Live Bear Cam

Search

2009 RX Death Pool Champion
Joined
Apr 3, 2005
Messages
13,603
Tokens
chances are good we will be able to watch a cub born live sometime this month...i ain't never seen a bear pussy...

Viewers and researchers will be able to witness Lily around the clock. The camera will transmit in color by day and produce infrared images at night. A motion sensor will trigger video and sound transmission when there's activity. Otherwise, it will send still images.

http://www.bear.org/website/visit-us/lily-den-cam.html

Three-year-old Lily may have her first set of cubs in January. She is part of the long-term study of black bear ecology and behavior being conducted by the Wildlife Research Institute (www.bearstudy.org) near Ely, Minnesota, less than 30 miles from the Canadian border. Lily is the daughter of 9-year-old June who features prominently in the video footage at the North American Bear Center and here on its website. As a cub, Lily’s face was lighter than her brothers and she was the dominant cub of the litter. She now has a dark face with a light brown muzzle and prominent eyebrow spots.


Lily can be seen as a cub in these videos on the Bear Video page:


Caring for Cubs in the Den -- A wild black bear mother cares for her three 5-week-old cubs. They are snug in a dug den as snow falls outside. The mother is 6-year-old June and this is her 2nd litter. The light-faced cub is a female (Lily) and the other 2 are males (Cal and Bud). This exceptionally trusting mother allowed us to place a video camera in her den to obtain these intimate scenes of bear family life. [Lily is the most visible cub.]


Water in the Den -- A 6-year-old wild black bear mother licks her cubs dry after moving them from their wet den during an early spring thaw. [Good close-up of Lily’s light face as June licks her head.]


Nursing Cubs -- A 6-year-old wild black bear nurses her 3 cubs. Nursing positions are established in the den. Each cub works their pair of nipples, alternately suckling from each. They make a humming noise as they begin to suckle but stop vocalizing about halfway through the 5 minute nursing bout.[Lily climbs across June’s chest to get to her usual set of nipples on June’s right side.]


Eating Ant Pupae -- A female wild black bear and her three young cubs dig at logs and stumps, and move rocks and stones to forage on ant pupae. [Lily feeds with her brothers in the opening scene.]


Eating Animal Matter -- Wild black bears feeding on a variety of animal matter—from snowfleas and white-tailed deer fawns in the spring to bumblebees in the summer. [Watch Lily eat snowfleas and dig out bumblebee
 

2009 RX Death Pool Champion
Joined
Apr 3, 2005
Messages
13,603
Tokens
Lily May Have Miscarried

Lily Update, 11:40 AM ET, January 15, 2010.
Watching Lily in her den is as exciting and new to us researchers as to anyone else. We have many questions and are waiting for answers.
On Monday, I visited her den to adjust the camera. She came out and stood facing away from me a foot away. Her genitals were more swollen than I’ve ever seen on any bear—a larger area more swollen than any female in estrus. Was she about to give birth? Had she produced a stillborn cub? If the latter, why didn’t anyone see her eat it? I saw nothing in the den.


On Wednesday afternoon, a viewer saw her bury something in the bedding and thought it was a cub. Was the viewer right? Why didn’t anyone else report it?


On Thursday morning, she curled up and spent over 20 minutes licking her genital area and the bedding. Had her water broke? At 3, Lily is at the minimum for reproduction, so there is a question whether she can complete her pregnancy. She was plenty heavy in fall, but a nagging thought is that she may have used up too much energy after fishermen unknowingly disturbed her from this den. Lily temporarily moved 2 miles away and tried unsuccessfully to dig 3 dens in soil that was too rocky. After a few days, she lay down and idly gnawed at some branches. Then she seemed to make a decision. She got up and returned to the present den and raked bedding into it for the winter.


Females that weigh over 175 pounds in fall have a good chance of producing cubs. 10 of 14 females of that weight gave birth at age 3 like we hope Lily does. Lily was well over 200 before her unsuccessful den-making foray. We will all be relieved when she gives birth and we can begin watching her care for them at each stage of development. —Lynn Rogers, Ph.D.
 

2009 RX Death Pool Champion
Joined
Apr 3, 2005
Messages
13,603
Tokens
still checking for footage of swollen genitalia..
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,116,674
Messages
13,535,846
Members
100,387
Latest member
entegra
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com