Rome News-Tribune

Bear sightings, human encounters reported in North Ga., East Tenn.

- By Ben Benton

CHATTANOOG­A — Yearling male black bears are on the move this month, looking for their own territory, while female bears with young cubs are looking for food, and that search can put the large mammals and humans in dangerous conflict, according to bear advocates and state and federal officials.

Tennessee is home to an estimated 5,000 black bears, and that number is increasing, according to the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency.

Bears emerge hungry in spring and are on the hunt for food for the rest of the season, and easy access to human trash can cause problems between humans and bears.

“In our region, there have not been any notable encounters, thank goodness,” TWRA spokeswoma­n Mime Barnes said Friday in an email. “There have been encounters in East Tennessee where there are higher numbers of bears.”

Earlier this month, a mother and her 3-year-old daughter were injured by a bear that tore into their tent at Elkmont Campground in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, and not far away, other sightings were reported and four cubs were rescued, according to The Associated Press.

Park officials said a 350-pound bear was euthanized after likely being attracted to campsite food smells and having previous access to nonnatural foods. It scratched the mother and daughter, causing superficia­l head laceration­s, before the father scared off the bear after several attempts.

Officials investigat­ed and trapped the bear, which showed extreme food-conditione­d behavior and didn’t fear humans, AP reported.

A black bear with several cubs was spotted around the Horse Creek Recreation Area near Greenevill­e, Tennessee, specifical­ly along the exterior of the campground, the lower day-use area near the main bathhouse and on some of the

local trails within the area, U.S. Forest Service spokeswoma­n Ashley Miller said in a statement June 18. The bears there have so far not exhibited any signs of aggression towards people, but extreme caution should be taken when visiting the Horse Creek Recreation Area, Miller warned.

Forest Service officials are urging visitors to exercise caution in the area and be on the lookout for black bears and to remember federal orders for the Cherokee National Forest prohibit possessing or leaving food, bear attractant or refuse unless it is possessed properly or stored properly, Miller said.

When humans and bears clash, it’s usually the fault of the two-legged species and a lack of attention to picking up things that attract bears — trash, pet food, barbecue grills, bird seed and the like. Officials with the Townsend, Tennessee-based nonprofit Appalachia­n Bear Rescue and Ellijay, Georgia-based Appalachia Georgia Friends of Bears said people really can do better.

The bears’ lives depend on it, and it’s possible human lives could be at stake, too, according to Dana Dodd, executive director of the rescue group and Gerald D. Hodge, founder and CEO of the friends group.

Each year, there are accounts of bear encounters where humans live, and many times the bears are seeking an easy meal humans are sometimes ready to provide, they said.

“The bottom line in most of these stories are bears having access to human provided food, whether

it is passively or actively provided,” Hodge said Thursday in an email. “They get food-conditione­d and habituated and then the trouble starts. It reinforces the saying, ‘A fed bear is a dead bear.’”

Recent incidents this season offer evidence.

“We are caring for nine little bears right now, and eight of them are cubs that were born this year, and we have one yearling; he was the first bear that we got this year, and he’ll being going back into the wild soon,” Dodd said Thursday in a phone interview. “These bears bring us to a 26-year total of 356 bears that we have cared for,” she said.

State officials and the rescue group — which has facilities to care for cubs and young bears until they can be released — over a 24-hour period in June rescued four female bear cubs born to two different mothers, she said.

“There’s tons of reasons that cubs can get orphaned or injured, but the latest four we received this week, three on Monday and one just after midnight,” she said of rescues June 20 and 21, “and for all of those four, their path to the rescue went directly through humans’ garbage and irresponsi­ble people not securing their trash when they’re in bear country.”

Appalachia­n Bear Rescue officials said three of the black bear cubs were rescued after their mother had to be euthanized because she was habituated to human food. The situation left the cubs orphaned.

Dodd said careless property owners in the area of

some rental cabins in Sevier County, Tennessee, where there is no bear-safe system to keep the animal out of human trash, persists as a problem site for bears there.

“This trash caused a week of suffering for a little bear, orphaned three more bears and cost the life of a mother bear,” Dodd said. “Once a bear is day-active around people, nothing bothers them. This mother bear had started breaking car windows.”

A bear cub that got its head freed from a plastic food container June 20 required the assistance of TWRA officer Janelle Musser and watch groups from the rescue who stayed in the area where the little bear was last seen, according to officials.

The bear was first spotted June 13 in the Wears Valley area of Sevier County, and after a week of being stuck, state and Appalachia­n Bear Rescue officials found the cub June 20, part of the way up a tree. A local business owner brought a ladder that allowed Musser to climb up and put a catch pole around the container, according to rescue officials.

Once there was tension on the container, the cub was able to free its head. Officials then set out and monitored traps to capture the cub they named “Little Trouble,” now recovering at the rescue facility, according to officials. That cub and the other three cubs will be kept until they grow large enough to release.

The situation might have been different if humans were involved in keeping bears and humans away from one another, especially

in rental or seasonally-occupied properties.

“The next renter comes to that place and they don’t know what happened in the last five days,” Dodd said. “Their kids walk outside with an ice cream cone in their hands, completely unaware that a bear has had ice cream in that trash and it knows what it’s like and it’s going to walk around the corner and hurt the person who’s holding the ice cream.”

The situation is completely avoidable, she and Hodge said.

“If humans do not properly secure their trash, bird feeders, wildlife feeders, or clean and secure their grills, they all become attractant­s,” Hodge said, noting recent bear problems in the metro-atlanta area.

“They are spreading into their historic range,” he said. “They follow noses, water and food sources both natural and unnatural. Black bears are opportunis­tic feeders, and sometimes it gets them into trouble around humans.”

Officials said educating humans and getting them to participat­e is a key to avoiding problems.

“Last year, we spoke to 1,600 humans face-to-face through table events, festivals and speaking to civic organizati­ons,” Hodge said. “We drove over 3,000 miles, distribute­d over 7,000 educationa­l brochures, 4,000 children’s place mats, 3,000 door hangers, thousands of ‘BearWise’ bulletins to key target audiences and reached nearly 30,000 humans through specific targeting in high-risk human-bear conflict neighborho­ods.”

 ?? File ?? In this 2018 file photo, a young black bear appears to be napping after a visit to Garden Lakes that drew all kinds of attention .
File In this 2018 file photo, a young black bear appears to be napping after a visit to Garden Lakes that drew all kinds of attention .

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States