Permalink: https://photo.greenpeace.org/archive/Spirit-Bear-in-Great-Bear-Rainforest-27MZIFLH1WHG.htmlConceptually similarSpirit Bear in Great Bear RainforestGP01ST8Completed★★★★★★Spirit Bear in Great Bear RainforestGP01ST6Completed★★★★Bear in the Great Bear RainforestGP01SS4Completed★★★★Bear with Birds in the Great Bear RainforestGP01SSRCompleted★★★★★★Spirit Bear in Great Bear RainforestGP01ST7Completed★★★★★★Bear in Great Bear RainforestGP01SRTCompleted★★★★Grizzly Bear in Great Bear RainforestGP01SSXCompleted★★★★★★Grizzly Bear in the Great Bear RainforestGP01SS0Completed★★★★Black Bear in Great Bear RainforestGP01SSZCompleted★★★★View AllGP01SS3Spirit Bear in Great Bear RainforestA bear searches for fish in a river in the Great Bear Rainforest in British Columbia, Canada.Locations:British Columbia-Canada-Great Bear Rainforest-North AmericaDate:16 Oct, 2007Credit:© Andrew Wright / www.cold-coast.comMaximum size:2664px X 1776pxRestrictions:Photographer maintains full copyright and would like to be credited as follows: ©Andrew Wright / www.cold-coast.comKeywords:Bears-Day-Forests (campaign title)-Great Bear Rainforest (campaign title)-KWCI (GPI)-Nature-Outdoors-Rivers-Rural scenes-Scenic-Temperate rainforestsShoot:Great Bear Rainforest in the FallRepresenting one quarter of the world’s remaining coastal temperate rainforest, the Great Bear Rainforest stretches along the mainland coast of British Columbia to the Alaska border, covering an area the size of Switzerland—the largest intact coastal temperate rainforest on the planet. A spectacular forest ecosystem with many pristine valleys, the Great Bear Rainforest is also known as 'Canada's Amazon' for its dense web of natural life including towering ancient trees, grizzly bears, salmon, wolves, and the rare white spirit bear. On March 31st, 2009, the government of British Columbia announced the implementation of the most comprehensive rainforest conservation plan in North American history for the Great Bear Rainforest - the result of a decade-long campaign and one of the longest in Greenpeace history.