The Robert R. McCormick Bear and Wolf Habitat
contains seven outdoor habitats for spectacled bears, maned wolves and polar
bears--all critically endangered species. Both the bear and the wolf habitats
have special denning areas for new mother and their young.
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The polar bear habitat is one of the largest in the world, with a
266,000 gallon pool and underwater viewing windows.
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Shrouded in mystery, the rarely seen maned wolf is named for
the patch of long black hairs growing along its shoulders and upper back
that stand on end when the animal is threatened or frightened. While its
name and wolf-like size imply a close relation to wolves, it is not a wolf
at all. With big ears and a tapered snout and its hunting technique of pouncing
on small mammals and birds, it actually is more similar in appearance and
behavior to a long-legged red fox. In fact, its Paraguayan name means "bog
fox."
Native to grasslands, swamp borders and scrub forests of South America,
this endangered wild dog has adapted to survive in its varied habitats.
Its stilt-like legs help it see over and move through tall grasses, lack
of underfur protects it from overheating and its large, erect ears act as
heat radiators as well as sound detectors.
While researchers don't know exactly how many of these shy, solitary
animals actually remain in the wild, there are fewer than 200 maned wolves
in captivity at more than 40 zoo worldwide. An active participant in the
maned wolf SSP, Lincoln Park Zoo has had more than 16 successful births
since our maned wolf breeding program began in 1972.
Species data sheets:
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The polar bear makes its home literally on top
of the world, in the icy regions of the arctic circle. Known to the Inuit
Indians as Nanook, meaning great-white bear of the north, the polar bear
is extremely well adapted for life in a frozen world. The bear's black skin
absorbs the sun's warm rays while layers of fat covered with thick, white
fur insulates its body against the arctic air and water. The dense hair
on the soles of its broad feet allows for quick, sure-footed travel on the
ice. Equipped with an excellent sense of smell, sharp claws and white on
white camoflage, this clever hunter has been known to slink along the ice
on its belly, covering its black nose with a paw in order to sneak up on
unsuspecting seals, its primary food source.
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For more than 110 years, polar bears have been
a traditional favorite at Lincoln Park Zoo. Our polar bear exhibit is one
of the largest in the world, designed for both polar bears and visitors.
Outlined by craggy cliffs and rocks, the 266,000 gallon pool has a small
salt water lagoon and underwater viewing windows for visitors to observe
an impromptu polar bear water ballet.
Standing on its hind legs, an average adult male polar bear towers 8
feet in height and weighs in at 1,000 pounds. Weighing just over one pound
at birth and covered only with a thin coat of white hair, cubs are kept
warm all winter long by snuggling in ice caves and nursing on their mother's
fatty milk. When spring arrives four months later, cubs emerge from the
den 25 pounds heavier and ready for their first hunting lesson. |
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High in the Andes of South America lives a small, tree-climbing
bear rarely seen by man. In Ecuador, it is called "osos de anteojos,"
Spanish for "the bear with eyeglasses." In North America, we call
it the spectacled bear. The only bear to be found south of the equator
gets its name from the distinctive white circles around its eyes, which
resemble a pair of eyeglasses. Each spectacled bear also has a pattern of
white markings on its face, neck and chest that is as unique as a set of
fingerprints and can be used to tell one bear from another.
The endangered spectacled bear is rapidly disappearing from the wild.
Lincoln Park Zoo is leading a conservation effort with one of the most successful
spectacled bear breeding programs in the world, a commitment reflected in
the amount of space and number of naturalistic habitats devoted to these
bears. Lincoln Park Zoo manages approximately 20% of the captive spectacled
bears in North America and 10% worldwide. Close to 30 spectacled bear births
have been recorded here since our breeding program began in 1968. |
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