The Polar Bear is at the top of the "food chain" in the Arctic. They maintain the balance of nature, by preventing an overpopulation of seals. Seals are the Polar Bear's primary food. Specifically, the Ringed Seal, and occasionally the Bearded Seal. But if hunting is good, and prey plentiful, the average adult Polar Bear, will usually only eat the fatty portions of the seal, leaving the rest for other animals, such as younger Polar Bears, or Arctic Foxes, and the Ravens. Seals are not the only thing that Polar Bears have been know to hunt. Sometimes, they both hunt and eat walrus, Beluga Whales, as well as Short-legged Reindeer, and other foods, such as birds, bird eggs, beached whales, and even kelp. For more details, please see the sites listed below.
The only thing that can beat a polar bear is a hunter, and another polar bear.
They are at the top of the food chain in their natural environment.
It is Polar bears, eat seals, eat fish, eat plankton, eat alge.
fish
polar bear mostly eat those animals which have a large quantity of fat which keep them warm in very cold climate
Mainly berries and fish.
after a polar bear it is a brown bear
all i can tell you is that brown bears eat berries
right above the acorn...and below the brown bear..
grizzly bear *
A bear on the top of the food chain.
bear
In a food chain, the arrows are meant to show what animals energy goes where EX: fish--->bear the energy of the fish goes to the bear
maybe polar bear
The polar bear is the top of the food chain, no other animal relies on it for food to live.
Kodiak brown bears are at the top of the food chain. Like most bears, they will eat many kinds of foods, including, fish, berries and grasses, deer, elk, moose, honey (including the comb and larvae), termites, ants.
They are not getting enough food.
Yes. It is an apex or top predator, which qualifies it to be at the top of the food chain.