Home

Polar Bears


VII. Diet and Eating Habits.

A. Food preferences and resources.

1. Polar bears feed mainly on ringed seals and bearded seals. Depending upon their location, they also eat harp and hooded seals and scavenge on carcasses of beluga whales, walruses, narwhals, and bowhead whales.

eating
Polar bears feed mainly on ringed or bearded seals. When seals are unavailable, polar bears eat other marine mammals, reindeer, small rodents, sea birds, ducks, fish, eggs, vegetation (including kelp), berries, and human garbage.

2. On occasion, polar bears kill young walruses and beluga whales.

3. When other food is unavailable, polar bears eat reindeer, small rodents, seabirds, ducks, fish, eggs, vegetation (including kelp), berries, and human garbage.

B. Food intake.

1. A polar bear's stomach can hold an estimated 15% to 20% of its body weight. It can assimilate 84% of the protein and 97% of the fat it eats (Stirling, 1988).

2. Polar bears need an average of 2 kg (4.4 lb.) of fat per day to survive. A ringed seal weighing 55 kg (121 lb.) could provide up to eight days of energy for a polar bear (Stirling, 1988).

C. Methods of collecting and eating food.

1. Still hunting.

2. Stalking on land.

3. Aquatic stalk.

4. Stalking birth lairs.


5. Eating.


Polar Bear Reproduction

 

index
Polar Bears Index

 


HOME(7224 bytes)

SeaWorld/Busch Gardens Animal Information Database
www.seaworld.org / www.buschgardens.org

©2002 Busch Entertainment Corporation.
All Rights Reserved.