Meet the Bodaciously Bulky Bears of Fat Bear Week 2021

The annual tournament celebrates Alaska’s chunkiest brown bears and their summer-long salmon feast

four brown bears eating jumping salmon at a small waterfall
Every summer, brown bears descend on Brooks River to pack on the pounds needed to survive their winter hibernation.  Katmai National Park and Preserve via Flickr

Editor's Note, October 15, 2021: Congratulations are in order for Otis, who took home his fourth Fat Bear Week title! Nearly 96,000 people voted in the finale this month, according to Katmai National Park.

It’s that time of year again: the leaves are changing, the days are getting shorter, and the bears are getting chunkier. Every fall, some of the largest brown bears in the world gorge themselves on sockeye salmon at Brooks River in Katmai National Park, Alaska. To the delight of internet onlookers, the slender bears prepare for hibernation by ballooning into fluffy brown blimps.

“Fat Bear Week is really a celebration of success and survival,” says Lian Law, a visual information specialist at Katmai, to Natalie B. Compton for the Washington Post. “We really highlight the resilience and adaptability of bears here.” 

Each day of Fat Bear Week, which spans from September 29 to October 5, the public is asked to choose between the “fattest of the fat” in online daily mashups. Voters can judge the bears on any combination of criteria—floofiness, chonkiness, or inexplicable charm. Enthusiasts can also download their own March Madness–style bracket and watch the bears feast via a live river cam. The bear with the most votes each day advances until one girthy goober is crowned the champion on "Fat Bear Tuesday," which falls on October 5 this year.

The first iteration of the competition took place in 2014 as a single-day event and has since soared in popularity. In 2019, more than 200,000 votes were cast. Last year, the number grew to more than 600,000 votes.

An illustration of the official Fat Bear Week 2021 Bracket
The official Fat Bear Week 2021 Bracket Katmai National Park and Preserve via Flickr

The annual tournament celebrates the bears’ success in preparation for their long winter hibernation, but it’s also become part of a conservation movement. Though the bears are reaching peak fatness this week, Fat Bear Week is an entire summer of eating in the making. The bears eat around 90 pounds of fish, berries, small mammals, and vegetation each day to pack on the pounds necessary to survive months of winter hibernation. They’ll lose over a third of their body fat during their winter snooze, which lasts about six months. If the brown bears don’t have access to calorie-rich foods like salmon, they may not survive the winter.

“It really does raise awareness about their ecosystem,” Law says to the Washington Post. “We are holding these Brooks bears and the Brooks area as an exemplary illustration of a healthy ecosystem...So, yes, we are celebrating the success of these bears, but it’s important also not to forget that not all the bears and all of those places are so fortunate.”

This years’ late salmon run hasn’t deterred hordes of bears from seeking salmon in the Brooks River, according to a National Parks Service press release. The lumbering creatures appear to have had no problem plumping up.

"They are pretty massive," says Naomi Boak, the media ranger at Katmai National Park and Preserve, to Mashable’s Mark Kaufman.

Here are a few of this year’s finest floofers:

 747

A composite before and after photo of bear 747
747, whose build coincidentally resembles the Boeing airliner, is last year’s defending champ. National Parks Service and Explore.org

As last year’s champion, some expect 747 to clinch a back-to-back victory. In September 2020, scientists estimated he weighed more than 1,400 pounds and he appears even bigger this year. According to Explore.org, 747 yielded to the river’s most dominant bear, 856, for many years until this summer 2021.

“He's the fattest and largest bear I've ever seen," said Mike Fitz, a former Katmai park ranger and currently a resident naturalist for explore.org, to Mashable last year. "I feel a special bit of privilege to witness a bear as big as he."

In July, 747 trumped his long-time rival to become the river’s top bear. 747 rarely has to get aggressive with others—most bears recognize they’re no match for his sheer size and stay out of his way.

128 “Grazer”

A composite before and after photo of bear 128 Grazer
Grazer is one of the river’s many bold female bears. National Parks Service and Explore.org

Bear 128, called "Grazer," is often one of the fattest bears to visit the Brooks River and this year, she returned with two young cubs. She’s known as a defensive mama bear, often picking fights with much larger bears, including dominant adult males, to keep her cubs safe. Grazer’s boldness is risky but pays off with access to the best fishing spots in the river.

435 “Holly”

A composite before and after photo of bear 435 holly
The experienced mama bear earned the 2019 title for her girthy glow-up. National Parks Service and Explore.org

Holly might start the season looking a little scraggly, but by early fall, this sturdy gal resembles “the shape and color of a toasted marshmallow,” according to Explore.org. The 2019 Fat Bear Week champion is the super-mom of the river. In 2014, Holly adopted an abandoned cub and raised it alongside her biological cub. Both of the cubs are now successful adults, 503 and 719.

When Holly earned her heavyweight title in 2019, "it was very hard to get a good picture [of Holly] out of the water," Boak to NPR’s Tom Goldman, "because she was a submarine for the entire month. She did not stop fishing, except to dig a belly hole big enough for her to sleep in."

480 “Otis”

A composite before and after photo of bear 480 Otis
Despite missing a few teeth, Otis is still a skilled angler. National Parks Service and Explore.org

Another strong contender this year, Otis, has won the competition three times. At around 25 years old, he’s one of the older bears in the bracket—but he's a total fan favorite. Otis made an unusually late appearance at the river this year, but rapidly packed on the pounds when he arrived.

"He's certainly made up for lost time," says Mike Fitz, a former Katmai park ranger and currently a resident naturalist for Explore.org, to Mashable. "He's gained an incredible amount of body mass in about seven weeks."

32 “Chunk”

A composite before and after photo of bear 32 Chunk
With a name like “Chunk,” he’s got a lot to live up to. a href="https://explore.org/fat-bear-week"> National Parks Service and Explore.org

Even at his leanest, bear 32—"Chunk"—is known for maintaining substantial fat reserves, especially on his hindquarters. The jiggly giant was estimated to weigh more than 1,200 pounds in September 2020 and ranks among the river’s most dominant bears.

Chunk’s personality matches his outsized statute. According to Explore.org, Chunk will wait patiently to scavenge leftover salmon and even play with other bears—two uncommon behaviors for a dominant bear to display.

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