Black Bear (Ursus americanus)

Group Carnivors
Code AMAJB01010
Order Carnivora
Family Ursidae
Author Pallas, 1780
Rank G5 (definitions)
USESA (PS) (definitions)
Occurrence P (definitions)
Scale N (definitions)

County List:

Western UP all
Eastern UP Luce, Mackinac, Alger, Schoolcraft
Northern LP Lake, Arenac, Antrim, Alpena, Benzie, Alcona, Charlevoix, Leelanau, Manistee, Gladwin, Kalkaska, Isabella, Iosco, Bay, Emmet, Crawford, Clare, Cheboygan, Grand Traverse, Mason, Midland, Missaukee, Montmorency, Newaygo, Mecosta, Presque Isle, Wexford, Roscommon, Ogemaw, Osceola, Oscoda, Otsego
Southern LP none

Rule:

Forested or Mixed Forested/Nonforested Landscapes

Habitat Requirements may be distributed across the NEIGHBORHOOD

      (Any Forested Upland Except Conifer Plantations (Pole or Sm Saw or Lg Saw or Uneven))
   containing:
      (Dead Down Woody Debris and Mast and Living Cavity Trees)
   neighboring:
      (Any Forested Lowland (Pole or Sm Saw or Lg Saw or Uneven))
   containing:
      (Dead Down Woody Debris and Mast and Living Cavity Trees)
   neighboring:
      (Any Forested Upland (Regen))
      or (Any Forested Lowland (Regen))
      or Grass
      or Upland Brush
      or Savanna
      or Any Cropland
   containing:
      Mast
view decision rule term definitions

Habitat List:

Habitats Regen Sap Pole Sm Saw Lg Saw Uneven
Aspen YESnoYESYESYES-
Paper Birch YESnoYESYESYES-
Oak YESnoYESYESYESYES
Assorted Hardwoods YESnoYESYESYESYES
Northern Hardwoods YESnoYESYESYESYES
Spruce/Fir YESnoYESYESYESYES
Hemlock YESnoYESYESYESYES
Jack Pine YESnoYESYESYESYES
Red Pine YESnoYESYESYESYES
White Pine YESnoYESYESYESYES
Conifer Plantations YESnononono-
Mixed Upland Hardwoods YESnoYESYESYESYES
Mixed Northern Hardwoods YESnoYESYESYESYES
Mixed Upland Conifer YESnoYESYESYESYES
Mixed Pine YESnoYESYESYESYES
Swamp Hardwoods YESnoYESYESYESYES
Balsam Poplar & Swamp Aspen & Swamp Birch YESnoYESYESYESYES
Bottomland Hardwoods YESnoYESYESYESYES
Tamarack YESnoYESYESYESYES
Northern White Cedar YESnoYESYESYESYES
Black Spruce YESnoYESYESYESYES
Mixed Lowland Hardwoods YESnoYESYESYESYES
Mixed Lowland Conifer YESnoYESYESYESYES
Non-ForestedGrass, Upland Brush, Savanna, Row Crops, Small Grains/Forage Crops, Fields/Pastures
Special FeaturesDead Down Woody Debris, Mast, Living Cavity Trees, Edges, Riparian

view size class definitions

Literature:

Kurta, A. 1995. Mammals of the Great Lakes Region. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor. 376 pp.

Before European settlement, the black bear lived in most forested areas of the continent, but its current range is much reduced. A black bear prefers dense coniferous or deciduous woods having a thick understory and lacking continual disturbance from humans. Both upland forests and swampy woods are acceptable.

About one-quarter of the diet is animal food-mostly carrion and invertebrates. The powerful bear rips open rotting logs or overturns rocks searching for ants and grubs and raids the nests of bees and wasps looking for developing young and stored honey. It occasionally takes a fish, rabbit, or mouse, and, even more rarely, a deer fawn or moose calf. Fruit eaten includes raspberries, cranberries, strawberries, apples, grapes, and cherries. In late summer and autumn beechnuts and acorns are dietary staples.


DeGraaf, R. M. and D. D. Rudis. 1986. New England wildlife: habitat, natural history, and distribution. GTR NE-108. Broomall, PA:USDA, Forest Service, Northeastern Forest Experiment Station. 491 pp.

Habitat: Primarily in fairly remote forests and swamps. Prefers mixed deciduous-coniferous woodlands with a thick understory. Requires abundant sources of hard or soft mast within its habitat.

Special Habitat Requirements: Den sites located under fallen trees, in hollow logs, rock ledges, slash piles or other protected areas.


Baker, R. H. 1983. Michigan Mammals. Michigan State University Press, East Lansing, MI. 642 pp.

Habitat Preferences: Two basic black bear environments occur in Michigan: the northern hardwood and conifer forests of the Canadian biotic province and the southeastern hardwood forests of the Carolinian biotic province. These broadly overlap in the northcentral part of the Lower Peninsula, with clearing, lumbering, livestock raising, farming, and other human occupations generating a variety of changes in plant diversity and successional stages.

Upland forests, marshes, swamps, and thickets in several plant successional stages provide forage and cover for this mammal. The best black bear habitat in Michigan combines a series of forested ridges with an interdigitation of marshes and swamps, which give the animal sufficient ranging room and food, and nearby thickets for seclusion.

Density and Movement: Black bears require large expanses in which to roam-probably as extensive as 50,000 acres, and as far as 15 miles from a home base. Males generally travel over larger areas (perhaps twice as great) than females. Movements of both sexes are regulated by age, dominance, territorial restrictions, breeding activities, and sources of food.

Behavior: Erickson recorded 229 winter dens in the Upper Peninsula: 46% were in cavities (usually excavated) under stumps and logs, 21% in holes excavated in knolls or hillsides, and 11% under brush or slash. Others were in hollow standing trees, hollow felled logs, rock crevices, unsheltered depressions, a beaver lodge, and even under a deserted dwelling. Shelters used in summer are less elaborate, generally consisting of "forms" under brush or leafy boughs.

Food Habits: On an annual basis, Banfield (1974) lists the overall diet as consisting of vegetable matter (76.7%), carrion (15.2%), insects (7.4%), and small mammals (0.7%).


Allen, A. W. 1987. The relationship between habitat and furbearers. Pages 164-179 In: M. Novak, J. A. Baker, M. E. Obbard, B. Malloch (eds.) Wild Furbearer Management and Conservation in North America. Published by The Ontario Trappers Association, Ashton-Potter Limited, Concord, Ontario. 1150 pp.

Key Components of Habitat: Mosaic of forested, nonforested cover types; mixed forest with variety of tree and shrub species; refuge provided by relatively inaccessible terrain.

Management Actions to Enhance or Maintain Habitat Quality: Provide a variety of successional stages; maintain or encourage cover-type mosaic through cutting and burning; provide units of suitable habitat and area for refuge and travel corridors; maintain units of forest cover in association with cliffs, rock outcrops and riparian areas. Enhance production and diversity of hard- and soft-mast-producing vegetation.


Kolenosky, G. B. and S. M. Strathearn. 1987. Black Bear. Pages 443-454. In: M. Novak, J. A. Baker, M. E. Obbard, B. Malloch (eds.) Wild Furbearer Management and Conservation in North America. Published by The Ontario Trappers Association, Ashton-Potter Limited, Concord, Ontario. 1150 pp.

Habitat: Black bears are inhabitants of the forest. They evolved as forest dwellers and have remained dependent on the forests for their survival. Only the forest can provide their seasonal and yearly requirements of space, food, water, cover, and concealment. Generally, a mixed forest with a variety of tree and shrub species of varying ages provides the best habitat. Mountainous regions represent good habitat because of the diversity provided by the varied altitudinal gradients, but the highest growth rates are in eastern deciduous forests where there is a wide variety of food species, including fall crops of nuts and acorns.