News

A black bear was killed at Yellowstone National Park after crushing an unoccupied tent and outsmarting a food storage pole ...
Yellowstone National Park staff killed a black bear when it became "habituated and food-conditioned." That means it figured out that people are sources of food.
The bear was killed by park staff in the evening of July 11, and marks the first lethal removal of a black bear at ...
An adult female black bear has been lethally removed from Yellowstone National Park after becoming conditioned to human food, ...
A food-conditioned black bear was killed at Yellowstone National Park after a series of concerning incidents "posed a clear threat to visitor safety." ...
The bear was euthanised by Yellowstone National Park staff around 5 p.m. on July 11, following "a series of concerning incidents." ...
DENVER ( KDVR) — Yellowstone National Park staff reported Thursday that on Friday, July 11, an adult female black bear was ...
A black bear was killed in a management action for the first time since 2020 after eating food storage near Blacktail Deer ...
We go to great lengths to protect bears and prevent them from gaining access to human food in all areas of the park. But ...
In 1957, Yellowstone tourists often got a little too close for comfort—like this driver, who leans out the window to snap a photo of a mother bear and her cubs.
According to wildlife filmmaker Casey Anderson, the grizzly bear might be the greatest forager. Having closely observed the Yellowstone grizzly’s diet and eating habits, he’s seen them dig up ...
The bears were in dangerous proximity to humans: Hungry bears tore at open car windows. Tourists posed a little too close with their film cameras. Yellowstone park rangers logged dozens of ...