Jimbo wrote on Oct 20
th, 2016 at 5:56pm:
chaga -
I was surprised to see THREE cubs. For some reason I thought they generally had pairs.
I’m no expert by any stretch of the imagination on black bears, but some time ago I accompanied some researchers on a trip to the mountains in Eastern Kentucky on a cold, cold day to change the radio collar on a sow and put chips beneath the fur of her cubs.
(For those not familiar, after being all but extinct from Kentucky for many years, a couple of decades ago wandering bear from West Virginia re-established a population in the southeastern part of the state, and it’s grown so much that Kentucky allows a limited bear hunt each year.)
Well, that research trip didn’t go as planned – her den was out in the open (a dead-fall of a tree) … she “woke up” (black bears technically don’t hibernate but are in a state called “torpor” … the drugged dart malfunctioned … and she took off, leaving her cubs exposed with wind chills in the single digits and snow swirling. And radio telemetry showed she crossed several ridges and kept going.
Long story short, the researchers grabbed the cubs, put them in a pack in the back seat of my truck with the heat running as they figured out what to do. I have a picture of one of the cubs sticking his head out of the pack in my truck.
The point is: There were three cubs (all male).
I read some of the subsequent research, and it showed that the average litter size in Kentucky was 3.1, with documented litters of two to five cubs. But the study I read acknowledged that the 3.1 was “more than any nearby location.”
For what it’s worth … I just thought it was interesting.
- kypaddler