Grizzly Bear Info


Last Updated: Saturday, August 16, 2008 | 11:13 PM ET Comments50 <http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2008/08/16/grizzly-mauling.html#socialcomments> Recommend27 <http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2008/08/16/grizzly-mauling.html#>
CBC News <http://www.cbc.ca/news/credit.html>  
A grizzly bear mauled and seriously injured a man in Alberta on Saturday.
RCMP said the man was hiking in the bush northeast of Cadomin early in the morning when he was attacked. They said he had not spotted the bear and didn’t realize it was nearby.
Cadomin is on the eastern edge of the Rocky Mountains, southwest of Edmonton.
Police said in a news release that the man was taken to hospital in Hinton, Alta., in serious but stable condition with numerous cuts to his right leg. He was not identified.
Alberta wildlife officials are investigating.
Earlier this month, a woman in Coquitlam, B.C., suffered serious injuries in a black bear attack while she was gardening in her front yard. The bear was later shot by police.
A black bear was also put down after it broke into a house in North Vancouver.
With files from the Canadian Press

Shell suspends drilling

 

by Interior News, Smithers

Shell Canada has suspended drilling in the Klappan Valley to allow for further environmental reviews and consultations with stakeholders.

“This is a voluntary suspension of our plans,” said Shell spokesperson Laurieanne Lynne. “We’re not going to undertake any drilling for the remainder of 2008, but there is some work that will continue.”

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NewS.31.20080812131005.JulyAugust2008020.jpg1_20080813.jpg
Koda and Espen are six-month old grizzly cubs, newly admitted to The Northern Lights Wildlife Society Animal Shelter. The cubs will stay at the shelter for one year for rehabilitation until they are fit to return to the wild.

Submitted photo

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Published: August 07, 2008 8:00 AM
Updated: August 07, 2008 8:31 AM
AMANDA FOLLETT AND CATHY ELLIS BOW VALLEY
This year’s August long weekend was the deadliest on record for bears in the region with at least three killed by trains and vehicles in Banff and Kananaskis.
In Banff National Park, a medium sized adult black bear was struck and killed on the Canadian Pacific Railway in the early hours of Saturday (Aug. 2) east of Lake Louise near Protection Mountain.

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Dean Bassett The Canadian Press

FARNHAM GLACIER — Residents blocking a construction project near Invermere say they’ll stay put until a controversial development near West Farnham Glacier receives permits and a signed development plan from the province.  Protesters stopped road-building equipment about 50 kilometres from Invermere along a forest service road that leads into the West Farnham Glacier on the weekend.  Wildsight, the region’s main environmental watchdog, says the road construction is a back-door attempt to move a long-stalled project at Jumbo Glacier along under the guise of a proposed lift and athletes’ training facility.

“Machines are tearing up the alpine in Farnham Creek headwaters as we speak… ,” said Dave Quinn, Wildsight’s Purcell Mountain program manager.

The facilities are part of the proposed Jumbo resort master plan, which remains unsigned at the provincial level.

According to Wildsight, the road construction is taking place through the Farnham Creek headwaters in an alpine area near West Farnham Glacier, adjacent to Jumbo Glacier. If built, Wildsight believes the road will give Glacier Resorts Ltd. an opportunity to build ski lifts inside the proposed boundaries of the resort.

The Calgary Olympic Development Association has operated an athletes training camp on the adjacent East Farnham Glacier since 2005.

Mr. Quinn said four to eight people camped in the area over the past weekend.  Opponents surmised the activity might be an attempt to revive a stale agreement. Mr. Quinn noted that after 20 years the Jumbo Glacier Resort proposal still doesn’t have the necessary rezoning to go ahead. The government says Wildsight’s worries are misguided.

“It’s a matter of improving facilities for Canadian skiers,” said Peter Walters, executive director of tourism operations for the ministry.

Mr. Walters said the road construction has nothing to do with fulfilling the environmental assessment requirements. However, he conceded the proponent must show substantial work on site by October, 2009.

Mr. Walters said the road is an extension of an existing one to serve a new ski training area on the Farnham Glacier.

With respect to the master development agreement, Mr. Walters said the proponent and provincial government continue to work with representatives from the Ktunaxa and Shuswap First Nations on an accommodation agreement with respect to Jumbo.

At that point the province will be in a position to approve the master development plan.

Even if the road work falls within existing agreements, NDP MLA Norm Macdonald says, the protest is an example of the deep distrust local residents have for the B.C. Liberal government, particularly concerning the Jumbo project.

“Hunter fined $11,000 for illegally killing bear”

 Four years ago, Williams Lake hunter Don Hunka shot a female grizzly bear and left it to die on the banks of the Atnarko River in Tweedsmuir South Provincial Park.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20080730.BCBRIEFS30-2/EmailTPStory/TPNational 

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Remote Kamchatka faces ecological meltdown as fish stocks are obliterated

Grizzly bear fishes for salmon

A grizzly bear fishes for salmon. Photograph: Daisy Gilardini/Alamy

Sitting in his snug log cabin next to the swirling Bystraya river, Alexander explained when he went fishing.”Sometimes we do in the day. Sometimes we do it at night. There’s no set time,” he admitted, passing round a tub of mouth-wateringly delicious wild salmon and a chunk of brown bread.

“In the winter we dig holes in the ice and fish. We also shoot geese,” he said, showing photos of himself cradling his rifle in a large snow hole, next to his floppy-eared retriever Bzhik.

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Tyee Grizzly Photo 

 And now, even as we tremble, we’re stunting his growth.

View full article and comments here http:///Books/2008/07/22/GrizzlyMonster/

By Crawford Kilian

Published: July 22, 2008

TheTyee.ca

The only grizzly I’ve seen was in Jasper, a huge blond coming north from the Athabasca River. It was beautiful and intimidating, but I was more alarmed for the bear than for myself. I was safe in a car on the Edmonton-Jasper highway. The bear was running alongside the highway, looking for a gap in the traffic. I hope it found one.

Since 1978 I’ve spent part of every summer in Jasper, learning something new every time. One thing I finally learned a few years ago is that Jasper isn’t a wilderness. Nothing is.

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Grizzlies at ‘great risk,’ hunting ban urged
Conservationists press premier on matter

Kelly Sinoski
Vancouver Sun

Monday, July 28, 2008
As hunters prepare for the fall season, conservationists are calling on the provincial government to keep the grizzlies out of the hunt.

A coalition of scientists, conservationists and animal advocates sent a letter to Premier Gordon Campbell Monday, suggesting it ban grizzly hunting  because the population is at “great risk” and needs to be protected.

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http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20080729.BCGRIZZLY29/TPStory/Environment

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

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For Immediate Release
July 24, 2008
 
Bigger IS Better: Largest single private conservation land acquisition in Canadian history
 
Vancouver - The Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC) today announces a bold commitment to protect 550 square kilometres of remote valleys, mountains and lakes in south-central British Columbia. The acquisition of an exceptional property, known as Darkwoods, launches the largest single private conservation project ever undertaken by a Canadian non-profit organization.  “This is a unique and immediate opportunity to conserve a landscape roughly the size of the entire Island of Montreal,” says John Lounds, President and CEO of the Nature Conservancy of Canada. “Darkwoods is a conservation initiative of global significance. It’s part of a greater vision that will set new standards for conservation success.”

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Minister Penner Viewing Grizzly Release Preparations July08Minister Penner Viewing Grizzly Release Preparations July08Female Cub Leaving TrapMale and Femal Cubs in WildMale Cub on Stretcher Other photos at http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/gallery/index.html#  

Hi All,

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http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/news/story.html?id=895d8ffb-0c88-47c0-b2a1-217b827a7ac8&k=55985

Larry Pynn, Vancouver Sun

Published: Sunday, July 13, 2008PRINCE GEORGE - For two hours orphaned grizzly cubs Suzie and Johnny tested their new-found freedom with curiosity and trepidation.
Raised in captivity and released Saturday northeast of Prince George near the Parsnip River, the grizzlies stepped from a cylindrical steel cage into a logging clearcut.
Black bears released back into the wild often scoot away into the forest, but not these 1.5-year-old grizzlies — raised at the Northern Lights Wildlife Society rehab facility in Smithers since the deaths of their mothers last year.
Female Grizzly Bear Cub View Larger ImageView Larger Image Suzie and Johnny, two orphaned grizzly bears, are returned to the wild after being rehabilitated at the Northern Lights Wildlife Shelter.

Female Grizzly Bear Cub “SUZY” awaiting her release from the World’s First Grizzly Rehabilitation Center at Northern Lights Wildlife Center in Smithers, BC.

ROLF KOPFLE / Special to the Vancouver Sun

It had been a long and dusty four-hour drive, and Johnny wasn’t going anywhere until he had a bite of grass. Both bears eventually wandered downhill into a clearing to explore the wild on their own for the first time.

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Update July 2nd 2008 Note: please distribute this e-mail widely My name is Kim Elmslie and I am writing to you on behalf of the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) and Angelika Langen, one of the directors of the Northern Lights Wildlife Society (NLWS).  We wanted to provide you with some background on the pilot grizzly bear rehabilitation project that is happening in British Columbia this summer. 

IFAW first became involved with NLWS in May 2007 when Angelika Langen attended the first Bear Rehabilitation Workshop in Russia.  For over a year NLWS and IFAW have been working together with the British Columbia Ministry of Environment on a pilot project to rescue, rehabilitate, release and monitor grizzly bear cubs that have been orphaned.  One of the objectives of the pilot grizzly bear rehabilitation project is to create standards and protocols.  While the bears are in care, valuable information about grizzly behaviour, nutritional needs, medical treatment and facility requirements will be collected so that it can be shared with wildlife rehabilitators and others.   A second objective of the pilot project is to monitor the bears once they are released into the wild. The data gathered from post release monitoring will assist in determining what happens to the bears when they are released back to the wild and will answer questions regarding survival rates, possible human/bear conflict situations and their ability to integrate into the existing wild population. 

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By Cathy Ellis - Rocky Mountain Outlook - July 03, 2008

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