How Fat Bears Bulk Up To Hibernate (And Why We Love To See It)
Released on 10/04/2023
[Narrator] Every year something switches in the brains
of these coastal brown bears.
Before they hibernate, they lose their ability to feel full
and pack on hundreds of pounds.
In fact, it's become an annual competition
to celebrate these fat bears.
This is 747 in summer, 2022,
and this is 747 in October, 2022.
In the span of a few months,
747 and other bears like him
at remote Katmai National Park
are gaining 20 to 40% of their body weight.
And for bears, that's a good thing.
[gentle music]
[bear vocalizing]
Fat Bear Week is a celebration of success and resilience
in our healthy population of brown bears.
It is a week-long March style madness bracket
where the public gets to vote on their favorite fat bear.
[Narrator] Katmai has some
of the fattest bears in the world
because of a strong sockeye salmon population.
The salmon run lasts from late June through September
allowing the bears to feast.
Sockeye salmon are very nutritious food.
They're actually pretty high calorie.
One sockeye salmon will contain anywhere between
two to 5,000 calorie.
Bears in average, they might catch 10 fish per day.
If they are consuming the entire fish,
they're getting anywhere between
20,000 and 50,000 calories per day.
[Narrator] And salmon is a good source of fat for bears
looking to pack on the pounds.
They're actually going to focus on
just the fattiest parts of the fish.
So the skin, the brains, the eggs in females.
They eat that, they strip the skin, they leave it,
and then some other bears or other animals
will pick off those carcasses.
There is one particular bear, bear 480 Otis,
who was observed on the webcams to consume
45 salmon within a five-hour period.
[bear vocalizing]
[Narrator] And bears are catching these fish
at Brooks Falls.
But why are bears actually fishing?
It has something to do
with a metabolic process called hyperphagia.
Hyperphagia is a general term
that basically denotes overeating.
The term can be applied to humans.
With bears, it means that there is a period of the year
right before they go into hibernation in the fall
where they're eating just as much as they possibly can
in order to try and prepare for hibernation.
[Narrator] But bears are mysterious creatures.
Researchers still don't really understand
why bears enter this state.
There's a few hormones that act as what we call
satiety factors that tell the body that we're full.
A couple of the big ones are a hormone called leptin.
And leptin is released by adipose tissue,
and that is something that helps tell our body like,
Hey, we've got enough stored energy,
so you don't need to eat anymore, you're full right now.
Another one is called ghrelin
that's released by the stomach.
And it says, Hey, I'm full right now.
You should stop eating.
So their body's not telling them I'm full.
So they'll just keep on eating and eating
without that feedback telling them to stop.
If they are not moving a lot, not working a lot,
not using those muscles, then that energy is gonna be stored
because they don't need to use it right then.
And the way that it's generally gonna be stored
for bears is in adipose tissue.
So we're getting a lot of energy
that is then being stored as fat
as they prepare to go into hibernation
so that they can use that through the winter.
[Narrator] Other animals such as hummingbirds
enter hyperphagia before long migration periods.
But for most animals like humans or cats,
hyperphagia is not a good thing.
Overeating can have a lot of negative health impacts.
You know, heart disease, diabetes, very well known.
All of these sorts of things can happen
when you've got uncontrolled eating
and that energy is not being used.
[Narrator] Bears then enter a hibernation period
and go into dens at Katmai.
What hibernation really is,
it's a reduction in the metabolic rate.
So the bear's not necessarily asleep.
In fact, they still have circadian rhythms
where they will be sort of more active during the day,
less active at night.
So they're still awake throughout this entire period.
Heart rate during hibernation
I would think of as being in the 10 to 12 beats per minute.
They're just, their metabolism has been slowed down.
Their heart rate slows down,
their respiration rate slows down.
Generally, they're not eating or drinking,
urinating or defecating,
though there are certainly exceptions to that.
[Narrator] Unlike some other hibernating animals,
bears don't actually see
too much of a drop in body temperature.
So a lot of the animals
where hibernation was originally defined
are some of the smaller mammals.
And they will drop their body temperature down
closer to ambient temperature
and hold very close to freezing.
But brown bears will have a body temperature
of around 36, 37 degrees Celsius.
And then during hibernation,
they're only dropping down to maybe 31 degrees Celsius,
about a six degree drop in body temperature.
[Narrator] Bears can also give birth while in hibernation.
Usually they give birth from late December
up until early February.
Their metabolic rate will increase,
not all the way back up to active state,
but it will increase quite a bit.
And then they give birth,
and immediately after giving birth essentially,
the metabolic rate will drop straight back down
to a full hibernation period.
And the cubs will just kind of climb underneath mom,
and they'll start nursing while mom continues to hibernate.
[Narrator] And all that fat that's been stored up
helps them to survive a long winter.
Bears store all this fat going in hibernation
so that they have energy
so that they can survive through the winter.
They'll lose between 25 and 40% of their body weight
over the winter.
That's gonna be higher for, like, females that give birth.
They're gonna be closer to the 40% range.
Some of the really large males
tend to be closer to 25% range.
One interesting thing,
that fat is not only giving them energy,
it's also providing, so that the catabolism of fat
also provides water.
So we mentioned that they're not drinking all winter long.
This is one way that their body is able to get
a little bit of water since they're losing water constantly
through respiration and stuff like that,
they do need to offset that somehow.
And the catabolism of fat
actually creates water that they're using as well.
Doing any of this type of work on bears
can be very challenging.
Hibernation is fairly well studied physiological state.
Despite that, we still don't really know
what triggers hibernation.
It's really tough to nail down precisely individual factors,
particularly when a lot of times
it's not one factor that's triggering it.
It's multiple things that are working in concert
that might lead to bears
changing physiological states like this.
[Narrator] So who will win
this year's Fat Bear Competition?
One of those big contenders
is the reigning champion, 747.
He still looks really, really good.
When he came out of hibernation,
I was fortunate enough to see him the first week of June.
And I was like, Oh my goodness.
This is a bear that lost one third of his body weight.
There's some other large males
that are also looking really good.
Number 32 Chunk.
There are also some females that are in the running for it.
Bear 128 Grazer.
She is looking really, really good.
[bear vocalizing]
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