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May 30, 2011

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Grizzly bear encounters, shootings up

THERE have been a half-dozen encounters between grizzly bears and humans reported in Montana, the United States, this month alone, a number experts attribute to a growing bear population stuck in the low country because of the deep snowpack.

Most of those encounters didn't turn out well for the bears. Four times, the grizzlies were shot and killed. Grizzly bears are listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, but their numbers have been growing in recent years, increasing the chance for encounters with humans, said Chris Servheen, the grizzly bear recovery coordinator for the US Fish and Wildlife Service.

In addition, heavy snowfall this winter has taken longer to melt in cool spring weather. "You have more bears, and then you have these high snow levels so the bears can't be in the mountains where they want to be," Servheen said. Authorities were investigating the death of a grizzly sow shot near East Glacier sometime between May 7 and 12, after a nearby landowner complained that an adult bear and two cubs had killed a calf.

Federal officials received a warrant to search the landowner's home for the .22-caliber weapon that may have killed the bear, though no charges have been filed. Soon after that carcass was discovered, a Ronan-area landowner shot and killed a female grizzly bear on May 14 that had been killing chickens. Wildlife officials with the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes said the shooting was justifiable self-defense and that no charges would be filed.

That same weekend, an antler hunter shot and killed a sow grizzly in the Blackfoot-Clearwater Wildlife Management Area.



 

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