From the department of “yes, Richard lives in a rural area,” yesterday afternoon as I was driving home from the bank a young black bear ran right in front my truck. (My truck did not hit the bear and it ran away before I could get a good picture). In the past I’ve shared resources about Polar Bears, Black Bears, Brown Bears, and Panda Bears, but I’ve never put all of those resources in one place until now.
The Wildlife Research Foundation’s Meet Our Bears website features a live bear den webcam and archived videos
about Maine’s Black Bears. In addition to the videos, the website
offers some basic information about the lives of Black Bears. Hopefully,
in the future there will be more educational content added to the
website. For now though the site is a good place to see some bears in
their natural habitats. And from the “don’t try this at home” department, here is a video of the
researchers checking on a bear in her den. The Wildlife Research
Foundation also has a video of a bear giving birth to twin cubs.
The August 2011 issue of National Geographic magazine featured a cover story
about the “Spirit Bears” of British Columbia. “Spirit Bear” refers to
the Black Bears that are white in color due to a recessive trait called
Kermodism. As always the National Geographic website has some neat
resources to support the main article. One of the online resources for
the Spirit Bear article is a Punnett Square that explains how two black Black Bears can produce a white Black Bear.
The National Zoo app for Windows 8 features live webcam feeds of panda bears, lions
and their cubs, tigers, cheetahs, and fish. Because these are live
webcams sometimes you’ll see the animals and sometimes you won’t. If the
webcam feed isn’t showing the animals when you’re viewing it you can
switch to the gallery of still imagery.
Bear Tracker
is a feature of the Polar Bears International website. The Bear Tracker
plots the travels of collared polar bears in Hudson Bay and the
Beaufort Sea north of Alaska. You can view the travel paths of one or
all of the bears on each map. The map also offers play the travel paths
recorded over time.
Polar Bears International has some lesson plans
for teaching about climate change, ecotourism, and conservation. You
will also find links to a slideshow on Polar Bears and nice PDF about Polar Bears that contains an educational game. And if you would like to show videos of polar bears to your students, Explore.org has polar bear footage that you can watch here.
WWF Together
features interactive stories about endangered animals around the
world. Each of the interactive stories includes beautiful images and
videos, facts about the animals and their habitats, and the threats to
each of the animals. The animals currently featured in the app are
pandas, marine turtles, elephants, tigers, polar bears, bison, whales,
gorillas, rhinos, and snow leopards. Stories about sharks and jaguars
are slated for addition to the app later this year.