Waterloo Region Record

Yellowston­e grizzlies removed from threatened species list

- Matt Volz

HELENA, MONT. — The U.S. government lifted protection­s for grizzly bears in the Yellowston­e region on Monday, though it will be up to the courts to decide whether the revered and fearsome icon of the West stays off the threatened species list.

More than a month after announcing grizzlies in and around Yellowston­e National Park are no longer threatened, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service officially handed over management of the approximat­ely 700 bears living across 49,210 square kilometres in Montana, Idaho and Wyoming to wildlife officials in those states.

The ruling does not apply to the approximat­ely 1,000 bears living farther north in the Northern Continenta­l Divide area that includes Glacier National Park and the Bob Marshall Wilderness.

Not much is expected to immediatel­y change as a result of the handover. State wildlife officials have been working for decades to protect the bears as their population grows and their range expands farther away from the oldest U.S. national park, and they say they will continue to do so.

Federal wildlife officials will also monitor the states for five years and reimpose protection­s if the population drops below 500 bears.

The bears were determined to be a threatened species in 1975 after hunting and trapping in the 1800s and early 1900s nearly wiped them out. The strict no-kill policy and habitat preservati­on that came with being on the threatened species list helped their numbers recover in the years since.

Now, grizzly bears can be hunted again under the management plans submitted by Montana, Idaho and Wyoming. None of the three states will hold a hunting season this year, and wildlife officials say any hunts in the future would be held only after closely examining the effects on the population.

“There are a lot of safeguards in the conservati­on strategy to ensure the grizzly population will remain,” said Kevin Frey, a wildlife management specialist for the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks.

Hunting grizzlies is strongly opposed by wildlife advocates and Native American tribes who worry the bears’ recovery will nosedive without U.S. government oversight. Multiple organizati­ons and individual­s have filed notice that they will sue to place grizzly bears back on the threatened species list.

It’s happened once before. In 2009, a federal judge overturned the Fish and Wildlife Service’s decision two years earlier to lift protection­s after the Yellowston­e bears’ numbers rose above 600. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the judge’s ruling in 2011.

The ruling then was that the bears still needed protection because of the decline of the white bark pine trees — a key food source. Federal wildlife officials say that the bears have now adjusted to a more meatbased diet, and the white bark pine nuts are no longer vital for their survival.

Wildlife advocates say that change in diet brings a different kind of threat.

Encounters with ranchers protecting livestock and hunters competing for elk and deer have become common as the bears’ population has swelled and they wander back into areas where they haven’t been seen in a century.

“We see bears going to areas where they have little chance of remaining conflictfr­ee,” Frey said. “It’s becoming more challengin­g with all the people.”

Yellowston­e National Park Superinten­dent Dan Wenk said the park supports the removal of grizzlies from the threatened species list but wants to make sure the population remains strong so visitors will continue having opportunit­ies to see the animals.

A no-kill zone won’t be pursued for grizzlies, Wenk said. Instead, park officials want to be involved with discussion­s that lead up to decisions by the three states on how to structure their bear hunts.

 ?? JIM URQUHART, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? For the second time in a decade, the U.S. government has removed grizzly bears in the Yellowston­e region from the threatened species list.
JIM URQUHART, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS For the second time in a decade, the U.S. government has removed grizzly bears in the Yellowston­e region from the threatened species list.

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