Santa Fe New Mexican

Admit it: You can always bear another bruin video

Encounters between bears and people rising, echoed by social media

- By Claire Moses

In August, a black bear bit a man who was camping in Colorado, officials released a statement about “bear activity” in Tennessee after one tried to find food in a car and a grizzly attacked a man in Wyoming.

In September, a black bear and her cubs ate Krispy Kreme doughnuts in Alaska, another black bear prompted closures at Walt Disney World in Florida, and officials in Montana euthanized a grizzly that had broken into a home and fatally attacked a woman earlier in the summer.

And beginning Wednesday, Fat Bear Week, an annual contest to crown a champion among the hundreds of hefty bears of Katmai National Park and Preserve in Alaska, will offer delight on many people’s social media newsfeeds.

So, what’s going on?

In some places, including Alaska, Montana and Florida, the population­s of both bears and humans have increased in recent years, leading to more encounters. The ever-growing presence of social media and the meteoric rise of TikTok have also played a major role.

“There’s a collision of factors that might make you feel as though bears are absolutely everywhere,” said Emily Bell, the director of the Tow Center for Digital Journalism at Columbia University. “Fat Bear Week was not a thing that anyone talked about five or 10 years ago.”

The time of year is one factor. There are more interactio­ns between humans and bears in late summer and early fall, said Greg Lemon, a spokesman for Montana’s Fish, Wildlife and Parks Department, because bears are searching for food before winter and humans are hunting.

More people have also been exploring places that were previously less popular but have gained fame on social media, said Deion Broxton, a broadcast news reporter at KMOV in St. Louis who used to cover Yellowston­e National Park. One such place is Glacier National Park in Montana, where a grizzly bear was seen hiking among humans this summer.

Grizzlies have been federally protected since the 1970s, and their population is growing. Wyoming petitioned last year to remove grizzly bears around Yellowston­e from the endangered species list, with support from Montana and Idaho. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is reviewing the matter.

“Every year, there are more of them and more of us,” Lemon said.

It’s not just that more bear-human interactio­ns are happening but also that we’re hearing about them again and again. Bears and their antics are perfect fodder for short video clips. And once you watch one bear video, social platforms’ algorithms may serve you more and more of them.

Anytime Lemon writes a news release about a bear interactin­g with a human, he said, “The Today show is calling — it’s just nuts.” Since June, Today has run at least four items about bears.

The New York Times is no exception — it published at least seven articles about bears this summer, not including this one.

Broxton said he saw an audience demand for “wholesome” content about animals, and he knew videos showing bears interactin­g with humans would get noticed.

“We look for anything that grabs people’s attention,” said Broxton, who had his own close encounter with wild animals — bison — that went viral in 2020.

The media attention can feel reminiscen­t of what came to be known as “the Summer of the Shark” in 2001, when news outlets relentless­ly covered shark attacks in Florida, the Bahamas and elsewhere. At the time, scientists said fears of such incidents were overblown.

News organizati­ons that report on wildlife encounters or animal attacks should provide enough informatio­n and context for the public to understand the risk, said Ted Spiker, the chair of the University of Florida’s journalism department. Reporters covering these stories, he said, should ask: “What’s the bigger picture? What are the reasons for the increase?”

 ?? ACACIA JOHNSON/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? A brown bear near the boundary of Izembek National Wildlife Refuge in King Cove, Alaska, in 2022. In states including Alaska, Montana and Florida, the population­s of both bears and humans have increased in recent years, leading to more encounters.
ACACIA JOHNSON/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO A brown bear near the boundary of Izembek National Wildlife Refuge in King Cove, Alaska, in 2022. In states including Alaska, Montana and Florida, the population­s of both bears and humans have increased in recent years, leading to more encounters.

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