Journal ArticleOpen Access
Unsecured attractants, collisions, and high mortality strain coexistence between grizzly bears and people in the <scp>Elk Valley</scp> , southeast <scp>British Columbia</scp>
Authors
Author Affiliations
Kelowna General Hospital, Ministry of Forests, University of British Columbia, University of British Columbia, Okanagan Campus, ...
Published InConservation Science and Practice
Year2023
Citations7
Abstract
Abstract Historical persecution of grizzly bears in North America reduced the species range by 55%. Today, dedicated recovery efforts and shifting societal perceptions have supported the recovery and expansion of grizzly bear populations in many areas. With increasing overlap between people and bears, conservation actions and scientific inquiry are now shifting efforts toward supporting coexistence with bears. Here, we assessed the demography and behavior of grizzly bears in a coexistence landscape in southeast British Columbia, Canada, where abundant grizzly bear populations occur among busy, human‐settled valleys. Between 2016 and 2022, we captured 76 individual grizzly bears and monitored their conflict behavior, survival, and reproduction for 160 animal‐years. The cause of death for 14 animals with a functioning collar was human–wildlife…
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