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Yellowstone: Conflicts involving bears, humans low in 2018

Yellowstone officials predict bears will become more habituated to humans as the park welcomes more visitors.
Credit: Yellowstone National Park
File image of a grizzly bear in Yellowstone National Park

CODY, Wyo. — Despite the challenges of managing visitors eager to photograph wildlife in Yellowstone National Park, the number of conflicts involving humans and bears was low in 2018, according to the park's annual bear report.

Rangers were notified of 1,627 grizzly and black bear sightings in the park between March 10, 2018, the first sighting of bear activity of the spring, through Dec. 20, 2018, the last black bear sighting of the year, The Cody Enterprise reported .

"There were few bear-human conflicts inside of the park in 2018," said Yellowstone biologist Kerry Gunther. "However, managing visitors that stopped to view and photograph bears foraging in roadside meadows and thus creating large bear jams was a considerable management challenge."

More than 4 million people visit the 3,400-square-mile park each year.

"As visitation increases, park managers should expect an increasing number of bears to become habituated to people and a higher level of habituation among those bears, thereby causing more bear jams and jams of longer duration," the report said.

Park officials counted 240 "bear jams" in 2018 but only eight human-bear conflicts. In one of those instances, a hiker was injured during an accidental encounter with a bear on a trail.

Rangers removed 87 wildlife carcasses that could have attracted bears and installed 162 food storage lockers in 2018.

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