The grizzly bear, also known as the North American brown bear or simply grizzly, is a population or subspecies of the brown bear inhabiting North America.[1]
Coverage[]
Grizzly bears are featured in the documentary.
In 25 years after people, while animals haven't just been hunted by humans, but also been hemmed in. Roughly 3 million miles of paved road are in the United States alone and it's no coincidence that many of it cut right through the paths animals use to get from place to place. Scott Creel stated that things that make a landscape good for animal movement make it easy to engineer a road on the location which cut off much of all major migrations in North America. It also particularly wreaked havoc on the grizzly bear and because their habitat was carved up by roads, they're confined to isolated pockets, cutting them off from food and potential mates. After people, roads are no longer the barriers for the grizzly bears and instead became pathways, the trails that lead them back into the heart of their former range on roads like the Golden Gate Bridge.