The Denver Post

GRIZZLY HUNT LOTTERY GOES TO A SHOOTER

- By Karin Brulliard

More than 7,000 applied for one of 22 licenses, but photograph­er Thomas Mangelsen claimed one of them. What does he plan to do with it?

The largest grizzly hunt in the Lower 48 in more than 40 years is set to open next month in Wyoming, and more than 7,000 people applied for a chance to kill one of up to 22 bears.

Among the tiny number of people who won the draw for permits is a wildlife photograph­er who has produced some of the most famous images of the area’s grizzlies.

Thomas Mangelsen, who has lived near Grand Teton National Park for four decades, said this week that he will use the permit to shoot bears as he’s always done — with a camera, not a gun.

Mangelsen’s luck in the lottery followed a campaign spearheade­d by local hunt opponents to encourage likeminded people to apply for permits in hopes of preventing the death of at least one member of the Yellowston­e area’s grizzly population, which was removed from the endangered species list in 2017. Amid a hugely contentiou­s debate over the hunt, their tactic is being hailed by some as a heroic protest and scorned by others as starryeyed thievery of an opportunit­y that hunters deserve.

“Well, what other way are we going to do it?” said Mangelsen, 72, referring to hunt critics. “We’ve petitioned the government, we’ve gone to the meetings, we’ve talked and we’ve testified, we’ve gone to legislator­s . ... We have a right to protest in whatever way we feel is necessary.”

Their approach was possible because of regulation­s in the six hunting areas closest to Grand Teton and Yellowston­e national parks, prime grizzly habitat where federal biologists track the species’ population. There, up to 10 hunters will be allowed into the field, one at a time, for 10 days each. The hunt in those areas will end when the first female is killed or after 10 males are killed.

In two other areas that are farther from parks and more populated by humans, up to 12 bears, male or female, can be killed. Hunting is not allowed in the parks, on the road that connects them or in a no-hunt buffer zone in a region east of Grand Teton.

Mangelsen is No. 8 on the permit list for the closer areas, which means his turn will come up only if none of the first seven hunters has killed a female bear. But he and organizers of the campaign said another supporter, a woman who lives in the Jackson Hole, Wyo., area, drew the No. 2 spot and also planned to pay the $600 resident fee for a permit.

“That’llbe10days­thatanothe­r hunter won’t be in the field,” Mangelsen said. “We might be able to save a couple bears.”

Yellowston­e grizzlies were placed on the endangered species list in 1975, when the federal government estimated that just 136 remained. The population has since rebounded to about 700, and the bears are now spreading far beyond the parks, where threats include collisions with cars and conflicts with humans over property and livestock. Federal and state biologists say limited hunting will not imperil the population. Idaho also approved a hunt of a single male grizzly; Montana, the third state that abuts Yellowston­e, considered but rejected a grizzly hunt this year.

Mangelsen is one of the best-known chronicler­s of what he calls the Yellowston­e area’s “rock star bears.” They include 399, a female grizzly he first spotted in 2006 who has produced dozens of offspring often seen with her near roads in Grand Teton, where tourist gawking regularly leads to “bear jams” — lines of cars stopped while passengers get an up-close look at an iconic American species. He said 399 and others like her underpin his opposition to the hunt. Because elk hunting is allowed in and around Grand Teton, the grizzlies are accustomed to scavenging gut piles and consider the sound of a gunshot to be a “dinner bell” rather than a threat, he said. That would make them easier targets during a hunt.

While there’s a chance 399 could venture into the hunting areas, Mangelsen said, some of the large males she’s mated with, named Bruno and Brutus by local fans, are known to go to those areas. Their size would make them coveted trophies, he said.

To “rob the opportunit­y of millions of people from ever seeing a bear is really sad,” Mangelsen said. “Bears do not belong to the hunters. They do not belong to the bear-watchers. They belong to themselves and the landscape.”

Wyoming officials said the nonhunter attempts to win permits violated no rules. But they clearly weren’t delighted about the idea.

“We think we should all be grateful that over the last four decades, hunters and anglers spent nearly $50 million to recover grizzly bears to ensure there is an opportunit­y for people to see and photograph grizzly bears in northwest Wyoming,” said Renny MacKay, a spokesman for the Wyoming Game and Fish Department.

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