World's Largest Known Bear Identified

This giant was larger than the average bear, easily dwarfing the polar bear, the largest species living today.

THE GIST
  • The world's largest known bear was a male South American giant bear that was 11 feet tall.
  • The bear likely evolved such a large body size due to the absence of other large carnivores.
  • The elderly male bear sustained numerous serious injuries during its lifetime, possibly due to fighting with other males or saber-toothed cats.
Polar Bear

The largest individual bear from an existing species was a male polar bear that weighed in at 2,200 pounds.
A male South American giant short-faced bear has just broken the record for world's largest bear, according to a paper in this month's Journal of Paleontology.

Standing 11 feet tall and weighing in at about 3,500 pounds, the bear, which lived in Argentina during the Pleistocene Ice Age, would have towered over the world's largest individual bear from an existing species. That distinction belongs to a male polar bear that weighed in at 2,200 pounds.
Huge body size benefited the South American giant short-faced bear (Arctotherium angustidens) during the species' existence from two to half a million years ago.
"During its time, this bear was the largest and most powerful land predator in the world, so we think it lived free of fear of being eaten," co-author Leopoldo Soibelzon told Discovery News.
Soibelzon, a researcher in the Vertebrate Paleontology Division at the La Plata Museum, and colleague Blaine Schubert of East Tennessee State University made the determinations after analyzing fossilized remains of the bear. The fossils were unearthed during a La Plata City construction project. They were donated in 1935 to the museum there, where the bones have been ever since.
Extensive prior work conducted by the authors looked at other extinct and living bear species. The research found that the most reliable predictor of body size in bears is based on seven particular bone measurements. Soibelzon and Schubert calculated the giant bear's size using these measurements of leg bones, along with equations for estimating body mass.
The scientists think the bear evolved to become so huge due to the absence of other large carnivores in its habitat. The saber-toothed cat was also high up on the Argentina food chain at the time, but it was still much smaller than the South American giant short-faced bear.
A variety of big herbivores additionally lived in the region at the time, providing plenty of dinner options for the enormous bear.
"A. angustidens probably had an omnivorous diet composed of a great variety of components, but with a predominance of animal remains," said Soibelzon. "Among them, probably the bones and flesh of large mammals were very important in its diet."
The particular male bear individual that the scientists studied reached old age despite sustaining serious injuries during its life. The fossilized remains still retain signs of those injuries.
The researchers aren't certain what caused the physical damage, but Soibelzon said that "certainly male-to-male fighting would be a possibility."
"Other possibilities include hunting megafauna, like giant ground sloths," he added, "and disputes with other carnivores, such as a saber-toothed cat, over a carcass."
Schubert said the bear was part of a group of bears known as the tremarctines that has only one living representative: the spectacled bear. This modern bear is a relatively small species, reflecting selection pressures that have occurred over the years. During the Pleistocene, however, huge bears lived in both South America and North America. Europe was also home to a gigantic cave bear.
Eduardo Tonni, who is head of the Vertebrate Paleontology Division at the Museo de La Plata, told Discovery News he agrees with the new findings since the conclusions made by the authors "are well sustained by the fossil record and current knowledge." Tonni said the two researchers have been studying important fossil collections for prehistoric South American, North American and European mammals over the last 14 years.
Tonni added that the researchers "analyzed and compared, for the first time, the evolutionary trends of fossil and living bears."
Glian
omg people are on the internet and cant find/use a conversion table? and if standard is so prolific why dont you know the basic conversions? weights and measures arent that hard to mentally flip back and forth, geesh!
Monday, April 18, 2011, 5:26:22 PM
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Emanuel Ctys
The Biggest Bear Ever Found in video, Arctotherium angustidens
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nRvN28Erw8Q
Monday, February 07, 2011, 6:06:46 PM
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Oxymoronical
But if Americans did everything that everyone else told them to do the other countries would have to find a new country to feel smug and superior to.
Wednesday, February 02, 2011, 8:17:18 PM
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Mike
metric please
Wednesday, February 02, 2011, 1:51:14 PM
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fritriac
Nothing about bears here, but: Discovery News is widely read by an international audience. So why do you still (and solely) use Imperial Units instead of SI?

Just saying ... only three nations worldwide have not officially adopted the International System of Units as their primary system of measurement ...
Tuesday, February 01, 2011, 11:47:56 PM
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bananabob
I agree!
Wednesday, February 02, 2011, 3:00:22 AM
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Jack
The use of metric units was by authorised in the USA by Congress in 1866, although it has not yet been officially adopted as the national system by the USA, Burma, or Liberia (a combination too grotesque for comment!).
Thursday, December 01, 2011, 8:16:21 AM
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Peter Kerr
is it possible that the "Giant" bears and sloths as well as other "Giant" sized plants and animals evolved due to high carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere? If the CO2 caused the plants to become huge then maybe the animals that ate the plants also grew huge and in turn, the predators that fed on them. I know that ice core samples say that the CO2 levels were much higher during the ice ages and here we have a story about giant animals at the same time, maybe it's all linked to plants thriving on the CO2?
Tuesday, February 01, 2011, 10:18:17 PM
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