Louisa Willcox,
CounterPunch.org
December 2018
Awe lies at the heart of the relationship between ancient cultures and bears. All species of bear share the ability to seemingly die in winter and remerge in spring with new life. Because of this, bears have symbolized transformation since time immemorial.

Drawing by David Mattson
By now most grizzly bears are snug in winter dens, safe at last
from poachers, big game hunters, and other dangers. Last week, to the relief
of her many fans, Number 399, the rock star grizzly matron of Grand Teton
Park, was seen with her two yearling cubs making their way back towards her
denning area along Pilgrim Creek. She and her family had stayed up later
than most grizzlies because they could feast on the abundant remains of elk
killed by hunters in Jackson Hole. Once again, this 21-year-old veteran mom
had miraculously survived a landscape bristling with guns as well as other
hazards that come with her life strategy of living close to people.
What does the next four to five months of life look like for her and other
grizzly bear moms? Let’s peer into her lair and find out.
In the darkness below the snow, we find miracles and mysteries. I like the
fact that, despite industrial-scale research, hibernation remains magical
and elusive. Wild animals will always defy circumscription by the human
intellect – and throw us back on heart, soul, and imagination.
There are some things that we do know about hibernation. Bears don’t eat or
drink or excrete waste for between 150 and 180 days. (If it were you or me,
we would have died after just a few days.) But when bears crawl out of their
dens in the spring, they are specimens of health. They don’t lose much bone
strength or lean muscle mass, even though they may lose as much as 30% of
their fall weight. And their kidneys, liver, and hearts don’t fail.
Unlike deep hibernators, bears are not unconscious during their winter
slumber. Nor, like ground squirrels, does their body temperature plummet to
freezing. Which is why mother bears can give birth in the dead of winter to
a cub or two, each the size of a teacup, which she groggily nurses in her
den until sometime during April or even May. Her milk has the highest fat
content of any terrestrial mammal, and so cubs grow super fast – from about
a pound at birth to roughly 20 pounds at 12 weeks when they leave the den.
How does a mother bear pull off this incredible feat? Part of her secret
involves obesity. Gorging on foods ranging from meat and moths to ants and
whitebark pine seeds, a grizzly bear packs on several pounds a day during
her late summer and fall hyperphagic feeding frenzy. Amazingly, she consumes
roughly 30,500 kcal of digestible energy every day during the fall, compared
to the approximate 2,700 kcal that a 200-pound couch potato human would need
to survive.
Although grizzlies mate during late spring, the female’s fertilized eggs do
not implant till she dens. If she is not fat enough to pull off a successful
pregnancy in the den–which could kill both her and her cubs—she
spontaneously aborts. Miraculous or what?
Her choice of a den site helps boost her chances of success. She digs her
den at higher elevations and on north-facing slopes where snows pile deep
enough to cover the entrance hole and provide not only good insulation but
also absolute safety from predators. Often taking advantage of a natural
roof provided by boulders or tree roots, she makes the den a tad larger than
her body for a snug fit.
The Miracle of Hibernation
What happens next to the bear is physiologically both fascinating and
confounding. Researcher Dr. Lynn Rogers provides an intimate although
perhaps intrusive peek at the life of a wild black bear family in their den,
thanks to a miniature video camera– complete with contractions, delivery,
nursing, baby noises (from purrs and grunts to screams) and, ultimately, the
cub’s emergence into the big wide world—by the scruff of the neck.
The potential importance of hibernation is not lost on medical researchers.
Scientists have long suspected that the mysteries of bear hibernation, if
unlocked, could benefit people with heart disease, diabetes, osteoporosis,
and traumatic injuries.
Have scientists gotten closer to unveiling the grizzly bear’s secrets? Yes
and no. They are far from realizing the dream of putting people who have
experienced traumatic injury into the kind of suspended animation that
characterizes hibernation. They hope that by inducing hibernation in someone
undergoing a stroke or cardiac arrest, they could buy doctors precious
treatment time. So far, the closest they have come is applying cold fluids,
internally and externally, to temporarily slow metabolic processes.
Scientists are making more headway divining treatments for human
osteoporosis. If we are inactive for months, even weeks, our bones
deteriorate to the point we can no longer walk. But bears produce a
parathyroid hormone that maintains bone density and strength. Today, some
doctors are treating humans suffering from osteoporosis with a manufactured
hormone that matches what bears produce.
Researchers have a rudimentary understanding of how hibernating bears avoid
diabetes, but not enough for practical application. Even though “healthy”
bears get manifestly obese by late fall, they do not get Type 2 diabetes.
Diabetes occurs when cells are no longer able to take up sugar in response
to infusions of insulin. When humans who are starving or who have
uncontrolled diabetes rely on fat for energy, the body cannot handle the
toxic byproducts of fat catabolism. Not so for bears. They are able to
recycle these byproducts into making more fat. If that is not a miracle,
what is?
Kidney function in bears is similarly weird and wonderful. If our kidneys
did not excrete otherwise toxic wastes such as uric acid, we would soon die.
But get this: bears have microbes in their guts that, during the winter
months, convert urea to nitrogen to make new amino acids that are the
building blocks of protein. This enables bears to maintain lean body tissue
in the comfort of their own dens without eating or eliminating waste. It is
no accident that researchers are looking to bears for some answers about how
to feed malnourished populations in developing countries with limited access
to protein-rich foods.
To scientists, hibernating bears are mind-blowing for yet more reasons. For
example, when they implanted a defibrillator in a bear’s heart to measure
heart rate during hibernation, the bear’s body forcibly ejected it. Same
with implants in its gut. The bear’s basic response to implants of foreign
objects is to powerfully reject them. Maybe that is why bears rarely get
infections. Researchers are especially intrigued with the possible role of
ursodeoxycholic acid, a bile acid named for Ursus (Latin for “bear”) that is
elevated during hibernation and could help treat human injuries.
And here is yet another surprise: bears actually stop breathing during
hibernation for as much as 25-30 seconds at a time. With lower oxygen
requirements, they don’t have to breathe as much. When oxygen levels get low
enough, their brain sends a signal to take another breath. And get this:
when a bear inhales, its heart rate can increase 800-fold, while a human’s
increases only by one-fortieth as much. What athlete doesn’t want to borrow
that trick?
Scientists studying bear hibernation are not the only ones who at some point
just throw up their hands in awe.
Grizzly Transformation
Awe lies at the heart of the relationship between ancient cultures and
bears. All species of bear share the ability to seemingly die in winter and
remerge in spring with new life. Because of this, bears have symbolized
transformation since time immemorial. Seeking the bear’s gifts, we have
looked to this creature as teacher, guide, and healer. Today, our use of the
bear’s name for sports teams and stock markets is hardly accidental.
Moreover, the word “bear” in English shares the same root as “birth,”
“breath,” “bury,” and “beer.”
In modern ecology, you hear that the grizzly bear is an “umbrella species.”
The health of grizzly bear populations engenders health for entire
ecosystems. Ancients had a different way of orienting to the same issue.
There is an old story of a bear that goes into her den to dream the world
into being each winter. She dreams of antelope and whitebark pine and
buffalo. In her imagination, she creates each being and entire ecosystems
during the long barren months. When she emerges in the spring, trailed by a
young cub, she is celebrated by all the creatures of the earth.
In my gathering of bear stories over the years, I have found only one that
truly baffles me. It is the story that legitimizes killing bears as trophies
and extolls destroying bears when nonlethal approaches are available for
resolving conflicts. This story is the opposite of reverence and wonder. It
is about domination, violence, and death.
This utilitarian narrative, which drove the genocides of bears, bison,
wolves, and native peoples, survives today in many forms, particularly in
western states. Despite harboring the last populations of wolves, bison, and
grizzlies in the continental US, wildlife managers in Wyoming, Montana, and
Idaho are relentless proponents of hunting these species, ostensibly to
control populations – although the best available science shows that
grizzlies are self-regulating.
For decades, these managers and their political masters have doggedly worked
to remove federal Endangered Species protections for grizzly bears in the
Yellowstone (GYE) and the Northern Continental Divide (NCDE)
Ecosystems–succeeding in the case of wolves, which are again being
slaughtered outside our National Parks. Despite setbacks imposed by a court
order in September that restored federal protections for Yellowstone’s
grizzlies, state politicians and their regressive allies are not giving up.
Last week the NRA, Safari Club, and state of Wyoming appealed the relisting
order. At the same time, the state of Montana adopted new regulations
designed to facilitate removal of ESA protections for NCDE grizzlies. And we
can expect more attempts to legislatively delist grizzlies during future
Congressional sessions.
Elsewhere in the country, other states have broadened their financial and
political base beyond hunters and fishers. This shift is boosting
conservation of nongame species as well as respect for all wildlife, not
just species that can be hunted. The explosion of public interest in seeing
and photographing rare and iconic wildlife such as grizzlies encourages a
similar approach in Northern Rockies states. But here, managers still cling
to their traditional “clientele” of hunters, even though the number of
hunters afield are in precipitous decline. The stage is set for ever-greater
conflict among those with opposing world views about wildlife.
As grizzly bears disappear into high-country dens to undertake the annual
miracle of hibernation, we ourselves can pause for reflection. What kind of
world will we dream for grizzly bears this winter? What sort of world will
grizzly bears wake up to next spring? Will it be a world in which wonder is
diminished or renewed?
Louisa Willcox is a longtime grizzly bear activist and founder of Grizzly Times. She lives in Montana.
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