Human-Bear Conflicts
Understanding Nuisance Behavior
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Photo by Tristan Curry |
Nuisance behaviors in bears are
typically those that cause problems with people in and around homes,
neighborhoods, or businesses. Generally, those behaviors include some form of
attractant such as garbage, food scraps,
pet food,
birdfeeders, livestock feed, or other
human-related items. The important thing to remember when dealing with nuisance
behaviors, however, is that “problem bears” are not born- they are a product of
their environment. Situations that invite bears into or near human dwellings
can create cycles of behavior that can be very hard to break. Unfortunately,
bears can become so tolerant and bold around people that issues of human safety
arise. In those instances, bears may have to be trapped, relocated, or even
killed.
When bears have ready access to
human-related foods, two behavioral situations can arise that seriously affect
the potential for future nuisance activity- food conditioning and
habituation. If a bear has continued access to garbage in a neighborhood,
for instance, it may become increasingly dependent on that food source. This
behavior is the same as giving your pet a food reward for successfully
completing a repetitive task. In the case of bears, the task is overturning a
garbage can or climbing into a dumpster, and the reward is the food that is
obtained. Without any negative stimuli, that bear will become increasingly
“conditioned” to human food and more bold in its attempts to acquire those
items.
Unfortunately, bears that become
conditioned to human foods often develop a second and even more negative
behavioral condition as a result of spending so much time around humans. This
second trait is referred to as “habituation” to humans, and it is simply a loss
of their natural fear of people. Once that fear is lost, bears may become
day-active in search for food, approach people, and alter their home range to
include human population centers. The sad truth, however, is that
food-conditioned and habituated bears live considerably shorter lives as a
result of so much time spent near people. Those bears often die prematurely as
a result of vehicle collision, poaching, or euthanasia due to unacceptable
behaviors around people.
Fortunately, all of these negative
patterns of behavior can be prevented by eliminating access to human-related
foods. Help protect Kentucky’s bears by being responsible and following our
guidelines for living in bear country. Doing so will not only help us keep
bears wild in Kentucky, but it just may save a bear’s life.
Click here to view a map of black
bear vehicle collisions in Kentucky.
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