Grizzly bear-cattle interactions on two grazing allotments in Northwest Wyoming

Item Metadata

Dublin Core

Title

Grizzly bear-cattle interactions on two grazing allotments in Northwest Wyoming

Description

We determined cause of death for 182 cattle found dead on 2 adjacent public land grazing allotments in northwest Wyoming during 1994-96. Grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) killed fifty-one calves and 6 adults, representing 1.1% (mean) of the annual calf herd and 0.1% of the annual adult herd. An additional 0.9-1.8% of remaining calves were missing each year. Black bears (U. americanus), although present, were not implicated in cattle depredation. We believe that missing calves experienced depredation similar to discovered calves because the proportion killed by bears was similar for those equipped with mortality-sensing transmitters and unmarked calves (P = 0.73). Thus, estimated depredation equaled 78 calves or 1.3-2.2% of the annual calf herd. All observed depredation occurred at night (n = 9). Kills were separated by a mean of 3 days (n = 50) and occurred between 16 June and 13 September (median = 9 August). Radiotagged grizzly bears (n = 17) spent a greater proportion of time in the study area while depredations were occurring, and 10 were located near cattle more frequently than expected (P < 0.05), but most did not kill cattle. Although individuals from all sex and age (subadult, adult) groups except subadult males killed cattle, 3 adult males were responsible for 90% of confirmed losses. We employed management actions including euthanasia, translocation, and aversive conditioning to remove chronic depredators. No depredations were discovered following absence of the 3 depredating males in 1996, unlike the previous 2 years when losses continued for an additional 4 to 6 weeks. This suggests that removal of chronic depredators can reduce losses. Other bears did not become more depredatory, although many were known to utilize cattle carcasses. Removal of cattle carcasses during 1996 appeared to reduce bear densities but did not deter depredatory bear behavior. Identification and removal of depredatory individuals appears key in addressing conflicts with grizzly bears on rangelands.

Bibliographic Citation

Anderson, C. R. Jr, M. A. Ternent, and D. S. Moody. 2002. Grizzly bear-cattle interactions on two cattle allotments in northwest Wyoming. Ursus 13:247-256. https://www.jstor.org/stable/3873205

Creator

Anderson Jr, Charles R.
Ternent, Mark A.
Moody, David S.

Subject

Bridger-Teton National Forest
Depredation
Domestic cattle
Grand Teton National Park
Grizzly bear
Nuisance bear management
Ursus arctos

Extent

10 pages

Date Created

2002

Type

Article

Format

application/pdf

Language

English

Is Part Of

Ursus

Collection

Citation

Anderson Jr, Charles R., Ternent, Mark A., and Moody, David S., “Grizzly bear-cattle interactions on two grazing allotments in Northwest Wyoming,” CPW Digital Collections, accessed April 25, 2024, https://cpw.cvlcollections.org/items/show/70.