And the fattest bear in Alaska is ... 409
Beadnose
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[October 11, 2018]
By Yereth Rosen
ANCHORAGE (Reuters) - In an Alaska clash of
tubby titans that has become a social media sensation, a shaggy, brown
and possibly pregnant mother known as 409 Beadnose was crowned on
Tuesday as Fattest Bear of 2018.
Beadnose nosed out a larger Alaska brown bear, a male called 747 – and
likened to a jumbo jet – in online votes collected by staff at Katmai
National Park and Preserve during a wildly popular event called Fat Bear
Week. Male bears are bigger but Beadnose was deemed to be more rotund.
“Her radiant rolls were deemed by the voting public to be this year’s
most fabulous flab,” the park said on its Facebook page. “Our chubby
champ has a few more weeks to chow down on lingering salmon carcasses
before she heads up the mountains to dig herself a den and savor her
victory.”
Katmai, which hugs the mountainous Gulf of Alaska coast, is known for
its massive, salmon-chomping ursine residents.
October, the month before bears go into their dens to hibernate, is when
the animals work the hardest to build the body fat they need to survive
winter. And October is a perfect time for nature lovers to watch
Katmai’s livestream video as the park's brown bears do their
pre-hibernation gorging.
Fat Bear Week may be fun and games for human spectators, but it is
serious business for bears, said Andrew LaValle, a Katmai ranger who is
in charge of most of the park’s social media postings.
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A shaggy, brown and possibly pregnant mother bear known as 409
Beadnose, crowned on Tuesday as Fattest Bear of 2018, is seen on the
bank of Brooks River in Katmai National Park and Preserve, Alaska,
U.S., September 30, 2018. Courtesy NPS/Handout via REUTERS
“This might be entertaining, especially with these beautiful majestic
animals, but this is a life-or-death struggle,” he said. The bears have
to eat a year’s worth of food in a few months but really start to chow
down in June when sockeye salmon begin swimming upstream through the
park to spawn. Bears can lose a third of their body weight while
hibernating, LaValle said.
Fat Bear Week got its start in 2014 as a one-day educational event
called Fat Bear Tuesday, LaValle said. It became a week-long event
the next year.
Throughout the past week, park staffers have posted photos of
individual bears and gathered input from viewers who selected
favorites in a bracketed, tournament-style competition. This year’s
competition started with 12 bears before reaching Tuesday’s
Beadnose-747 faceoff.
Luckily for Katmai bears, their home holds a river teeming with fish
from the world’s largest natural salmon runs. The Brooks River is a
spawning site for salmon based in southwestern Alaska’s Bristol Bay.
(Reporting by Yereth Rosen, editing by Bill Tarrant and Cynthia
Osterman)
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