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Icefields Parkway Grizzlies
The Icefields Parkway has been described as one of the most beautiful roads in the world. Each year over half a million park visitors enjoy this 230 kilometre traverse through the spectacular sub-alpine landscape between Lake Louise and Jasper. In this high mountain landscape, two female grizzly bears have established home ranges that take in the busy Icefield Parkway. Their stories help explain why you might see a bear roadside and how this willingness to tolerate people puts them at risk of losing the wary behaviour they need to survive. The best thing you can do for a roadside bear is to drive by carefully.
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![]() Blondies’ orphaned 2-year-old cubs © Parks Canada/Hal Morrison |
Blondie and her two one-year-old cubs frequent the roadside and reports are received of her bluff-charging vehicles and people at bear jams. She is hazed with rubber bullets and noise-makers twice before seeking other habitats. Her adolescent cubs (now four year olds and acting more independently of each other) are frequenting the Bow Summit area, in close proximity to Num-Ti-Jah Lodge. They remain un-collared and are again subjected to a modified five-day aversive conditioning program to curb this undesirable behavior.
2004
Late evening June 2: wardens receive a report that a grizzly has been hit
by a vehicle on the Trans-Canada Highway near the Lake O’Hara turn-off
in Yoho National Park. Upon investigating the following morning, 18-year old
Blondie is found dead of internal injuries about 60 m off the highway. Her
two 2-year-old cubs are now on their own.
June, 1999
Snow lingers in the high mountain areas and bears are concentrating their
feeding efforts on the fresh green plants emerging at valley bottom.
An unmarked (no ear tags or collar) adult, female grizzly with two young-of -year cubs is reported roadside. Bear jams quickly form around her. She tolerates people at close distances in her efforts to forage on lush roadside vegetation. Soon the bear reacts aggressively at some of these encounters with people.
Sows with cubs are nutritionally stressed. In hibernation, they have to sustain not only themselves, but also grow and nurse newborn cubs. In spring, they forage constantly to get the energy they need to protect and nurse their cubs. Dominant male grizzlies, which pose a risk to cubs, prefer and are able to establish habitat away from people. Consequently by default, sows (and young bears) are more likely to tolerate the sights, sounds and smells of people to access bear foods along highways. This puts them at greater risk of human-caused mortality.
Wardens strike a plan of action. They decide it’s not necessary to submit the family group to the stress of capture and collaring at this point, but will instead use a combination of an area closure and focused highway patrols with aversive conditioning techniques. The Waterfowl Campground and hiking trails to Cirque and Chephren Lakes are closed. In addition to the legal closure notice, a poster explaining the situation is posted.
For seven days during daylight hours, wardens patrol an adjacent stretch of highway, which the sow and her cubs had been using. Deterrents are used anytime the sow is visible from the road. The Waterfowl grizzly, as she has been dubbed, is ‘actioned’ four times with screamers, bangers and rubber bullets. (Rubber bullets are only used on adult bears, never cubs.) The hope is that the bear will learn to move away from the roadside when vehicles approach and/or use this habitat at night.
The campground remains closed for one month to protect public safety and to give this bear family a chance to forage undisturbed on the nutrient rich vegetation growing here. Once the late snowpack melts at higher elevations and the sow has other foraging options, six "Critter Gitter" motion-sensor devices are deployed around the centre of the campground. When triggered, they emit a loud noise intended to frighten animals away. They are used to discourage the sow from using the campground area. The sow and her cubs soon move into higher elevation habitat. The campground is re-opened. The Waterfowl grizzly is not observed in the campground nor roadside for the rest of the season.
2000
With spring’s arrival, the Waterfowl grizzly returns to valley bottom
with her cubs. The campground is closed for about one week to give her some
space to forage undisturbed and for public safety. She moves on as soon as
higher elevations become snow-free.
2001
Only a couple of sightings of the sow and her 2 two-year-old cubs documented.
As the bears show wary behaviour, further action is not required.
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