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America saved the grizzly bear from extinction. Now, they are invading backyards and main streets

Grizzly bear population in US has nearly trippled in last 50 years, causing friction with their human neighbors

Josh Marcus
San Francisco
Saturday 10 August 2024 15:46 EDT
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Cyclist killed in grizzly bear attack in US

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The grizzly bear, long an icon of American’s Mountain West, has bounced back since being placed on the endangered species list in 1975, with at least 2,000 roaming the country.

The population growth is a major conservation success, so much so that the bears were removed from the list in 2017, but the increase means that humans and bears are encountering each other more often.

The apex predators, which can top 500 pounds, seem increasingly comfortable across a range that’s grown to some 27,000 miles—a development that’s put them in new and dangerous situations, as well as their human counterparts, who’ve experienced burglarized homes, dead livestock and personal injury.

Now, because of the alarming spike in encounters, states such as Idaho, Montana and Wyoming are pushing federal wildlife managers to remove the grizzly’s protected status and allow hunters to target the famous species.

The successful conservation of grizzly bears in the U.S. has led to new tensions between the animals and humans. As bear populations have grown, so have the number of face-to-face meetings.
The successful conservation of grizzly bears in the U.S. has led to new tensions between the animals and humans. As bear populations have grown, so have the number of face-to-face meetings. (Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

“They need to be scared of us,” raft guide Samantha Justice, who carries a rifle when she goes into the woods in the region, toldThe Wall Street Journal.

In Cody, Wyoming, rancher Bridget Gallgher told the paper she’s had to put up an electric fence to keep grizzlies from entering her corn fields, where wildlife managers trapped four bears last year.

“I do a lot of praying,” she said.

As recently as the early 1990s, bears were responsible for about 50 human-animal conflicts each year, a figure that’s risen to more than 400 in recent years, according to the Journal.

Over the July 4 holiday, a hiker in Montana’s Glacier National Park had a close encounter with a grizzly.

“I took out my bear spray, got low and backed away slowly from the bear,” Amanda Wylie said on social media. “I talked to him nice and once I felt a safe enough distance away, I got my phone out to record, wondering if these would be my last moments.”

As recently as the early 1990s, bears were responsible for about 50 human-animal conflicts each year, a figure that’s risen to more than 400 in recent years
As recently as the early 1990s, bears were responsible for about 50 human-animal conflicts each year, a figure that’s risen to more than 400 in recent years (Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks)

Video of the interaction shows her telling the creature, “You’re OK. Please don’t come here. Thank you. Please go.”

“It eventually shook his body, which let me know I could relax a little,” she explained. “Once he turned away, I rejoiced, knowing I would live to see another day and have an amazing encounter story to share.”

The previous month, across the border in Canada, a rare white grizzly and its two cubs were involved in two car accidents.

In May, a grizzly bear at Grand Teton National Park sent a man to the hospital.

Last year, wildlife officials euthanized a grizzly that broke into a home in Montana and killed a female hiker near Yellowstone in July 2023.

In September of 2023, a hunter suffered a series of injuries after being mauled in Montana by a grizzly, prompting officials to partially close Custer Gallatin National Forest.

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