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How Do Bears React to People?
Black
bears may enter camps or your cootage or home, especially when wild
foods are scarce, but they rarely attack people.
Black
bears usually retreat before people are aware of them. Their hearing is
more sensitive than a human's, and their broad, soft foot pads allow
them to move quietly downwind where they can best identify their
dangers. The may stand upright to see farther (not a sign of
aggressiveness). If need be, they can run faster than 25 mph or climb
trees quickly.
They generally prefer to forage for wild foods away from people but are
almost as quick as chipmunks to seek food in campsites and garbage cans
when wild nut and berry crops fails. They rarely attack people.
Campground bears and roadside panhandlers may nip or cuff people that
crowd around them, try to pet them, or tease them with food. But the
injuries, if any, are usually slight, only occasionally requiring
stitches.
Full-blown attacks by black bears are rare. Black bears attacks are
usually not at campgrounds and are usually not by black bears that are
familiar with people. Recorded killings by black bears this century
total only about 34 across North America. Most of these killings were
unprovoked acts of predation. How likely is a black bear to be a killer?
The 500,000 black bears in North America kill fewer than one person per
3 years, on the average, despite hundreds of thousands of encounters. To
put this in perspective, for each death from a black bear across North
America, there are approximately 17 deaths from spiders, 25 deaths from
snakes, 67 deaths from dogs, 150 deaths from tornadoes, 180 deaths from
bees and wasps, 374 deaths from lightning, and 90,000 homicides in the
United States alone (data from the National Center for Health
Statistics, 1980-1983). In the rare event of one of these attacks, the
best defense is to fight with fists, feet, rocks, or anything hard.
Playing dead is usually not the best action with black bears.
Unlike
grizzly bear mothers, black bear mothers seldom attack people in defense
of cubs. Black bear mothers typically bluff or retreat. Researchers who
routinely capture cubs by chasing them up trees have not been attacked
even when they have held the screaming cubs. The ferocity of mother
black bears is one of the biggest misconceptions about this species.
Credits - University of Minnesota
photo's - Mike McIntosh |