So far, U.S. Geological Survey biologists have put Tasul and her brother Conrad on two diets. One was made up of meat from land animals and the other was composed of seafood. “We like to think of it as the surf and turf experiment,” Amy Cutting, an Oregon Zoo curator, told the USGS. The researchers’ measurements show the bears’ meals affect their fur and blood for far longer than previously thought. “Until now, we assumed that blood represented what a bear ate over the past one to two months, but our results suggest those samples represent diet up to six months or more,” USGS wildlife biologist Karyn Rode said. Tasul and Conrad really do give blood voluntarily. In recent years, their keepers have trained them to tolerate blood draws without having to be tranquilized. A specialized cage lets a keeper sit in front of the bears’ faces and feed and comfort them while a veterinary technician draws blood from the top of one of their back paws. Keepers originally intended the training to help the bears stay less stressed during blood draws the zoo performs to check the animals’ health. [U.S. Geological Survey, Oregon Zoo] Correction (2/26/2015): The original story incorrectly referred to Tasul as a he, but she is a female polar bear. We apologize for assuming maleness.