Bear Tracks and Trails
Bears walk on the soles of their soft feet, so they often do not leave distinct tracks unless they walk through soft mud or snow.
Bears have 5 toes on each foot. Their large toe is on the outside of the foot and the small inner toe does not always register.
Footpads are bigger at the outer edges. Front tracks are wider than
rear tracks. The small round heel pad of the front foot seldom
registers. The rear track is longer because the whole foot, including
the heel, registers. They tend to toe-in, especially with their front feet.
Often bears
travel in an over-step walk, with their rear foot falling in front of
where the front foot fell. Where the back foot falls only slightly in
front of the front foot, there is a double track, which has led to
outlandish reports of track sizes. In deep snow, bears direct-register
by placing their rear foot in the same hole created by the front foot.
Bears often follow deer trails and forest roads, but some trails are
used mainly by bears. These consist of a series of depressions created
by multiple bears placing their feet in the same footsteps year after year.
Bear trails can be seen where bears approach favorite marking trees.
These trails are often especially distinctive because bears frequently
stomp-walk as they approach such trees. Stomp-walking is a form of
scent-marking in which bears stomp, twist, and slide each footstep.
Black Bear Tracks and Trails:
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Bears frequently move in an overstep walk, with the rear foot falling in front of there the front foot registered.
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The broadest part of the palm pad is on the outside and the shortest toe, which may not register, is on the inside.
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Bears toe-in and walk with most of their weight on the outside of their
foot. The imprint of the claws and the smaller inner toe may not
register.
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These tracks along a woods road were left by a black bear in a slight
over-step walk. Notice the rear track is in front of and slightly
overlapping the front track.
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A bear walked in the fine mud of a dirt road. The track sequence from the bottom is left front, left rear, right front.
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Bear tracks are visible mostly as flat areas in these muddy tire prints.
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Bears walk in the same tracks of the
bears that went before them, leaving a pattern of depressions that last
for years, specially near marking trees.
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This bear trail runs along the edge of a wetland. Bears typically
travel along the edge of wetlands, just inside the first row of trees.
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A bear was moving in a brisk overstep walk as it travelled to an oak
stand to feed. This track pattern is common on bare ground or in
shallow snow.
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Bears often use a direct-register walk to save energy when traveling in
deep snow. They step their rear foot in the track left by the front
foot.
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A near-perfect imprint of a hind foot in wet snow.
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Fresh tracks of a bear running in snow. The lower track is the right
front and the upper track is the right rear. On the left is the left
rear track on top of the left front track.
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Bears are very agile
and often walk the length of logs as they traverse their territory. A
bear used this log to cross a stream.
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The individual depressions in this bear trail are evident because the
goldthread can't grow where the soil has been compacted by the weight
of passing bears.
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