The jr eroticismlivestream of Alaska's fat bears is unfiltered. It can be brutal.
On July 27, one of the largest and most dominant bears of Katmai National Park and Preserve's Brooks River attacked a cub, to the dread of web onlookers. The cub looked seriously injured, appeared to slightly improve over a couple of days, but ultimately died in the river. It's an event that reveals the bears' natural world in its full, wild spectrum.
"We get to see their moments of joy," Mike Fitz, a former Katmai park ranger and currently a resident naturalist for the bear cam livestreamers explore.org, said in an online live chat. "However, the webcams are live, the footage is uncensored. We also see bears face hardship, hunger, injury, pain, and even death."
These bears, living remote lives on the Alaskan Peninsula where visitors arrive aboard small floatplanes, are beamed to the world with the aid of radio transmitters. Katmai's bears have grown internet-famous in the park's annual Fat Bear Week contest, an event celebrating the success of these persevering animals in the harsh wilderness. They must devour salmon throughout the summer to build enough fat stores to outlast the long winter famine, when they hibernate. That's why a fat bear is a healthy bear.
In July, bears congregate in the park's Brooks River to capitalize on these prodigious runs of salmon — bringing the often solitary animals in crowded, close proximity. It's here where the attack occurred.
The well-known mother bear Grazer — who was last year's Fat Bear Week champion — was fishing atop a waterfall with her two spring cubs (meaning they were just born this year). This was a somewhat risky endeavor, because the current is strong. Soon enough, both young bears fell over the falls, and one passed near the large male bear 32, "Chunk," an animal in his prime whose dominance affords him the most productive fishing spots. For reasons unknown, Chunk went after and attacked the cub, as shown in the screenshot below. He clenched the small bear in his jaws.
But the drama didn't end there. Grazer sprinted to defend her cub.
Grazer is a particularly aggressive bear, who has previously charged bears that came close to her cubs, and even mauled a bear that attempted to steal a fish. It's this fearless aggression, against a dominant bear hundreds of pounds larger than her, that likely spared the cub an abrupt fatal injury. Numerous times, Grazer forced Chunk to back off.
"She's courageous — she's defensive."
"She continued to fight back," Naomi Boak, who covers the bears for the Katmai Conservancy, an organization supporting the national park, said during the live chat. "She's courageous — she's defensive."
You can watch the encounter below, from 12:20 to 14:30.
Although the cub appeared severely injured following the attack — bawling, licking its paw, and moving little — the young bear persevered in the aftermath, though it eventually succumbed to injuries. On August 2, webcam watchers saw the dead cub float over the waterfall. The lifeless animal passed directly in front of Grazer.
Even so, the cub gave an ardent effort to live. It survived the encounter and made it to the relative safety of the riverbank, where it attempted to convalesce. "Cubs are tough," Fitz told Mashable over email. Katmai cubs face many threats — attacks, illness, drowning, insufficient nutrients — and have about a 34 percent survival rate at Katmai.
"Cubs are tough."
We'll never know why Chunk opportunistically attacked the cub. Prior to the cubs falling, Chunk expressed no interest in Grazer's family; rather, he was focused on capturing 4,500-calorie sockeye salmon. Large males have killed bears on the livestream before. It could simply have been an instinctual reaction. It's possible, as in other cases of bear infanticide, Chunk intended to send a potentially cub-less Grazer back into estrus, a form of sexual selection (though this doesn't add up when considering his previous disinterest in the family group). Chunk might have felt he was competing with Grazer's family for food. Or perhaps it's a reason our species can't understand or imagine.
The Katmai bears will continue fighting for survival on the bear cams. It's a dynamic view into a largely untrammeled realm. It's a world that is at once beautiful and ruthless.
"National parks such as Katmai exist to protect and preserve wild landscapes and ecosystem processes," Fitz said. "This includes the grand spectacles such as bears fishing at Brooks Falls and nature's harsh realities."
UPDATE: Aug. 5, 2024, 12:19 p.m. EDT This story was originally published on Aug. 3, 2024 and updated to add new details about the death of the bear cub. Mark Kaufman contributed to this update.
How the White House press conference became 2017's mustWhy the Northwest's heat wave didn't just break records, it obliterated themApple might launch a cheaper 6.7See Ingenuity on the surface of Mars in NASA's new 3D photo drop16 best tweets of the week, including Thicken Nugget, male fridge, and Pentagon SubwayMatt Damon botches attempt to speak about Weinstein, sexual misconductAustralia's first sameLenovo Yoga Tab 13 is a tablet that doubles as a portable screenSee Ingenuity on the surface of Mars in NASA's new 3D photo dropTesla recalls 285,000 cars, this time over faulty cruiseU.S. report on UFOs not saying it's aliens, but not saying it's not aliensNothing to launch its wireless earbuds in JulyGoogle tests new feature that will warn if your search doesn't have reliable results yetThis is how much you aged in 2017, the longest year in historyThe 18 best motivational podcasts that could change your lifeWhy the Northwest's heat wave didn't just break records, it obliterated themHow to clean an air fryer'Loki' is giving Tumblr a chance to relive its first Marvel obsessionReddit is selling NFTs, and somehow they're already worth thousandsInside the shady world of influencers promoting cryptocurrency 'The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes' didn't need that President Snow voiceover NYT's The Mini crossword answers for November 20 WhatsApp's Meta AI chatbot is now accessible via a new button Mother Mold: Keith Edmier’s Frozen Faces On TikTok, aging is the hot new trend Sam Altman and OpenAI: Here's everything you need to know about the drama Staff Picks: Cats, Combat, Conversationalists Actors are concerned about AI terms in new SAG The Screen of Enamoration: Love in the Age of Google by Alfie Bown The Objects of Paul Cézanne, Captured The Insomniac’s Dream Diary 'The Curse' and 'Anyone But You' have given us the funniest feud of 2023 Best deals of the day Jan. 23: 17 Sex tips for disabled people and their partners Apple pauses ads on X / Twitter after Elon Musk endorses antisemitic conspiracy Another OpenAI twist: Microsoft hires Sam Altman as AI team lead With a Bang: An Interview with Eleanor Antin The End of the Tour: Tennis Stars in Twilight The Sentence That Is a Period Goodbye to the Gem Room
2.9667s , 10194.7890625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【jr eroticism】,Inspiration Information Network