A gray bear besieged 400 pounds and killed the park employees in Yellowston last week because it poses a threat to public safety in one of the most crowded areas in the Wyoming Park, according to what he said. National Park Service.
The 11-year-old male bear turned the bear-resistant piston-which weighs 800 pounds-and garbage boxes were withdrawn from its concrete bases in search of human garbage. She was able to reach food and garbage near Old believersPark officials said that near the Nuzha Nuza Pearce area and parking the square of the auto square in the middle of the road.
“It is unfortunate that this bear has started to search regularly for garbage and was able to defeat the garden resistance infrastructure,” said Kerry Gunter, a biologist in Bir Bir administration. “We do our best to protect the bears and prevent them from becoming conditional on human food. But sometimes, the bear outperforms or overcomes our defenses. When that happens, we sometimes have to remove the bear from the population to protect visitors and property.”
The park noted that Yellowston provides food storage cabinets “resistant to the bear in all camps, as well as food storage devices in the country’s back camps, and” bear resistance to bear and garbage cans. “
National Park Service/Allan Barker
The officials also said that the last time a bear was killed by the garden employees in “A Management Action” in 2017, when he “removed” the gray bear after it was affected by the tents and got food in Heart Lake camps.
In 2023, Another gray In the area, she was killed, after a woman witnessed the path of forests west of Yellowston and attacking a person in the state of Idahu three years ago. Montana Fish, wildlife and gardens called Bear, a 10 -year -old female, with approval from American fish and wildlife service.
The gray bears are protected in the United States as a threatening type and it is illegal to harm or kill them except in cases of self -defense or defending others, according to what he said. Fish and wildlife service. The Great Yellowston ecosystem, with Yellowston National Park, was identified in essence, by the government agency as a “recovery zone” for the gray population.