The Daily Telegraph

Rare bear dies after blunder by biologists

- Nick Squires in Rome

AN INQUIRY has been launched in Italy into how one of the world’s rarest bears died after it was captured and sedated by conservati­on workers.

The Marsican bear, Ursus arctos marsicanus, is the world’s rarest subspecies and lives in the Apennine mountains of central Italy.

A relative of the Eurasian brown bear, there are just 50 left in the wild, roaming the mountains and forests of the National Park of Abruzzo, Lazio and Molise.

One of the bears was captured this week in a baited tube trap by biologists who wanted to sedate it so that they could fit it with a radio collar to track its movements.

However, the sedation went wrong, possibly as a result of too much anaestheti­c, and the bear died.

To make matters worse, it was reportedly not the bear that biologists had wanted to capture. They were hoping to sedate and tag a large male, nicknamed Mario, which was raiding bee hives and chicken coops around the mountain villages of Lecce dei Marsi and Villavalle­longa. Instead, they captured a different bear.

Antonio Carrara, the head of the national park, said his staff were “shocked” by what had happened.

“For us, the loss of a bear is really serious and we want to find out what happened.”

The bear had shown “respirator­y problems” shortly after the sedative shot was administer­ed, he said.

It was the second time in four years that a bear in Italy has died accidental­ly while being sedated.

The same thing happened to a bear that was nicknamed Daniza after it was captured and placed under sedation in the northern Trentino region in 2014.

A post-mortem examinatio­n will be carried out to determine exactly what killed the Marsican bear and whether any type of illness may have weakened its resistance to the sedative drugs.

WWF, the environmen­tal organisati­on, said that protocols regarding the capture and sedation of bears should be immediatel­y placed under review in order to guarantee the well-being of the animals.

“We await the post-mortem examinatio­n results in order to clarify what happened, but this is, without doubt, a very serious loss,” a statement by WWF Italia said.

“This is a sub-species on the brink of extinction, reduced to a population of just 50 individual­s.”

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