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  1. #1

    Default Warning

    NEWS RELEASE
    Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife

    June 29, 2010
    Contact: Mike Cenci, (360) 902-2938

    Ten bears removed from
    Long Beach Peninsula town

    OLYMPIA ? Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) officers and biologists last week removed 10 black bears that had been fed by people from the town of Oysterville, on the Long Beach Peninsula in Pacific County.

    Five of the bears ? female adults and cubs ? were relocated to Mount Rainier National Park. Another five were so dangerously habituated to people that they were euthanized. Meat from the euthanized bears was donated to an area food program.

    ?I hope we never have to do anything like this again,? said WDFW Enforcement Sgt. Dan Chadwick, who helped coordinate the bear removal in response to public-safety concerns about the growing number of bears in the area.

    ?I?ve never seen such a concentration of bears in such a small area. It was completely unnatural and it was caused by people feeding wild animals,? Chadwick said.

    A bear that learns to associate people with food is a potentially dangerous bear, and cannot be relocated in the wild, Chadwick said.

    ?We can?t risk human life by releasing a bear that would cause problems for other people,? he said. ?A fed bear is a dead bear. We keep trying to communicate that, to try to prevent situations like this one.?

    The Oysterville bear-feeding situation apparently had been going on for some time before a complaint was made, according to WDFW officers. Most, if not all, the bear feeding was conducted at one residence. The residents told WDFW officers they were spending $4,000 a year on dog food to feed the bears.

    Neighbors reported they became concerned when more and more bears showed up looking for food.

    The bears were so familiar around people that when a WDFW officer arrived on the scene, one of the bears crawled into the cab of his pick-up truck, said WDFW Deputy Chief Mike Cenci.

    ?This was a tragedy for wildlife,? said Cenci. ?We were obligated to act to prevent a human tragedy as well.?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    Rock Springs, Wyo., USA
    Posts
    1,672

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    Add any wildlife to this scenerio, even the nondangerous.
    Wyo-Blizzard

  3. #3

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    Dont....feed....the....bears....

    Didn't anybody watch Yogi growing up?

    Seriously.....same issue playing out in Northern NJ right now as well. Folks love them right up until they are digging through their garbage cans in broad daylight.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    White Bear Lake MN
    Posts
    1,054

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    In the Twin Cites (St. Paul-Minneapolis area) we have had bears, moose, coyotes and cougar sightings in our suburban neighborhoods. I do not know what is causing all of this, but I do know that animals are not fearing the humans, and this can become dangerous to the communities families. Many areas of the United States is having animal control problems when what was natural habitate has been turned into new housing developments, with no consideration of the effect of reduce natural habitate for the wildlife......... Two years ago a cougar was killed less than two miles from the Mall of American in Bloomington, MN, when DNR hired out of state trackers to terminate the animal.

  5. #5

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    Areas where hunting is restricted.....see's it first.

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