Brown bears could once be found across most of
Eurasia, compared to the more limited range today. General habitats included areas such as grassland, sparsely vegetated land, and wetlands. Although included as of
Least Concern on the 2006
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species (which refers to the global species, not to the Eurasian brown bear specifically), local populations, specifically those in the European Union, are becoming increasingly scarce. As the IUCN itself adds: "Least Concern does not always mean that species are not at risk. There are declining species that are evaluated as Least Concern." The brown bear has long been extinct in Britain (at least 1,500 years ago, possibly even 3,000 years ago), Denmark (about 6,500 years ago), the Netherlands (about 1,000 years ago, although later singles rarely wandered from Germany), Belgium and Luxembourg, with more recent extinctions in Germany (in the year 1835, although singles wandering from Italy were recorded in 2006 and 2019), Switzerland (in 1904, although a single was seen in 1923 and since 2005 there has been an increasing number of sightings of wanderers from Italy), and Portugal (in 1843, although a wanderer from Spain was recorded in 2019). Globally, the largest population is found east of the
Ural mountain range, in the large
Siberian forests; brown bears are also present in smaller numbers in parts of central Asia. The largest brown bear population in Europe is in
Russia, where it has now recovered from an all-time low caused by intensive hunting. Populations in
Baltoscandia are similarly, albeit slowly, increasing. They include almost 3,000 bears in
Sweden, 2,000 in
Finland, 1,400 in
Estonia and around 100 in
Norway. Large populations can also be found in
Romania (around 13,000),
Slovakia (around 2,500),
Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Croatia (1,200),
Slovenia (1,100),
North Macedonia,
Bulgaria,
Poland,
Turkey (around 4,000), and
Georgia. Small but still significant populations can also be found in
Greece (around 870),
Albania,
Serbia and
Montenegro. In 2005, there were an estimated 200 in
Ukraine; these populations are part of two distinct metapopulations: the Carpathian with over 5000 individuals, and the Dinaric-Pindos (Balkans) with around 3000 individuals. There is a small but growing population (at least 70 bears) in the
Pyrenees, on the border between
Spain and
France, which was once on the edge of extinction, as well as
two subpopulations in the
Cantabrian Mountains in Spain (amounting to around 250 individuals). There are also
populations totalling around 100 bears in the
Abruzzo,
South Tyrol and
Trentino regions of
Italy. Bears from the aforementioned Italian regions occasionally cross over to bordering
Switzerland, which has not hosted a native population since its last bear was shot and killed in
Graubünden in 1904. Outside Europe and Russia/the
CIS, other related
clades of brown bears persist in smaller, isolated, and for the most part highly threatened populations in
Iran,
Afghanistan,
Pakistan, North
India, central Asia, Turkey, == Cultural depictions ==