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  • WhitePine084

    c77d2ff4-b053-4f39-aa07-77f4e9f28bdd < Back < >

  • To Feed or Not to Feed | Bear Team

    TO FEED OR NOT TO FEED Eagles Nest Township is home to one of the most comprehensive, long running scientific behavioral studies of black bears in the world. Dr. Lynn Rogers Ph.D., one of the most prolific authors of peer-reviewed scientific articles on black bears, chose Eagles Nest Township because of its long history of feeding and peacefully coexisting with bears for over sixty years. Known as the Jane Goodall of bears, he developed a trust-based method of collaring and changing batteries in GPS units by using a handful of nuts instead of tranquilizers which can injure or kill bears. The study focuses on the bears of Eagles Nest Township, most of whom are descended from Shadow, a 34 year old resident black bear. Using airplanes, canoes, snowmobiles and snowshoes he has followed over 300 individual bears for over 30 years and has been able to develop a family tree of the generations of bears descended from Shadow (Shadow's Family Tree ). Dr. Rogers' initial population study has developed into a broad-based study of behavior, ecology, hibernation, vocalizations, body language, social organization, physiology, and bear-human relations. One of the many goals of this long-term study is to reduce bear-human conflict and find ways to coexist. Never has education been so important. Bear habitat is shrinking worldwide. People will not coexist with an animal they fear. The future of the bears that live around people depends upon knowledge and attitude of those humans. The need for accurate information about these animals is essential. To Feed or Not to Feed - UPDATE October 1, 2021 Read the article here Wildlife Research Institute To Feed or Not to Feed Consequences of feeding black bears? Feeding bears is one of the least studied aspects of bear biology. As a result, many of the beliefs about it have little or no scientific foundation. Here is a list of statements (in italics ) that were handed out to residents of Eagles Nest Community as gospel by a wildlife official in September 2007. Some of the statements may be true from time to time, but none typify black bear behavior. The bulleted information is from actual research—either cited from other sources or from our own research. However, a caveat is that the last two years (2020 and 2021) have produced such extreme drought and scarce berries and hazelnuts that we are seeing more bears than ever in our studies. Some are familiar bears taking advantage of diversionary feeding sites that keep them out of trouble in times of food scarcity. These include some of the oldest bears in Minnesota. But this year we are also seeing bears we never saw before as bears are driven out of large areas by fire and smoke. Some of these are coughing up blood and thick phlegm that we believe is from smoke inhalation. Feeding these bears has allowed us to see them recover. Some of the bears are skinny from the lack of food. Skinny mothers that appeared here did not appear to be producing much milk and had unusually small cubs. Feeding them allowed us to see the mother produce more milk and the cubs grow into healthy youngsters. The drought and scarce food situation extends far up into Canada. Bears that face scarce food travel much farther than usual, and some of them are likely the skittish newcomers that we are seeing here in this time when Minnesota’s own population is at a recent low. The latest DNR estimate is only 10,000 to 12,000 in the state compared to 20,000 to 25,000 a couple decades ago. At the same time more bears are coming out of the woods due to hunger, making bear numbers appear to be high. In this time of hunger, hungry bears are traveling from one diversionary feeding site to another and mostly staying out of trouble as they pass through people’s yards. Numbers have waned now as bears have gained weight and slowed down as they approach hibernation. Here are some common beliefs and what we and others have found. 1. A fed bear is a dead bear. ● This slogan was developed by campground managers to promote clean camping. A fed bear often does end up a dead bear in campground situations, but people blindly recite this rhyme as a mantra for all situations, not realizing it has no science behind it. 2. When bears congregate around feeding stations they spread communicable diseases to each other. ● Birds (Altizer et al 2004) and deer (Dobson and Foufopoulos 2001), can spread disease when congregating at feeders, but we know of no disease spread among bears in this way. We are currently conducting a study to determine whether a higher incidence of intestinal parasites occurs among bears that congregate around feeding areas. 3. Supplemental feeding is not necessary for bears. They survive well on natural foods. ● In good food years, black bears do survive well on natural foods, but in poor food years, cubs and yearlings may starve to death. ● In poor food years, hunger may drive bears to human food sources, and some of those bears are killed by landowners. Often, the bears are only gut-shot, resulting in slow, inhumane, and wasteful deaths. ● An increasing body of data from across North America suggests that diversionary feeding can help prevent problems around some rural communities. Where there is diversionary food for hungry bears to turn to, efforts to reduce nuisance problems by reducing attractants and using aversive conditioning are more effective and house break-ins are rare, resulting in fewer bears killed. 4. Bears prefer human foods over natural foods. ● What bears eat depends upon what the alternatives are. If the only natural alternatives are low quality foods, bears may temporarily prefer human foods. However, when high quality natural foods like emerging vegetation, colonial insects, nuts, and berries become abundant, bears demonstrate their preference for those foods and spend little or no time seeking human foods. ● In the State of Washington, where foresters provide diversionary food to reduce tree damage, Ziegltrum (2004) stated, “If given a choice among sapwood, pellets, and berries, bears prefer berries. In July [when berries ripen], bears quickly wean off the man-made feed.” ● Until recently, hunters in Virginia fed bears year-round. One hundred twenty-eight hunters surveyed provided 6,473,267 pounds of feed in a year (Gray et al. 2004). The Virginia Bear Hunters Association maintained that this supplemental feeding did not cause bears to cease their natural feeding and that bears will not use feeding sites, or will greatly reduce their rate of use, when acorns begin dropping from trees in late summer and early fall (Gray et al. 2004). ● In Minnesota, bears are killed over bait in higher numbers in years when natural foods are scarce (Garshelis and Noyce 2007). ● In Minnesota garbage dumps, most bear droppings during the summer berry season are natural food. Only after natural foods wane do most droppings contain garbage (Rogers 1989) 5. Bears may prefer natural food, but foods that people feed are more concentrated and easier to obtain – making for lazy, dependent bears. ● Researchers in northeastern Minnesota who walk with wild bears that have access to supplemental food find that black bears prefer high quality natural foods and forgo supplemental food to forage for natural foods when those foods are available. They say, “Anyone who thinks a fed bear is lazy should try following one around for a day as the bear travels far and works hard for wild foods. Variety is important in bear diets.” 6. Feeding is simply for human entertainment, not for the health of the bears. ● In many cases feeding bears is simply for human entertainment, as is feeding of deer, birds, or any other wildlife. People enjoy watching wildlife. ● Feeding in some areas is turning out to be important in reducing nuisance problems—whether it is done for entertainment or to divert bears from problem areas in times of natural food shortage. ● Feeding bears enables people to learn about bears and get past the ferocious images most people carry in their minds. This leads to better coexistence. ● Wildlife Research Institute feeds bears for research, keeping records of bear visits, weights, social interactions, and activities. The bears are also radio-tracked to learn what they do away from the feeding station. The study is revealing some of the information written here. Feeding also enables researchers to establish the trust needed to place radio-collars on bears without drugs, adjust collars for growth, and walk with bears to learn aspects of bear biology that could not be learned in any other way. 7. Bears get unnaturally fat when feeding on human foods. ● What is ‘unnaturally fat’ for a bear? Bears are not like people and dogs. Bears are built to gain and lose huge amounts of weight over the course of a year so they can hibernate overwinter and produce and nourish cubs for several months before emerging from the den. Fat bears maintain favorable HDL/LDL ratios. ● Ely researchers are not aware of any data that show harmful effects from supplementary human foods. WRI has obtained more weights on free-ranging wild black bears than any other bear study in the world. In northeastern Minnesota, adult bears with unlimited access to high-quality supplemental food do not show consistent weight gains until mating season ends and berries ripen. ● Out of 105 bears that have been observed at feeding stations during the 12 years to date, only two (both pregnant females) might be considered “obese.” Both produced healthy cubs. ● In captivity, an obese female black bear set a longevity record of 34 years at Grandfather Mountain, North Carolina. 8. Even if the bear you’re feeding does not damage your property, it may create nuisance problems and cause property damage at your neighbor’s home. ● This may happen from time to time, but data from Alaska, Montana, Colorado, Wisconsin, British Columbia, Michigan, and Minnesota show that hungry, emaciated bears (not fed bears) are the ones most likely to be nuisances, damage property, break into houses, and cause problems in campgrounds. ● House break-ins are most common where natural food is scarce and there is no diversionary food. ● Supplementary feeding sites are just another source of food to bears—along with natural feeding areas—but the reliability of supplementary food can become important in years of scarce natural food. ● Property damage is always possible with bears, whether they are fed or not, but people who feed bears in Eagles Nest Township experience very little damage, and neighbors of people who feed bears see few or no bears in the course of a year. 9. Feeding Bears = Tame Bears. A tame bear’s inherent wildness is compromised by feeding, making it unwary of people. This results in more unwanted human-bear encounters, which overall reduces the value, appreciation, and tolerance of bears by the general public. ● Many people believe it is wrong to feed birds, bears, or any wildlife. Perhaps that would be ideal. However, in many parts of the country people are moving into bear habitat and usurping valleys and shoreline areas where bears once fed. More needs to be learned about how people and bears can coexist. ● In Eagles Nest Township, where residents have fed bears for over 40 years, DNR records show fewer complaints over that period than elsewhere in the state. ● Although bears learn to trust people at feeding locations, most run when they encounter people in the woods where people are not expected. ● If “inherent wildness” means inherent fear of people, we are not sure there is such a thing. Wild bears are intelligent animals whose behavior depends more upon learning than instinct. Bears are seeing more and more people in their habitat and are adapting to it. Bear personalities vary greatly. Some adapt more readily than others. More and more, bears are learning that they can continue foraging and caring for cubs without wasting energy running from people. This is normal habituation. Does this ability to learn mean they are not wild? ● In Eagles Nest Township, the vast majority of bears cause no trouble—even when natural food is scarce and bears in other townships become nuisances. Only 2 out of 105 bears identified at feedings stations in the township since our research began in 1996 have been the source of complaints. By contrast, in a nearby community that did not provide diversionary food, 1 out of every 9 households killed a “nuisance” bear each year during an 8-year study (Rogers and Allen 1987). Whether it is better to feed bears or kill them when natural food is scarce is a matter of opinion. ● Where bears are fed, neighbors commonly come over, meet the bears, and overcome misconceptions. This increases the value, appreciation, and tolerance of bears by the general public and enables people to enjoy the woods without fear. 10. Too many bears concentrated in one area can create a multitude of problems including threat to humans, bodily injury, property damage, car kills, and vulnerability to illegal killing. ● This could happen if feeding were done to excess in the wrong place. However, the resident population of Eagles Nest Township is no larger than DNR estimates for surrounding areas—about 1 bear per 1½ square miles. ● “Threat to humans, bodily injury” It is well known that black bears pose little threat to humans. It is disturbing that wildlife agencies continue to portray bears as dangerous. ● “Car kills” Bears routinely cross roads and occasionally get killed whether or not they have access to supplemental food. In Eagles Nest Township, the core of the study area, 2 bears out of 105 seen in the township during 1996 to 2007 were killed by vehicles. Both were over a mile from any feeding station. ● “Vulnerability to illegal killing.” Bears are illegally killed throughout their range. In the Eagles Nest Study Area, after four decades of feeding, most people are more knowledgeable and tolerant of bears than people elsewhere. 11. Bears concentrated at feeding areas fight with each other and kill cubs. ● Where bears concentrate around food sources of any kind, aggression can increase as bears integrate into a peaceful hierarchy. Some bears watch from treetops until they have an opportunity to feed without conflict. Chases occur, but injuries are rare. By far the vast majority of injuries to black bears occur during mating season when bears are scattered and seldom use feeding stations. ● Of 59 cubs born during 1996 to 2007, none were killed at feeding stations. One was killed by a bear elsewhere. 12. Mother bears teach their cubs to be nuisances. ● Research has shown otherwise. Most mother bears with access to supplemental food spend the majority of their time foraging on natural foods away from feeding stations. ● Breck et al. (2008) stated “there was little indication that conflict behavior in black bears partitioned along related lineages. This indicates that the acquisition of human food conditioning behavior was a function of asocial learning and/or social learning independent of parents.” 13. Bears that get food at a house will then generalize and go from house to house looking for food. ● Neighbors of feeding stations seldom see bears. 14. Feeding often lures bears to areas where hunting is not allowed. Wildlife agencies rely on regulated hunting to thin out populations to reduce potential bear-human conflicts. ● When hunters distribute literally tons of bait in the woods, most bears are drawn away from diversionary feeding stations until the hunters stop baiting a month or so later. Hunters’ baits are a major source of supplemental food each year. ● In Virginia, a survey revealed that 128 bear hunters each distributed, on average, over 50,000 pounds of bear food/year (Gray et al. 2004). ● In Eagles Nest Township, MN, 4 collared bears and several non-collared bears with access to supplemental food were killed over bait between 2000 and 2007. 15. Bears accustomed to being fed by people will approach hunters and be killed. ● Habituation to humans seems to be location specific. Bears that are comfortable with people in their yards where they are used to seeing people generally avoid or run from people they encounter in the woods where they don’t expect to see people. ● Habituated, food-conditioned bears are not more susceptible to hunters. 16. Black Bears have lived for eons in Northern Minnesota habitats without supplemental feeding. In fact, today’s northern forests, with an interspersed diversity of types and ages, produce more natural bear foods than they did in the past.” ● Today’s forests likely do produce more natural bear foods than they did in the past, but scarce food years still occur. ● For many decades, bears ate at garbage dumps when natural foods were scarce. Since 1971, bear hunters have been putting tons of bear food in the Minnesota woods each year from mid-August until after mid-September. ● Bears survived for eons before people arrived with birdfeeders and garbage to lure hungry bears to be shot as nuisances. ● Bears and humans have competed for human food throughout history (Schorger 1946, 1949). WRI is studying ways to reduce the conflict. 17. Female bears that are supplementally-fed breed and produce cubs at a younger age and at shorter intervals; this artificially inflates their reproductive rate and hence the growth of the local population. ● Bears with access to supplemental food, including diversionary food, hunters’ bait, garbage, and birdfeeders often do have a higher reproductive rate. Where access to these foods is widespread, as with hunters’ bait, it could increase the overall population. ● However, where diversionary feeding was used in a portion of Eagles Nest Township, the local population did not increase. The population appeared to be limited by female territoriality, dispersal, and mortality. The number of territorial adult females (5-6) remained about the same—although the individuals changed over time—which each female occupying approximately 6 square miles. This territory size is consistent with that of females without access to supplemental food. The territoriality of resident females effectively limits the local bear population. Fersterer et al (2001) found that the home range sizes of bears with access to supplemental food in the state of Washington did not differ significantly from home ranges of bears in non-feeding areas. ● Of 21 females that held territories or were born in the 36-square-mile study area in Eagles Nest Township during 1996-2006, 7 (including a yearling) were still in the township in 2007, 8 moved out of the township, 5 were shot by hunters, and 1 died as a cub. Most juvenile males left their mothers’ territories and the study area at 1 or 2 years of age. ● Gray et al. (2004) stated that use of feeding sites in Virginia may be compensatory rather than additive and may only affect reproduction when acorns and other natural foods are scarce. 18. Supplemental feeding disrupts the normal social system of bears. ● Nothing in any study we know of supports that claim. Where it has been studied, females establish and defend territories normally, mothers care for cubs normally, families break up normally, bears court and mate normally, males disperse normally, bears make forays outside their usually areas normally, and bears forage on natural foods normally. ● Some of the forays are to diversionary feeding stations where social hierarchies reflect the social status of these bears within the overall study area. The same is seen at salmon streams or dense food patches across America. 19. Bear feeding often draws bears across busy roadways, increasing their chance of mortality as well as increasing the chance of dangerous car accidents for people. ● Highway deaths are a problem whether or not bears have access to diversionary food. Where bears do not have access to a few diversionary feeding stations, they are more likely to visit many bird feeders and garbage cans at houses along roads. In this study, 3 research bears were killed on Highway 169 and two others were hit and survived. Four of these were more than a mile from any diversionary feeding station. The fifth was seen being chased by a male during mating season minutes before it was killed. 20. Bears are adapted to natural food shortages. They have excellent memories and travel long distances to natural food sources. Supplemental feeding disrupts this. ● This statement wrongly assumes that bears prefer diversionary food over natural food and that bears become lazy and remain near feeding stations—a misconception that was covered above. When natural food is scarce, bears that remain near residential areas do spend more time at diversionary feeding stations than in other years, but these bears and other bears also make long trips to natural feeding sites. ● In a nearby study area, 40 percent of the females and 69 percent of the males made excursions outside their usual areas. Eagles Nest bears with access to supplemental food show a similar pattern. As examples, In September 1999, a bear with access to diversionary food traveled 24 miles outside her usual range for reasons unknown. On Sept 17, 2005, a female, and cubs with access to diversionary food traveled 15 miles north to feed on acorns in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. On August 13, 2007, a 2-year-old female with access to supplemental food left her territory east of Soudan and moved 4 miles outside her territory to a remote area for 19 days. Non-radio-collared bears are absent from diversionary feeding sites for up to 10 months at a time, depending upon natural food supply. 21. Bears feeding on natural foods rarely die of starvation, either in summer or winter. Supplemental feeding does not improve their chances of survival. ● Starvation is uncommon among adult bears, but cubs and yearlings often starve in years of scarce natural food. In a nearby study, cub survival ranged from 59% to 88%, depending upon natural food supply (Rogers 1987). Adding diversionary food in the current study increased cub survival to 91% (Mansfield 2007). Survival of yearlings after emerging from dens depended upon food and bodyweight (Rogers 1987). Only 40% survived as yearlings if they weighed less than 22 pounds upon emergence, 85% survived if they weighed 22-29 pounds, and all survived if they weighed over 29 pounds (Rogers 1987). ● The data clearly show that supplemental feeding improves survival. The data also show why hungry bears either become nuisances or go to diversionary feeding sites in years of scarce natural food. Some of them are literally starving to death. Also, pregnant females that don’t get enough to eat are unable to maintain pregnancies. 22. Help us keep our bears wild, healthy, free-ranging, and a source of enjoyment for all! ● “Wild” The black bears of Eagles Nest Township are truly wild whether or not they are accustomed to seeing people. All intelligent animals learn not to waste energy running from creatures that pose no threat, and yet they remain wild. ● “Healthy” The bears of Eagles Nest Township are very healthy. They eat mainly wild foods and use human foods as a supplement. They are above average in growth and reproductive success. ● “Free-ranging” The bears of Eagles Nest Township are indeed free-ranging. They show the same travel patterns that bears showed in a nearby study area where bears were not fed. Bears travel for many purposes, including mating, maintaining territories, and finding a variety of foods. ● “Source of enjoyment for all” Bears that are fed are a source of enjoyment and education for many. If the diversionary feeding were stopped, homeowners who feed deer and birds would likely have more bear visits, which may not be a source of enjoyment for them. Literature Cited Altizer, S., W. M. Hochachka, and A. A. Dhondt. 2004. Seasonal dynamics of mycoplasmal conjunctivitis in eastern North American house finches. Journal of Animal Ecology. 73:309-322. Breck, S. W., C.L. Williams, J. P. Beckmann, S. M. Matthews, C. W. Lackey and J. J. Beecham. 2008. Using genetic relatedness to investigate the development of conflict behavior in black bears. J. Mamm. 89(2):428-434. Fersterer, P., D.L. Nolte, G.J. Ziegltrum, and H. Gossow. 2001. Effect of feeding stations on the home ranges of American black bears in western Washington. Ursus 12:51-54. Gray, R.M., M.R. Vaughan, and S.L. McMullin. 2004. Feeding wild American black bears in Virginia: a survey of Virginia bear hunters, 1998-99. Ursus 15:188-196. Garshelis, D. and K. Noyce. 2007. Status of Minnesota Black Bears, 2006. Report to Bear Committee. Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. Mansfield, S. A. 2007. Effects of supplemental food on weights and reproductive success of black bears in northeastern Minnesota. Master’s thesis. Antioch University New England. Miller R., J. B. Kaneene, S. D. Fitzgerald, and S. M. Schmitt. 2003. Evaluation of the influence of supplemental feeding of white-tailed deer (odocoileus virginianus) on the prevalence of bovine tuberculosis in the Michigan wild deer population. Journal of Wildlife Diseases: Vol. 39, No. 1 pp. 84–95 Rogers, L. L., and Arthur W. Allen. 1987. Habitat suitability index models: black bear, Upper Great Lakes Region. National Ecology Center, U.S. Fish Wildlife Service, Biol. Rep. 82(10.144). 54 pp. Rogers, L. L. 1989. Black bears, humans, and garbage dumps in Minnesota. Pages 43-46. In, M. Bromley (ed.) Bear-people conflicts—Proc. Of a Symposium on Management Strategies (1989). Northwest Territories Department of Renewable Resources. Schorger, A. W. 1946. Influx of bears into St. Louis County, Minnesota. J. Mammal. 27:177. Schorger, A. W. 1949. The black bear in early Wisconsin. Trans. Wis. Acad. Sci., Arts, and Letters 39:151-194. Ziegltrum, G.J. 2004. Efficacy of black bear supplemental feeding to reduce conifer damage in western Washington. Journal of Wildlife Management 68:470-474. Thank you for all you do. Lynn Rogers, Biologist, Wildlife Research Institute and North American Bear Center The information above attempts to dispel the most popular myths and misconceptions about bears.

  • WhitePine060

    fb6eb2b4-3364-45a7-aed4-2d64dd6e28f0 < Back Slide 60 of 83 < > Scattered lone white pines provide different wildlife values than do white pine forests.

  • Bears: Behavior, Ecology, Conservation

    e7cde9fa-c8c6-4de4-9eb3-e20e66d4e96e Bears: Behavior, Ecology, Conservation Describes the characteristics and behavior of black bears, grizzly bears, and brown bears, and looks at the impact of humans on their habitat Erwin A. Bauer December 1, 1996 159 Pages:

  • Visit The North American Bear Center | Bearteam

    VISIT THE NORTH AMERICAN BEAR CENTER Visit the North American Bear Center and Northwoods Ecology Hall VISIT WEBSITE The North American Bear Center is located just one mile west of Ely along Highway 169. The North American Bear Center is a nonprofit museum with indoor and outdoor viewing of live black bears in natural habitat with a pond and waterfall. The 2.5-acre enclosure is home to four resident bears - Ted, Tasha and Lucky, and Holly that are always within view if the large windows and balcony. The North American Bear Center has a wide variety of daily programs, and a hands-on children’s area, people of all ages learn bear behavior from the bears themselves. It is recommended to allow at least a two-hour visit for this unique, world-class experience that the whole family will enjoy! Theater playing award-winning bear documentaries More than 50 video exhibits of wild Minnesota bears revealing decades of scientific research Brand new "Cub Room" where children play and learn Interpretive nature trails Birding & wildlife viewing Large gift shop (sales help support the North American Bear Center) Our Northwoods Ecology Hall (opened spring 2015) features the many animals that black bears encounter in northwoods habitats and includes the history and values of those habitats. Exhibits include a 660-gallon aquarium, terrariums with local reptiles and amphibians, a majestic bull moose mount, woodland caribou mount, and a 40-foot wildlife exhibit showcasing over 35 mammals and birds in seasonal habitat settings. Our touchscreen monitors make it easy for you to learn about all of these animals. Chosen by Popular Science as Minnesota's Coolest Science-themed Destination in 2021 READ ARTICLE You don’t have to go far from home to travel somewhere amazing. Correct your misconceptions about bears at the North American Bear Center | Minnesota Did you know that grizzly bears are 26 times more likely to kill someone than black bears? These are the type of ursine misunderstandings that the North American Bear Center works to set straight at their educational facility, essential work as global bear habitat shrinks. In addition to their indoor displays, the facility is home to four black bears that serve as ambassadors to their kind, living on 2.5 acres of a naturally-forested enclosure. Watch the bears forage, interact with other wild animals, and play in their pond from the viewing windows or the outdoor balcony.

  • Hornet Nest Remnants

    a63142ed-4cf1-4d7f-83b9-fd1eeb6d988c Hornet Nest Remnants Bears feed on high fat/protein hornet brood.

  • WhitePine003

    a57c6bad-6015-4040-b2a5-76b37f1c34b8 < Back Slide 3 of 83 < > These giants live up to 634 years and were once so plentiful a person could travel from the Atlantic shore to Minnesota and seldom be out of sight of them.

  • WhitePine076

    7d0a6dc8-4357-4ae8-8718-b879eefc6af0 < Back Slide 76 of 83 < > A special value of the bark on dead white pines is that when it begins to separate from the trunk it creates a space that's an ideal place for bats to give birth and raise their young. The dark bark on a trunk that towers above the other trees absorbs sunlight and becomes warm. In winter, birds take advantage of spaces under the bark for sleeping. dead white pines provide homes and food for as many animals and birds as do live ones.

  • Blustery Reaction

    adac76d4-1534-4661-97f5-271818c39742 < Back Blustery Reaction Could dreaming explain why this mother woke up from REM sleep blustering forward as if disoriented before turning toward the den entrance? Does the fact that she immediately calmed down when she realized nothing was there suggest that she can separate bad dreams from reality? Previous Next

  • What should I do if I see a black bear? | Bear Team

    WHAT SHOULD I DO IF I SEE A BLACK BEAR? What should you do if you see a bear? Update February 20, 2010 – 6:26 PM CST (WRI Update ) What should you do if you see a black bear? The standard answer nationwide is, “Speak calmly and back away slowly.” This identifies you as a person, shows you to be non-threatening, and gives the bear space. Not bad advice. But do you have to follow that advice to avoid an attack? No. Those are polite actions that respect a black bear’s comfort zone and help ease its anxiety. It is the gentle way to separate. Standing quietly without speaking might give you more opportunity to observe what the bear is doing. More aggressive action would likely send the bear running like many of us saw on Animal Planet’s ‘Bear Whisperer’ a couple nights ago. Is one action safer than another? If a black bear is more than a few yards away, it seldom matters what you do. Attacks are rare no matter what. One might say, “What? I’ve heard lots of advice about what a person must do.” Yes, well-meaning advice-givers have said a lot of things. Most have had no close-up experience with wild, non-tranquilized bears, and that includes most bear biologists. A problem with most advice is that it really makes no difference and carries the hidden, scary message that if you don’t do it, you will be in deep trouble, maybe killed. Much of the usual advice is based on assumptions that bears are quick to anger—like they are portrayed on covers of hunting magazines—and that they would love to attack us if they only dared. We can attest, after 43 years of working with wild bears, that those assumptions are wrong. Realizing how little science and how little first-hand experience is behind the well-meaning advice, we have tested as much of it as possible. We have not found a way to reliably elicit an attack. In fact, in 43 years, we've never been attacked, even when holding screaming cubs in our hands with mother bears present. We've seen lots of bluff charges, but no attacks. The closest we’ve come to eliciting attacks is when we tackled bears, which we quit doing decades ago. Of course, the bears bit and clawed their way free, but then they ran instead of attacking. What to do about a bear in your yard probably depends on how you feel about black bears. Do you enjoy seeing wildlife on your property? Watching a bear can be a wonderful experience. As more people live close to their woodland homes, the chances of seeing black bears are rising. One Eagles Nest resident who enjoys seeing wildlife recommends quietly observing from a distance. Announce yourself so the bear knows you are present and you don't startle the animal. If the bear knows you are there and is not stressed by your presence it is a wonderful time to study black bear behavior. Is it a youngster just after family breakup and afraid of its own shadow? Afraid of being chased by mom? Is it a mother with cubs? Listen for the language she uses with her cubs. Has she treed them for safety? What are the personalities of the cubs? Are some more confident and others timid? Do you see more than one bear? Are they friends? Rivals? Potential mates? Is the bear foraging on vegetation in your yard? Could what you thought was an alder bush really be beaked hazelnuts? Would you prefer not to see black bears or have them on your property? If you want the bear to leave: Identify yourself as human Yell, scuff your feet, wave objects, etc. Ask yourself what brought the bear to your property. Is the bear just passing through? Bears have a right to monitor/mark their territory, seek food, and look for a mate. We share the Northwoods with them. Have you inadvertently left out things that attracted them such as bird feeders or garbage? Do you have fruit trees, a garden or other bear food growing on your property? Contact the BearTeam to assess your property and help you remove attractants.

  • One of Us, A Biologist’s Walk Among Bears

    bd7be19b-01d3-4204-93d1-a6103684cf2a One of Us, A Biologist’s Walk Among Bears Barrie Gilbert's fascination with grizzly bears almost got him killed in Yellowstone National Park. He recovered, returned to fieldwork and devoted the next several decades to understanding and protecting these often-maligned giants. He has spent thousands of hours among wild grizzlies in Yosemite and Yellowstone national parks, Alberta, coastal British Columbia, and along Brooks River in Alaska's Katmai National Park, where hundreds of people gather to watch dozens of grizzlies feast on salmon. His research has centered on how bears respond to people and each other, with a focus on how to keep humans and bears safe. Drawn from his decades of experience, One of Us: A Biologist's Walk Among Bears explodes myths that depict grizzlies as bloodthirsty beasts that "kill for pleasure" and reveals the intelligent, adaptable side of these astonishingly social animals. He also explains their pivotal role in maintaining and protecting their fragile ecosystems. Accordingly, Gilbert pulls no punches when outlining threats to bear conservation. Most importantly, this book extolls a new way of appreciating grizzly bears, the same way we regard wolves, whales, chimpanzees, and gorillas. Barrie K Gilbert September 3, 2019 264 Pages:

  • WhitePine026

    5d716d3a-0244-4112-ba3d-686c8ebde469 < Back Slide 26 of 83 < > The new forest changed our wildlife, too.

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