The Wyoming Game and Fish Department trapped and relocated an adult male grizzly bear August 17, 2018. The bear was captured for damaging fruit trees on private lands on the South Fork of the Shoshone River west of Cody, WY. In cooperation with the Shoshone National Forest, the bear was relocated to Fox creek drainage approximately 13 miles northwest of Crandall. On August 19, 2018 an adult male grizzly bear was captured for depredating cattle on a U.S. Forest Service grazing allotment north of Pinedale, WY. In cooperation with the Shoshone National Forest, the bear was relocated to the Five Mile creek drainage approximately 5 miles from the east entrance of Yellowstone National Park. The release sites are located in currently occupied grizzly bear habitat.
Grizzly bear relocation is a management tool afforded to large carnivore biologists to minimize conflicts between humans and grizzly bears and is critical to the management of the population. When other options are exhausted or unattainable, Game and Fish will attempt to capture the bear. Once the animal is captured, all circumstances are taken into account when determining if the individual should be relocated or removed from the population. If relocation is warranted, the selection of a relocation site is determined taking into consideration the age, sex, and type of conflict the bear was involved in as well as potential human activity in the vicinity of the relocation site. Consultation with the appropriate personnel and agencies occurs to minimize the chance of future conflicts and maximize the survival potential of the relocated grizzly bear. Bears that are deemed an immediate threat to human safety are not released back into the wild.
Bears are relocated in accordance with state and federal law and regulation. Game and Fish continues to stress the importance of the public’s responsibility in bear management and the importance of keeping all attractants (food items, garbage, horse feed, bird seed, and others) unavailable to bears. Reducing attractants available to bears reduces human-bear conflicts. For more information on grizzly bear management and reducing the potential for conflicts please visit the Bear Wise Wyoming page: https://wgfd.wyo.gov/Wildlife-in-Wyoming/More-Wildlife/Large-Carnivore/Grizzly-Bear-Management/Bear-Wise-Wyoming