Evolution of Bear Management in the Mountain National
Parks
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East entrance to Rocky Mountain Park, later Banff
National Park, circa 1920 © Whyte
Museum of the Canadian Rockies/V263/NA-3436/Byron Harmon |
1885
Following the completion of the transcontinental railway, a small reserve
is created around hot springs near the town of Banff. It marks the start of
Canada’s national parks system and will become Banff National Park.
A year later, other reserves are set aside west of the Continental Divide.
They mark the establishment of Yoho and Glacier National Parks.
1887
First park regulations outline protection and preservation of all game, but
are not much regarded until about 1911 when they are more strongly enforced.
1890
The park regulations are revised. A clause prohibits the killing or injuring
of any wild animals – except predators such as wolves, coyotes, cougars,
lynx, wolverine, hawks, eagles and bears.
1895
Waterton Lakes National Park is established.
1901
Banff townsite’s population is ~271 people.
1902
The park regulations are again revised; all animals and birds are again protected.
1904
The promotion of bear hunting in Glacier National Park is dropped from the
Canadian Pacific Railway’s marketing literature.
1906
Poaching is a major concern for park managers.
1907
Jasper National Park is established.
1909
The first fire and game guardians are hired and evolve into the full-time
warden service. Revised park regulations direct wardens to destroy predators,
considered “noxious, dangerous, and destructive animals”, control
forest fires and enforce anti-poaching regulations.
1910
The Dominion Forest Reserves and National Parks Act is passed. James Bernard
Harkin becomes the first commissioner (1911-1936) of the new Dominion Parks
Branch. Harkin spends the next 19 years working to create a National Parks
Act to gain better protection for parks.
"The day will come when the population of Canada will be ten times
as great as it is now, but the National Parks ensure that every Canadian,
by right of citizenship, will still have free access to vast areas . . . in
which the beauty of the landscape is protected from profanation, the natural
wild animals, plants and forests preserved, and the peace and solitude of
primeval nature retained."
James B. Harkin
1911
Automobiles reach Rocky Mountains Park (later Banff) by road from Calgary.
Park regulations no longer prohibit their use inside parks. A road is pushed
west of Banff to Lake Louise by 1921. A road from Lake Louise reaches Field,
B.C. in Yoho National Park in 1927.
With the advent of the automobile, people begin to feel safe – and
bold around bears. It becomes popular to take photographs of friends and family
feeding a begging bear. Bears quickly learn to identify people with food and,
in turn, lose their wariness around people. When the cars are not around,
bears enter campgrounds and towns to look for food.
1915
Rocky Mountains Park’s Chief Game Guardian Howard Sibbald shoots and
kills an old adult female black bear reported raiding camps. He turns her
two cubs over to the Banff Zoo, which exists until 1937.
1918
Wardens are authorized to destroy bears found within any park townsite. They
also destroy ‘problem’ bears beyond townsites, citing no alternative.
Wardens are officially allowed to sell the pelts of any predators they kill
in the line of duty, with the exception of bear skins, which must be turned
in.
1920
Kootenay National Park is created with promised construction of the Banff-Windermere
Road (completed in 1923).
Hunting is made illegal in Yoho National Park.
1921
The Edmonton Journal prints an article titled “Feeding Bears
Popular Pastime at Jasper”, which promotes visiting Jasper to feed the
bears.
1928
Predators gain protection in National Parks.
1929
A lone Jasper warden is killed by a sow grizzly bear with cubs near his patrol
cabin in the Tonquin Valley.
Banff reports its first control kill of a grizzly for molesting horses and
charging a warden.
1930
Canada’s National Parks Act is established in legislation.
The Dominion Parks are renamed Canadian National Parks. Rocky Mountains Park
becomes Banff National Park.
1930s
A wheeled steel cage to catch and relocate bears is introduced as an alternative
to shooting ‘problem’ bears in Yellowstone National Park (U.S.A.).
In response to a request for feedback about newly introduced bear traps in
the U.S. Parks, Chief Park Warden for Yoho, Glacier and Mt. Revelstoke National
Parks comments: “Bears which develop the garbage habit, soon degenerate
into poor specimens and become troublesome. Viewing the bear situation from
this angle, I think probably the annual ‘crime wave’ could be
more effectively controlled by installing incinerators in all road camps and
positively destroying all garbage.”
1930s
Construction of the Banff-Jasper Highway (1931-1940) provides increased access
throughout the parks. As park visitation increases, so do bear-human conflicts.
1936
Four grizzly bears are shot at a highway construction work camp dump at Hector
Lake.
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