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Jump To Navigationjump To Search: Kermode Bear
Kermode bear
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Ursidae
Genus: Ursus
Species: U. americanus
Subspecies: U. a. kermodei
Trinomial name
Hornaday, 1905
The Kermode bear, sometimes called the spirit bear (Ursus americanus kermodei), is a subspecies of
the American black bear and lives in the Central and North Coast regions of British Columbia, Canada.[1] It is
the official provincial mammal of British Columbia and symbol of Terrace, British Columbia.[2][3] While most
Kermode bears are black, between 100 and 500 fully white individuals exist.[4] The white variant is known as
spirit bear, and is most common on three islands in British Columbia (Gribbell, Princess Royal, and Roderick),
where they make up 10–20% of the Kermode population.[5] Spirit bears hold a prominent place in the oral
traditions of the indigenous peoples of the area. They have also been featured in a National
Geographic documentary.[6]
Contents
• 1Description
• 2Habitat
• 3Conservation
o 3.1In captivity
• 4See also
• 5References
• 6External links
Description[edit]
The Kermode bear was named after Frank Kermode, former director of the Royal B.C. Museum,[1] who
researched the subspecies and was a colleague of William Hornaday, the zoologist who described it.[7][8] Today,
the name Kermode is pronounced as /kərˈmoʊdi/ kər-MOH-dee differing from the pronunciation of the
Kermode surname, which originates on the Isle of Man (/ˈkɜːrmoʊd/ KUR-mohd).[9]
White Kermode bears are not albinos, as they still have pigmented skin and eyes.[1][5] Rather, a single,
nonsynonymous nucleotide substitution in the MC1R gene causes melanin to not be produced.[5] This mutant
gene is recessive, so Kermode bears with two copies of this mutant, nonfunctional gene appear white, while
bears with one copy or no copies appear black.[5] Two black bears can mate and produce a white cub if both of
these black bears are heterozygous, carrying one copy of the mutant MC1R gene, and both mutant genes are
inherited by the cub. Additional genetic studies found that white Kermode bears breed more with white
Kermode bears, and black Kermode bears breed more with black Kermode bears, in a phenomenon known as
positive assortative mating.[5] One hypothesis is that this happens because young bears imprint on their
mother's fur colour.[4]
Kermode bears are omnivorous for most of the year, subsisting mainly on herbage and berries except during
autumn salmon migrations, when they become obligate predators.[4] During the day, white bears are 35%
more successful than black bears in capturing salmon.[10] Salmon evade large, black models about twice as
frequently as they evade large white models, giving white bears an advantage in salmon hunting. The white fur
of the bear is harder to spot under water by fish than black fur is, so the bear can catch fish more easily.[10] On
some islands, white Kermode bears have more marine-derived nutrients in their fur, indicating that white
Kermode bears eat more salmon than the black Kermode bears.[11]
Habitat[edit]
The U. a. kermodei subspecies ranges from Princess Royal Island to Prince Rupert, British Columbia, on the
coast and inland toward Hazelton, British Columbia. It is known in the Tsimshianic languages as moksgmʼol. In
the February 2006 Speech from the Throne, the Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia announced the
government's intention to designate the Kermode, or spirit bear, as British Columbia's official animal. It was
adopted as such in April of that year.[2] A male Kermode bear can reach 225 kg (496 lb) or more. Females are
much smaller, with a maximum weight of 135 kg (298 lb). Straight up, it stands 180 cm (71 in) tall.
Fewer than 400 white-coloured bears were estimated to exist in the coast area that stretches from Southeast
Alaska southwards to the northern tip of Vancouver Island;[12] about 120 inhabit the large Princess and Prince
Royal Islands.[12] The largest concentration of the white bears inhabits 80-square-mile (210 km2) Gribbell
Island, in the territory of the Gitgaʼata people.[13]
The bear's habitat was potentially under threat from the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipelines, whose planned
route would have passed near the Great Bear Rainforest.[14][15] Indigenous groups including the Gitgaʼat have
opposed the pipeline.[16] The Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline was rejected by the federal government in
2016.
Conservation[edit]
Although the Kermode bear is not rare, considerable conservation efforts have been made to maintain the
subspecies' population due to the bear's cultural significance. The main threats to the bear species
include habitat destruction due to oil pipelines and trophy hunting of black bears.
The majority of the Kermode bears' protein intake is from salmon during the fall.[10][17] Pipeline spills could
cause damage to salmon populations by polluting ecosystems.[13] Salmon are a keystone species and are
important to the nutrient intake of both aqueous and terrestrial environments.[18] The salmon contribute
nutrients to water during spawning and contribute to the land with decomposition of their carcasses when
predators, such as bears, scatter them throughout the forest.[18] Until November 26, 2016, the greatest
pipeline threat to the Great Bear Rainforest had been the Enbridge Northern Gateway Pipelines, but Canadian
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau shut the project down after the First Nations took the Canadian government to
court and won.[19] Trudeau instead approved two different pipelines, the Kinder Morgan Trans Mountain
Expansion Project and another Enbridge Pipeline, that have been deemed not to affect the British Columbia
Coast or the Great Bear Rainforest.[19]
In 2012, the coastal First Nations banned trophy hunting of all bears in their territories in the Great Bear
Rainforest. In 2017, after much public pressure to end the practice, the government of British Columbia
banned the trophy hunting of grizzlies in the Great Bear Rainforest, but the hunting of black bears remains
legal. A concern in regards to hunting is potential poaching.[20] Grizzly bears also pose a threat to Kermode bear
populations because of the decline of natural resources, especially salmon populations that are becoming
subject to climate change and overfishing.[13][21] Using noninvasive hair-line traps scientists tracked the
movement of grizzlies across the coasts and rainforest. They found that grizzlies are moving into black bear
and Kermode bear salmon feeding grounds more often. This disrupts the feeding of Kermode and other black
bears, as they often retreat once grizzlies arrive.[13]
Spirit Bear Lodge is an ecolodge that provides bear sightseeing opportunities, provides education about British
Columbia bears, and has stimulated the economy of the Klemtu Indian Reserve. The operators have
complained about hunting, stating they have seen bear carcasses, and that hunting makes the bears more
wary of humans and harder to spot.[20]
In captivity[edit]
In October 2012, a Kermode bear was announced to be housed at the British Columbia Wildlife
Park in Kamloops, BC, believed to be the first in captivity.[22] The yearling cub was found abandoned in
northwestern British Columbia on the side of Terrace Mountain near Terrace. After two unsuccessful attempts
to rehabilitate and release him back into the wild, the cub, now nicknamed Clover by handlers, was sent to the
park when conservation officers decided that he was not a candidate for relocation.[23] The park has plans to
create a custom home for the bear, which escaped from his temporary enclosure once.[24] Animal-rights group
Lifeforce believed that the bear was healthy enough to survive on his own and that he should be relocated and
released back into the wild.[25] Provincial government wildlife officials maintained their position against
attempting a long-distance relocation, stating that the risks outweighed the possible benefits, and as of July
2019, the bear remained in captivity.[26]