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Alaska's Fat Bear contest crowns Holly 'Queen of Corpulence'

Holly, this rotund and furrygrandma bear, has been crowned the fattest of them all. Fat Bear Week for Alaska's grizzlies has become a nationalinternet sensation.

Katmai National Park and Preserve's Fat Bear Week has become an internet sensation

Holly, this rotund and furrygrandma bear, was crowned the fattest of them all during Katmai National Park and Preserve's Fat Bear Week contest. (Katmai National Park & Preserve/Facebook/L. Carter)

A rotund and furrygrandma bear has been crowned the fattest of them all.

Fat Bear Week for Alaska's grizzlies has become a nationalinternet sensation, pitting individual bears against each other in an online voting contest.

This year'schampion fat fan favourite is Holly, organizersof the event said late Tuesday, with the winner selected by popular vote based on photos displayed on Facebook.

"All hail Holly whose healthy heft will help her hibernate until the spring. Long live the Queen of Corpulence!" Katmai National Park and Preserve said on its Facebook page, whichfeatured photographs of salmon-fattened Katmai brown bears.

Katmai, in southwestern Alaska, is known for its brownbears, which grow to massive sizes by gorging on salmon. Holly,who did not have cubs this year to distract her, had anespecially big finish to the season.

"She's just a great bear. When she doesn'thave cubs, she looks like the Michelin Man," said Naomi Boak, a Katmai Conservancy media ranger who has been managing this year's FatBear Week event.

Holly, who won in a field of 12 contenders, has beensingle-minded this year in her pursuit of salmon at Brooks Falls, the park'sbest-known bear-gathering spot.

"She doesn't stop fishing. It was really hard to getpictures of her because she just doesn't get out of the water," Boak said.

When she doesn'thave cubs, she looks like the Michelin Man.- Naomi Boak, Katmai media ranger


Fat Bear Week, an event that combines tongue-in-cheekcompetition with science education, highlights the Katmai bears'preparation for winter hibernation.

Bears typically lose a third of their body weight duringtheir winter sleep, so the body fat they accumulate in summerand fall is crucial to survival.

Thanks to Katmai's bounty ofsalmon, along with its abundant berries, the park's male bearscan eat their way to more than 1,000 pounds and females to abouttwo-thirds that weight before they retreat to their hibernation dens in the mountains.

Holly dubbed 'Supermom' for adopting cub

Even before this year's Fat Bear Week, Holly was well-knownto fans of Alaska wildlife. She has been a regular to millions of viewers who watch footage from the livestream"bear cam"at Brooks Falls that was set up and is operated by the siteExplore.org.

Holly was already famous for adopting a yearling cub thathad been abandoned by its mother. Adoption is "very, veryunusual"among brown bears, Boak said, prompting Holly'sbear-cam followers to dub her "Supermom."

Although she had no cubs this year, Holly has offspring,including another adult female with cubs of her own. The three
generations spent much of the summer at Brooks Falls, Boak said.

As well as the bears' bodies, Fat Bear Week's following alsoswelled this year. There were about 187,500 online votes cast in the 2019 competition, more than three times as many votes tallied in last year's Fat Bear Week.

The event gained a following in schools across the United States, after teachers incorporated Katmai's fat bears into lesson plans.