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Prevent Fatal Sloth Bear Encounters: Insights from Tiger Interactions

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Prevent Fatal Sloth Bear Encounters: Insights from Tiger Interactions

Context: Three scientists suggest that studying sloth bear behaviour during tiger encounters can help prevent deadly attacks in South Asia.

 

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  • The study titled “A most aggressive bear: Safari videos document sloth bear defence against tiger predation” was published in the journal Ecology and Evolution.
  • It is crucial for both human safety and bear conservation. 

 

Study Methodology

  • The study analysed 43 videos and photos of sloth bear-tiger interactions from 2011 to 2023, primarily from tourists visiting tiger parks in India.
  • Behaviour Analysis: Sloth bears were observed to stand up and charge when they became aware of a tiger at close range (<3 metres)
    • This defensive strategy was successful in 86% of cases, preventing contact, although 9% resulted in the bear’s death.

 

Key Highlights:

  • The sloth bear is considered an “enigma” among the eight bear species.
  • Including brown bears (Asia, Europe and North America), American black bears, Asiatic black bears, sun bears, polar bears, spectacled bears, and giant panda.
  • The diet primarily consists of insects and fruits, placing it and the giant panda at the low end of the carnivory spectrum.
  • About 7-8% of sloth bear attacks are fatal, whereas 14% of global brown bear attacks are fatal.
  • According to Bombieri et al. (2023), sloth bears have exceeded all other large carnivores, including tigers, in terms of fatal attacks on humans worldwide from 1950 to 2019.
  • Approximately 90% of the sloth bear’s range is in India, with additional populations in Nepal and Sri Lanka. 
    • In India, large villages and human settlements are close to sloth bear habitats, leading to frequent encounters.

 

 

Evolutionary Defense Mechanism:

  • Aggression Towards Humans: It may be a result of their evolved defensive strategies against Bengal tigers and other now-extinct large predators.
  • Bengal tigers (Panthera tigris) pose a threat to sloth bears. 2% of tiger scats in Indian parks contain sloth bear remains.
  • Survival Strategy: By aggressively defending themselves. Historical accounts from the 1800s document these aggressive interactions.

 

 

Avoiding Encounters: To avoid encounters, people should make noise in habitats.

  • If a close-range encounter occurs and the bear has not yet noticed, quietly back away. Being in groups can help intimidate the bear and reduce the likelihood of an attack.
  • If the bear has noticed do not run. Instead, fall to the ground, cover-up, and play dead. Sloth bears are unlikely to eat a person they believe is dead.

 

 

Sloth Bears 

  • Scientific Name: Melursus ursinus.
  • Species: One of the eight species of ursids.
  • Diet: Primarily insects (termites and ants) and fruits.
  • They have distinctive shaggy, dusty-black coats with a cream-coloured “V” or “Y” shape on their chests.
  • Their fur lacks an undercoat, keeping them cool in their warm native climate while protecting them from tropical insects.
  • The most dangerous wild animals in the Indian subcontinent.
  • IUCN Status: Vulnerable.
  • Habitat: Includes dry and moist forests and some tall grasslands across India, Sri Lanka, and southern Nepal.
    • Historically, they were also reported in Bangladesh and Bhutan, but they are now considered extirpated or possibly absent in these regions.

 

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