How Technology Has Helped Yosemite’s Human-Bear Management Program Hit All-Time Low Bear Incidents

December 21, 2018 Posted by: Yosemite Bear Team

How Technology Has Helped Yosemite’s Human-Bear Management Program Hit All-Time Low Bear Incidents

Yosemite has a long and tedious history managing bears, people, and the interactions between the two. In 1998, the park hit a record high number of bear incidents in the park with over 1,500 (documented) incidents in one year. This was a huge turning point for the park in changing the way that we managed our bears, and more importantly, people. With large efforts on public information and education regarding bears and food storage, along with improvements to the park’s bear-resistant food storage and garbage disposal infrastructure, and managing individual bears more directly with an intensive program to scare bears away from development using anything from yelling to less-than-lethal shotgun rounds, the park saw quick and major improvements. But still, the number of bear incidents remained in the hundreds each year for well over a decade.

Bear Incidents, 1998-2016

With the use of technology, incidents have now been under one hundred per year for over four years. This year we’ve hit a new record low, with only about 22 bear incidents total for 2018. If you want to learn more about how the park used technology to further reduce bear incidents, you are in luck! There is a new journal article out describing how technology was used in Yosemite’s Human-Bear Management Program to bring the number of human-bear conflicts in the park to new record lows.

Mazur, Rachel L.; Leahy, Ryan M.; Lee-Roney, Caitlin J.; and Patrick, Kathleen E. (2018) “Using Global Positioning System Technology to Manage Human-Black Bear Incidents at Yosemite National Park,” Human–Wildlife Interactions: Vol. 12 : Iss. 3 , Article 8.

Available for download at: https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol12/iss3/8

Last updated: December 21, 2018

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