You will love the great bird spceies and birdwatching opportunities all across the enormous Danube Delta. Picturesque little towns dot the many canal and waterway systems, allowing great access to some of ornithology's wonders! From Tulcea out to Chillia, Sulina and Sfantu Gheorghe, birds of all kinds abound in this rich natural resource in what is Europe's newest land.
The wonders of Europes largest wetlands offers birdwatching, hunting, fishing and more. Sail down the Danube's many arms as it flows to the Black Sea and see some stunning wildlife on organised tours or going it alone with a guy and a boat!
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Yes, this Lynx kitten perches precariously, a rich
life ahead. The Carpathians are home to Central Europes wides
range of Lynx, bear and wolves!
Big Mammals, Big Populations
Is it safe to go into the woods today? Bears, wolves and lynx
roam freely throughout the Carpathians, sometimes venturing into the
cities and livestock is at risk. But attacks on humans is rare,
despite the contact these big mammals have along the fringes of their
ranges.
The coniferous tree forests of Romania's mountains, are the natural
habitat of these big mammals, as well as deer, martens, wood-peckers,
nightingale, crows and hawks.
The
Carpathian brown bear population is the largest in Europe, estimated at 4,500 to 5,000 bears.
As a subspecies, the Carpathian bear (Ursus arctos formicarius) is the
smallest subspecies of the European brown bears.
The Carpathian Brown Bear constitutes the smallest subspecies of
bear, a member of the wider Grizzly Bear (Ursus arctos) species. DNA analysis has recently
revealed that the Carpathian subspecies of brown bear are genetically quite homogeneous, and that their
genetic phylogeography does not correspond to their traditional
taxonomy.
Bears Like Fish
And berries. And sometimes rubbish bins
in County Braşov too!
Carpathian Bears have furry coats in shades of blonde, brown, black, or a
combination of those colours. The longer outer guard hairs of the brown
bear are often tipped with white or silver. With a large hump of muscle over their
shoulders, they have great strength in the forelimbs for digging. Forearms
end in massive paws with very powerful claws up to 15 cm (5.9 inches) in
length.
The mature females sometimes weigh as little as 90 kg (200 lb), compared
with the largest subspecies of the brown bear, the Kodiak bear and the
bears from coastal Russia and Alaska. Along with their strength and deceptive speed,
Carpathian Brown Bears are legendary for their stamina. They are capable of running at
full speed for miles at a time without stopping. They prefer
semi-open country, usually in mountainous areas.
History
In Europe, the brown bear outlasted the larger and closely related
cave bear. The cave bear was hunted by Neanderthals who may have had a
religion relating to this bear, the Cave Bear Cult, but the Neanderthal
population was too small for their consumption of cave bear to result in
the species extinction and the cave bear outlasted the Neanderthals by
18,000 years, becoming extinct about 10,000 years ago. The cave bear and
brown bear diets were similar, and the two species probably lived in the
same area at the same time.
Behavior
The brown bear is primarily nocturnal and, in the summer, puts on alot of fat, on which it relies to make it through
winter, when it becomes very lethargic. Although they are not true
hibernators, and can be woken easily, they like to den in a protected
spot such as a cave, crevice, or hollow log during the winter months.
Eating
They are omnivores and feed on a variety of plant parts, including
berries, roots, and sprouts, fungi, fish, insects, and small mammals,
especially ground squirrels. Contrary to popular mythology, brown bears
are not particularly carnivorous as they derive up to 90% of their
dietary food energy from vegetable matter. Their jaw structure has
evolved to fit their dietary habits and it is longer and lacks strong,
sharp canine teeths of true predators.
Bears eat an enormous number of moths during the summer, sometimes as
many as 20,000 to 40,000 in a day, and may derive up to a third of their
food energy from these insects.
Brown bears retrace their own tracks and walk
only on rocks while being hunted to avoid being traced. Brown bears
steal the deceased prey of wolves and lynx throughout the Carpathians
where their ranges intersect. These animals can
cause the bear to retreat if they are able to scare the bear.
Posture
The brown bear is plantigrade like all bears, meaning it walks with its
entire foot like a human, rather than in its toes like cats and dogs,
which are digitigrade. They can stand up on their hind legs for extended
periods of time. Bears tend to sit down on their rear with their upper
body off the ground.
Normally a solitary animal, the Brown Bear congregates alongside
streams and rivers during the salmon spawn in the fall. Every other year
females produce one to four young, which weigh only about 1 to 2 kg (2
to 5 lb) at birth. Raised entirely by their mother, cubs are taught to
climb trees when in danger.
Habituation to human areas
A fed bear is a dead bear - bears are relocated when possible, but
repeat offenders may be killed when they have associated humans with
food sources.Bears become attracted to human-created food sources such
as garbage dumps, litter bins and dumpsters and venture into human
dwellings or barns in search of food as humans encroach into bear
habitat.
Throughout their habitat in Romania, Carpathian bears sometimes kill and eat farm animals. When
bears come to associate human activity with a "food reward", a bear is
likely to continue to become emboldened and the likeliness of human-bear
encounters increases. The saying, "a fed bear is a dead bear," has come
into use to popularize the idea that allowing bears to scavenge human
garbage, pet food, or other food sources that draw the bear into contact
with humans can result in a bear's death.
This old sow spots a tourist looking for Dracula
Trek across the wonderful trail systems of the
Carpathian mountains to find this old dear in your path!
Hiking is the best way for a chance encounter.
It is extremely rare that Carpathian bears kill or seriously injure humans,
with only three known cases during the last 100 years
in which humans were killed by bears in Europe. Attacks usually occur because the
bear is injured or a human encounters a mother bear with cubs.
Anyone walking in a forest where there are bears should carry an air
horn because 'bear bells' tend to provoke a bear's curiosity and a brown
bear's natural instinct is to run away from humans. When traveling in
groups trail songs are also effective. If camping, do not bring food
into the tent and clean up all garbage. Bears have a fantastic sense of
smell and will eat anything people eat. If one meets a bear, one should
remain calm and slowly walk in the opposite direction. Running humans
trigger the bear's chasing instinct and bears can outrun humans. Do not
make threatening moves, eye contact, or shout. Thousands of encounters
occur between humans and brown bears every year without conflict.
If a Brown Bear attacks and it is impossible to get away, the person
should lie down in a fetal position and put his/her hands around the
head to protect from bites to reduce damage to vital organs. Pretending
to be dead may save you. Punching
or gouging attacking brown bears intensifies their assaults.
It is important to remember that the considerations while
hunting a brown bear are different from those which arise while
defending against an attacking brown bear. Hunters will wait for a
broadside shot at the heart/lung area of unsuspecting bears. With proper
placement, almost any rifle is capable of taking out a Carpathian bear in
these circumstances.
Range of the Lynx in Central Europe
Romania has the greatest population of any
Central European country
The Lynx in Romania is the largest wild-cat of all the lynx types
world-wide, in the species "Lynx lynx Eurasian Lynx", with short tails, and a tuft of hair on the tip of the
ears. There are about 2200 lynxes in the Carpathians, making them
the largest continuous lynx population west of the Russian border.
Romania's large Lynx have large paws padded for walking on
the deep winter snows in the Carpathians, and long whiskers
on the face.
The colour of the body varies from light brown to grey and
is occasionally marked with dark brown spots, especially on the limbs.
They range about 5 kg (11 pounds) (roughly the size of a large domestic
cat) up to about 30 kg (66 pounds). The Eurasian Lynx found throughout
the mountains of Romania is significantly larger than the other species
found in the U.S. and Canada.
Habitat
The lynx inhabits the high altitude forests with dense cover of shrubs,
reeds and grass. Though the cat hunts only on the ground, it can climb
trees and swim.
The same Lynx as found in Romania, the Eurasian Lynx (Lynx lynx), was considered to be extinct in
other parts of central Europe, but continued to thrive in the rich
habitat of the Carpathian mountain system and across parts of the
Transilvanian plateau.
Behaviour
The Lynx is usually solitary, although a group of cats can travel and
hunt together. Mating takes place in the late winter just before the
snow melts start in the lower ranges of the Romanian mountains. Its desired
resting place is in crevices or under ledges, and it gives birth to 2 to
4 kittens at a time. It feeds on birds and mammals and often on sheep
and goats. However spotting
a lynx is an event most seen by shepherds in the Carpathians, due to the
rather shy
and solitary nature of the animal.
Here Kitty Kitty Kitty
This grand feline of the Romania forest is more
likely to ignore the occasional interloper in his territory.
Regal is as regal does.
Looking deep in to the spruce and fir woodlands of the Carpathian
mountains, a chill may rise as you see a pair of yellow eyes looking
back at you!
The wolves still found in Romania were once abundant and distributed over
much of Europe, yet today, for a
variety of human-related reasons including widespread habitat
destruction and excessive hunting, wolves inhabit only a very limited
portion of their former range.
The main differences between wolves
found in the mountains of Romania and the domestic dogs of Romania are
that wolves have, on average, 30% larger brains, a better immune system,
better sense of smell, and are generally much larger than domestic dogs,
although many tourists have sworn to have seen big wolves on the streets
of Bucharest!
The wolf holds a long association in Romanian folklore and history.
Many towns are named for wolves of the region. Vulcan in County
Hunedoara is a city is named after the Vulcan Pass that connects the Jiu
Valley to Oltenia, itself being derived from Slavic "vlk", meaning
"wolf". Bizarrely enough, the nearby town of Lupeni is more
obviously derived from the Romanian word for wolf, "lup".
A Pricolici is a werewolf in Romanian mythology. Similar to a
vârcolac, although the latter sometimes symbolises a goblin, whereas the
pricolici always has wolf-like characteristics.
Even as recently as modern times, many people living in rural areas
of Romania have claimed to have been viciously attacked by abnormally
large and fierce wolves. Apparently, these wolves attack silently,
unexpectedly and only solitary targets. Victims of such attacks often
claim that their aggressor wasn't an ordinary wolf, but a pricolici who
has come back to life to continue wreaking havoc!
Pricolici, like strigoi, are undead souls that have risen from the
grave to harm living people. While a strigoi possesses anthropomorphic
qualities similar to the ones it had before death, a pricolici always
resembles a wolf or large dog. Malicious, violent men are often said to
become pricolici after death, in order to continue harming other humans.
A rather nasty bit of folklore indeed! One can only wonder
what Ceausescu would be like as a pricolici.
In the Piatra Craiului mountains
chamois and
other large herbivores provide prey for the local wolf population, and
also for many other large carnivores (Carpathian brown bears and lynx)
living in the national park there.
The Design of the Wolf
Wolves are built for stamina, possessing features tailored for
long-distance travel across the inner and outer Carpathian ranges. Their paws are able to traverse
easily through a wide variety of terrains, especially snow. There is a
slight webbing between each toe, which allows wolves to move over snow
more easily than comparatively hampered prey. Wolves are digitigrade, so
the relative largeness of their feet helps to better distribute their
weight on snowy surfaces. The front paws are larger than the hind paws,
and feature a fifth digit, a dewclaw, that is absent on hind paws.
Bristled hairs and blunt claws enhance grip on slippery surfaces, and
special blood vessels keep paw pads from freezing in the cold winters of
the Carpathian alps.
Coloration varies greatly, and runs from gray to gray-brown, all the
way through the canine spectrum of white, red, brown, and black. These
colours tend to mix in many populations to form predominantly blended
individuals, though it is certainly not uncommon for an individual or an
entire population to be entirely one colour (usually all black or all
white).
A multicolour coat characteristically lacks any clear pattern
other than it tends to be lighter on the animal's underside. Fur colour
sometimes corresponds with a given wolf population's environment; for
example, all-white wolves are much more common in areas with perennial
snow cover. Aging wolves acquire a grayish tint in their coats.
Wolves can visually communicate an impressive variety
of expressions and moods that range from subtler signals, such as a
slight shift in weight, to the more obvious ones, like rolling on the
back as a sign of complete submission.
The Romanian Wolf Dog
Over several centuries, shepherds and dog breeders have used
selective breeding to "create" large livestock-guarding dogs that can
stand up to wolves preying on flocks.
Howling and other vocalizations
Wolves
howl for several reasons. Howling helps pack members keep in touch,
allowing them to effectively communicate in the thickly forested areas
of the upper reaches of the Carpathians. Furthermore, howling
helps to summon pack members to a specific location. Howling can also
serve as a declaration of territory, as portrayed by a dominant wolf's
tendency to respond to a human imitation of a "rival" individual in an
area that the wolf considers its own.
Wolves will also howl for communal reasons. Some scientists speculate
that such group sessions strengthen the wolves' social bonds and
camaraderie— similar to community singing among humans.
Growling, used in tandem with bared teeth, is the most visual and
effective warning wolves use. Just back away slowly if you see this, but
don't run! Wolf growls have a distinct, deep,
bass-like quality, and are used much of the time as a threat, though
they are not always necessarily used for defense. Wolves will also growl
at other wolves while being aggressively dominant.
Wolves function as social predators and hunt in packs organized
according to strict, rank-oriented social hierarchies. It was
originally thought that this comparatively high level of social
organization had more to do with hunting success, and while this still
may be true to a certain extent, emerging theories suggest that the pack
has less to do with hunting and more to do with reproductive success.
The pack is led by the two individuals that sit atop the social
hierarchy: the alpha male and the alpha female. The alpha pair (of whom
only one may be the "top" alpha) has the greatest amount of social
freedom compared to the rest of the pack, but they are not "leaders" in
the human sense of the term. The alphas do not give the other wolves
orders; rather, they simply have the most freedom in choosing where to
go, what to do, and when to do it. Possessing strong instincts for
fellowship, the rest of the pack usually follows.
Cooperative hunting and diet
Packs of wolves cooperatively hunt any large herbivores in their
range. Pack hunting revolves around the chase, as wolves are able to run
for long periods before relenting. It takes meticulous cooperation for a
pack to take down a large prey animal, but the success rate of such
chases is actually very low. Wolves, in the interest of saving energy,
will only chase any one potential prey animal for the first thousand or
so meters before giving up and trying again at a different time with a
different prey.
Wolves' diets include, but are not limited to, elk, caribou, moose,
deer, and other large ungulates.
They also prey on rodents and small animals in a
limited manner, as a typical adult wolf requires a minimum of 1.1 kg
(2.5 lb) of food per day for sustenance, but approximately 2.2 kg
to reproduce successfully; however, this certainly doesn't mean that a
wolf will get the chance to eat everyday.
Like many other keystone predators, wolves are sensitive to
fluctuations in prey abundance, making them likely to experience minor
changes within their own populations as the abundance of their primary
prey species gradually rises and drops over long periods of time. This
balance between wolves and their prey prevents the mass starvation of
all species involved.
Relationships with other predators
In the Carpathian mountains, the Gray Wolf will sometimes encounter
the equally adaptable Carpathian Brown Bear. The collective ferocity of the wolf
pack and the imposing size and strength of the bear often ensures that
encounters between the two result in little more than defensive
posturing. The Carpathian Bear however, will eat wolf cubs, particularly in
the post winter season after a long fast. Wolf packs in turn will kill
bear cubs and on some rare occasions, even pull down adults if the
stakes are high enough. Both will steal each other's kills given the
opportunity.
Livestock predation
As long as there is enough prey, wolves seem to avoid taking livestock,
often ignoring them entirely. However, some wolves or packs can
specialize in hunting livestock once the behaviour is learned despite
natural prey abundance. In such situations, sheep in the lower pastures
in the foothills of the Carpathians are usually the most
vulnerable, but horses and cattle are also at risk. Wolf-secure fences,
relocation where applicable, and local wolf extermination are the only
known methods to effectively stop livestock predation.
Related Subspecies of the Grey Wolf in Romania
It was once believed there were up to 50 subspecies. However, the
last decade has seen a new and widely accepted list that has been
condensed to 13 living subspecies, 14 including the common dog, and 2
recently extinct subspecies. This takes into account the anatomy,
distribution, and migration of various wolf colonies.
Caspian Sea Wolf Canis lupus cubanensis Endangered, declining Between
the Caspian and Black seas A smaller subspecies. Hunted as a nuisance
animal.
Italian Wolf Canis lupus italicus Endangered Italian peninsula An
average-sized subspecies. Full canine color spectrum represented. Occupy
comparatively smaller territories. Protected.
Russian Wolf Canis lupus communis Stable, declining Central Russia A
very large subspecies. Hunted legally.
The Romanian chamois (Rupicapra rupicapra ssp. carpatica) is a
goat-like animal that lives in the Carpathian mountains of Romania, with
other subspecies in the Alps, Apennines, and as far south as northern
Greece. It is in the Caprinae subfamily of bovids, along with sheep and
goats.
As a mountain dweller, the chamois is excellently adapted to living
in the rugged, rocky terrain of the Carpathians. A fully grown chamois
reaches a height of about 75 cm (2.5 feet) and weighs about 50 kg (110
lb). Both males and females have short horns which are slightly curled
backwards. In summer, the chamois' fur has a rich brown color which
turns to a light grey in winter. Distinct characteristics are a white
face with pronounced black stripes below the eyes, a white backside and
a black dorsal strip. Chamois can reach an age of up to 20 years.
Female chamois and their kids live in herds; grown-up males tend to
live solitary for most of the year. During rut season (mid December in
Romania), males seek out female herds and engage in fierce fights with
each other. After a gestation period of 20 weeks, a single kid is born.
The kid is fully grown at an age of three years. It is rumoured that in
farming areas, male chamois will occasionally mate with goats and
produce sterile hybrids, but no such event has ever been scientifically
recorded.
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