas have been created or expanded to address the habitat and food needs of tigers. Unlike sloth bears, the big cats have seen their numbers increase modestly. The two species can come into conflict; tigers can kill young bears.
“We need to manage the forests with the bear in mind,” says Harendra Singh Bargali, deputy director of The Corbett Foundation, a non-partisan conservation group, and co-chair of the IUCN’s Sloth Bear Expert Team. “Nobody knows what’s happening with [them], but there are 50 tiger reserves in India.”

In 2012, the Indian government released a national welfare and conservation action plan for sloth bears, but hasn’t enforced it, say biologists who study the species. In the 2016 IUCN assessment, scientists predicted that the bear’s populations will decline by more than 30 percent over the next 30 years due to habitat loss and human exploitation of the bear’s food sources.

While some of the conflict is difficult to avoid due to expanding human populations, many sloth bear attacks and deaths can be prevented by taking precautions, experts say: Making noise while in the forest to avoid startling the animals, traveling in groups, and, if attacked, playing dead and covering one’s head.


*This image is copyright of its original author



These bears, which have more than 75 acres to roam at India’s Bannerghatta Bear Rescue Center, were all rescued from some kind of human conflict. Some were permanently injured in traps, some were spared from performing in “dancing bears” shows, and others were suspected of attack. Twice a day they gather to eat porridge made by keepers. Though they live alone in nature, at this center they peacefully co-exist and some even form close bonds.



PHOTOGRAPH BY THOMAS ROWELL

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/sloth-bears-are-worlds-deadliest-india-human-conflict


PHOTOGRAPH BY THOMAS ROWELL
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Romania palulu Offline
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( This post was last modified: 10-01-2023, 02:16 AM by palulu )

Sloth bear in Ranthambore 


   
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