The News (New Glasgow)

Hungry bears making rounds

Many looking for easily accessible meals in urban setting

- BY SUEANN MUSICK

Black bears are on the move again in Pictou County.

Dave Steeves, district technician of forest resources with the Nova Scotia Department of Natural Resources, said with the warmer weather, black bears are beginning to make their presence known in the county.

“A black bear’s life revolves around its ability to pick up and follow scent in hope of finding a meal at the end of the journey,” he said.

He said as they start to stir in the spring they are fixated on building their fat reserve levels as they recover from the winter period of inactivity. Their fat reserves act as their lifeline in between winter periods, and they reach a point of physical starvation when they emerge in the spring.

Steeves said black bears will eat anything in the spring to bring them back to a healthier state, which is the opposite in the fall when they are attempting to add extra calories for their long winter sleep.

“Simply put, if the animal expends less calories to find easily accessible meals in an urban setting, they are less likely to expend the energy to find food in the woods,” he said. “The calories that are saved by finding easy food are stored and utilized at a later point when food becomes much scarcer.

He said black bears are omnivores, meaning they will eat almost anything from road kill to berries, apples, leaves, plant growth, garbage and green bin material.

Once a bear has located an easy accessible food source, it will continue to revisit this location until the food source no longer exists.

“This is a major contributi­ng factor as to why easy calories, like garbage and green bins, are such a looming issue regarding nuisance bear activity,” Steeves said.

Setting a trap to rid a residence of a bear isn’t always the best solution because there is little land base to relocate the animal without it becoming someone else’s problem.

“The chances are great that the same bear is going to be an issue and possible safety concern for someone else,” he said. “This is simply because that animal has become habituated to garbage and will now seek out garbage as a primary food source.”

Steeves said using a trap is the last possible option that wildlife managers want to try because the use of bait can attract other animals such as foxes, coyotes or raccoons, household pets or even other bears to the location.

“The reality of this situation is that most times the wildlife is just following the most basic biological urge to find food, the easier the better. That is where we run into problems with people.”

Steeves said many of these problems can be alleviated with some common sense and preventati­ve measures. If a bear is continuing to frequent a property it is most likely because there are easy accessible resources.

“An unfortunat­e but true reality of our current society is that personal waste management has changed the behaviour of our wildlife, a fact that is now being passed on to new generation­s of nuisance animals,” he said. “Mother bears are teaching their offspring that it is easier and more beneficial to get garbage and green bins than forage for natural food resources.”

The responsibi­lity falls on everyone to do their part to reduce wildlife and human interactio­n, Steeves said.

For more informatio­n visit the Department of Natural Resources website at: https://novascotia. ca/natr/wildlife/nuisance/bears. asp.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? Black bears are being frequently seen around the county as they emerge from their long winter sleep. The Department of Natural Resources is urging people to use common sense when discarding their compost and garbage so black bears are not attracted to...
FILE PHOTO Black bears are being frequently seen around the county as they emerge from their long winter sleep. The Department of Natural Resources is urging people to use common sense when discarding their compost and garbage so black bears are not attracted to...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada