Be Bear Aware, Be Bear FairBy Source: Oregon Dept. Fish & WildlifeWHAT IF: You Encounter a Bear | DON'T: Feed the Bears “A poor or perhaps just late berry crop this year is sending bears into residential areas looking for food,” District Wildlife Biologist Doug Cottam said. “In times like these, it’s even more important to not teach bears bad habits that endanger them and your neighbors." Four of the bears were public safety risks due to their behavior. The other two bears killed tried to break into the same goat pen where a goat was killed last week.
ABOVE: An aggressive bear broke into this attached garage north of Yachats looking for food. Wildlife officials are attempting to catch the bear. All of the bears had been repeatedly seen in the daytime and did not show wariness of people, indications that they had come to associate people with food and were now habituated, according to ODFW. "No one wants to see more bears put down or a person attacked. Please don’t feed the bears,” Cottam said. The bears killed are young males likely competing with dominant, older males for food. “The younger hungry males are wandering back into residential areas for food, and they are finding it at places like birdfeeders,” said Cottam. “Remember the right thing to do is to leave bears wild. They must learn to rely on natural food sources." While attacks are rare, bears habituated to finding food where humans live are often the ones involved in attacks on people. ODFW is extremely concerned about public safety in the mid-coast area and offers the following guidelines on what to do if you encounter a bear:
ODFW reminds residents to take the following precautions to avoid inadvertent feeding of bears.
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