Wednesday, December 16, 2009

durango community bear meeting


The inaugural meeting of the Bear & Trash Working Group will take place in early January. This working group brings together community leaders and stakeholders for discussion on city bear and trash policies with the goal of making recommendations for moving forward with clear, meaningful and workable solutions to reduce bear-human conflicts in the community. Special thanks to KSUT's Beth Warren for moderating this vital community discussion.

This meeting is open to the public, but the Working Group will be limited. 

Bear & Trash Working Group
Tues. Jan. 12, 2010
5:00 PM to 7:00 PM
Durango Public Library / Program Room 2

Topics to include:
• Overview of standard community wildlife-protection ordinances
• Review of proposed city code revisions in dealing with bears and trash
• Likely challenges in implementing bear and trash policies

Contact Bryan Peterson at bp@frontier.net for more information or a list of possible attendees.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Secrets of Black Bear Hibernation


This is one of the better articles out there on the science and marvels of black bear hibernation. You can also read the article as it originally appeared on PBS NOVA Online hereHibernating bear photos courtesy of Paul Cyr.


Secrets of Hibernation

by Peter Tyson

Certain mammals have what many people might consider the good fortune to be able to sleep through the winter—to hibernate. They bed down in the fall and, for all intents and purposes, don't arise again until the spring. Raccoons and skunks do it. So do woodchucks and chipmunks, hamsters and hedgehogs, bats and bears. Some, particularly rodents, sleep very deeply, while others, such as bears, slumber more lightly.*

*This has led some biologists to differentiate between the hibernation of, say, jumping mice and the "winter lethargy" of bears. Ours is not to quibble, however, and for the purposes of this article, sleeping through the winter—to whatever degree—will be referred to as hibernation.

One of the most celebrated hibernators is the American black bear (Ursus americanus). It can go for as long as 100 days without eating, drinking, urinating, defecating, or exercising. Biologists have long acknowledged that hibernating black bears may have something to teach us, and they are now studying the animals with an eye to aiding everything from organ preservation to kidney disorders, from human hibernation to long-distance space travel.

With all this at stake, it's worth taking a closer look at the black bear and its stunning physiological feats. How can it survive for so long without drinking? Why doesn't hunger force it to wake up and seek a meal in midwinter? What triggers it to enter and leave its den?

The bear facts: One of nine species of bear in the world, the American black bear is found throughout North America, from the frozen tundras of the Yukon to the steaming bayous of Louisiana. Unlike, say, the panda, it is thriving as a species, with an estimated 600,000 individuals roaming the continent. Its sheer numbers have forced it into ever closer contact with people, with black bears regularly seen these days in and around urban housing developments and other man-made environments.

Nesting instinct: Preparations for over-wintering begin in the summer, when bears begin gorging carbohydrate-rich berries and other foods to put on weight. During this period, they can gain as much as 30 pounds per week. In early autumn, a bear (and its cubs, if any) will rake leaves, twigs, and other plant materials into the den to form a nest. Throughout the fall its activity level steadily drops until it ends completely when the bear enters its den.

Bears make dens in burrows, caves, hollowed-out trees, and rock crevices. Dens of the bears Lynn Rogers studies in Minnesota typically feature entrances just large enough for a bear to squeeze through; interior chambers measure two-and-a-half to five feet wide and two to three feet high.

It's cramped for a single bear, much less for a mother and her cubs. But that's the way bears like it: Black bears do no exercising of any sort during the winter months, prefering to lie rolled into a tight ball, with their heads between their forepaws and their heavily furred backs exposed to the worst of the cold. Dens themselves offer little insulation. In Minnesota, dens with open entrances are about as warm inside as outside, where the temperature, Rogers says, often plummets to as low as -28°F. Bears keep warm using their great bulk, their inches-deep layer of fat, and their fur, which more than doubles its insulative value during the fall.

Missing beats: Once a black bear begins hibernating, it can doze for many months with a body temperature of 88°F or higher, which is within 12°F of summer levels. By contrast, the body temperature of smaller hibernators such as marmots, chipmunks, and ground squirrels may drop below 40°F. These daintier creatures must awaken every few days, raise their body temperatures to summer levels, eat stored food, and pass wastes.

Bears can go on slumbering because their warm pelts and lower surface-to-mass ratio allow them to better retain body heat. This, in turn, enables them to cut their metabolic rate in half. Using telemetry, Edgar Folk of the University of Iowa monitored the heart rate of a captive bear in Alaska as it slept. In the early fall, its heart beat 40 to 50 times a minute for most of each night. By December, when the bear was deep in hibernation, its sleeping heart rate had slowed to as few as eight beats a minute.

Black bears keep their heads and torsos warm enough that they can wake if disturbed, though some may take awhile to do so. In a 1981 article in Natural History, Rogers told of the time he accidentally fell onto a six-year-old female in her den. Even though her cub bawled, she didn't wake up for at least eight minutes. On the other hand, some individuals can revive disconcertingly quickly. Rogers again:

On January 8, 1972, I tried to hear the heartbeat of a soundly sleeping five-year-old female by pressing my ear against her chest. I could hear nothing. Either the heart was beating so weakly that I could not hear it, or it was beating so slowly I didn't recognize it. After about two minutes, though, I suddenly heard a strong, rapid heartbeat. The bear was waking up. Within a few seconds she lifted her head as I tried to squeeze backward through the den entrance. Outside, I could still hear the heartbeat, which I timed (after checking to make sure it wasn't my own) at approximately 175 beats per minute.

Bear essentials: Over-wintering black bears do other extraordinary things—things that might someday benefit humans. For starters, snoozing bears are able to gain all the sustenance they need entirely from within their own bodies. Fat tissues break down and supply water and up to 4,000 calories a day; muscle and organ tissues break down and supply protein.

Our bodies do the same thing when we're starving—with one crucial difference: Our bodies can't restore muscle and organ tissue, which those of hibernating bears can. Bears' bodies are somehow able to take urea—a chief component of urine that is produced during tissue breakdown and that, if left to build up, becomes toxic—and use the nitrogen in it to build new protein.

Even though a hibernating bear drinks no water, it does not become dehydrated. In a 1973 study published in the American Journal of Physiology, hibernation expert Ralph Nelson and colleagues at the Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation found that the three hibernating bears they studied were in "almost perfect water balance" after about 100 days of hibernation, during which they swallowed not a single drop of water. Nelson's team and other researchers want to learn how bears accomplish this metabolic feat, during which the amount of urine entering the kidneys drops by 95 percent, in hopes of using the information to help treat people suffering from chronic kidney failure.

Hibernating bears also have what would seem to be dangerously high cholesterol levels. Because they live off their own fat, their cholesterol levels are more than twice what they are in summer (and more than two times higher than those of most people). But bears evince no signs of hardening of the arteries or the formation of cholesterol gallstones. Research has shown that hibernating bears generate a form of bile acid that, when administered to people, dissolves gallstones, eliminating the need for surgery. Despite being cooped up in a space about the size of a doghouse, hibernating black bears also appear to avoid muscle cramping and degenerative bone loss. How they accomplish this remains a mystery.

Another mystery goes by the name "delayed implantation." A female will carry a fertilized egg in her womb for many months. The egg is ready to attach itself to the uterine wall and begin developing into a fetus. But it doesn't do so until the female's body gives some unknown signal. This adaptation allows bears to time the birth of their cubs, so they're not born too early or too late. It also gives the mother a way out if food is scarce: If she has not accumulated enough fat by the time she settles into her den to hibernate, the egg will spontaneously abort. Some biologists see this neat trick as a natural mechanism to control population.

Evidence is mounting that hormone-like substances in hibernating bears may control all these physiological tricks. When injected into other species, both those that hibernate and those that don't, these substances engender hibernation-like effects. Who knows? If people can be made to hibernate, perhaps sufferers of seasonal-affective disorder, or SAD, will find the ultimate relief: a winter-long snooze.

Want to hibernate? Human hibernation may not be as far-fetched as it sounds. In December 2000, Gerhard Heldmaier, a professor at the University of Marburg in Germany and chairman of the International Hibernation Society, announced the discovery of two genes that are thought to trigger hibernation. These genes direct enzymes to burn fat rather than carbohydrates, thereby equipping the body for hibernation. "There is no real reason," Heldmaier told London's Independent on December 3rd, "to say that humans are so different from other mammals that they are unable to enter hibernation."

Although it's possible that people may one day be able to nod off for the winter, the most likely applications of human hibernation involve medicine and perhaps space travel. Doctors might be able to preserve transplant organs longer if those organs could go into hibernation, as a true hibernator's organs do. The U.S. Army is reportedly eager to look into the potential of using hibernation to preserve wounded soldiers during transport from battlefields to hospitals. And NASA has sponsored research on using hibernation for long-distance space travel.

Spring break: In January, a pregnant black bear wakes up long enough to give birth in the den to one or more cubs. She then slumbers anew, rousing herself every now and then to lick the cubs and otherwise tend to them. The cubs, meanwhile, do not hibernate but suckle their mother, safely warmed by her sparsely furred belly. At some unknown cue, mom and cubs, which are now about three months old and weigh four to eight pounds, leave the den behind and get on with their lives in the world at large.

Weight loss is extreme among those leaving the nest. Between early fall and late spring, male black bears will typically drop between 15 and 30 percent of their body weight, while lactating mothers can lose up to 40 percent. Despite this grave weight loss, over 99 percent of black bears survive the winter. Most that do succumb do so because of den flooding or predators and not from starvation. A slumbering bear has all it needs within.

- Peter Tyson is editor in chief of NOVA Online.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Bear Smart Durango's Director Bryan Peterson made an appearance on FLC's Environmental Center "Making Waves" program, hosted by Josie Pacana, on KDUR radio in early November. You can listen to the interview here in its' entirety.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

bear smart truck

we figured that our director really can't do all this on a bicycle alone, so after receiving a very unexpected, very timely and very welcome general support contribution of $5,000 from Dr. Daniel Smith we purchased a very used 1986 Ford F150 to use for ongoing Bear Smart programs. 

Look for a identifying Bear Smart logo decal soon. Special debt of gratitude to Twin Buttes, LLC for the use of a vehicle in the meantime for a.m. trash monitoring and reporting.

recent grants

Bear Smart Durango has received grant funding to allow for completion of bear and trash monitoring projects in the City of Durango and La Plata County. We were awarded $2,000 from the La Plata Electric Association Round-up Foundation and $5,000 from Durango City Council. In addition, we received $250 from La Plata County towards this program.

Funds will be used for a.m. and p.m. trash monitoring, trash can tagging, weekly data compilation, monthly bear activity reports to policy makers, year-end GIS mapping (with the assistance of La Plata County GIS Department) and analysis (with assistance of Fort Lewis College) and recommendations for moving forward. County funding will be used for re-printing of trash can tags to include the county's logo.

kroegers bear paws fundraiser

the bear paws fundraiser at Kroegers Ace Hardware in August and September raised $1,100 in general funds for Bear Smart Durango. WOW!! Thanks to all of you that purchased $1 and $5 "bear paws" to help us in our efforts and special thanks to Bob Thom (pictured below) and the wonderful cashiers (Darci Neil and Jewell Gibson won for the most sales) at Kroegers, Rainbow Printing, Christina's Bar & Grill, Lon Erwin, Mark Smith and Jane Norton for their generous contributions in making this possible!

Sunday, October 11, 2009

safe passage

a friend pointed this out a month or so ago and i finally got around to taking a photo of it. These homeowners on west 2nd avenue were tired of having to repair their fence after bears wrecked it going thru their property. So they had a special metal gate made - with an opening for the bears to go thru. Pretty ingenious, and an indication that certain areas of our community deal with bears far more so than others.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

pics from Fall Bear Hike in Perins SWA

Bear Smart Durango led a hike in fall bear habitat on Sat. Oct. 3rd, where we saw sign of bears including acorn and chokecherry scat, older scat from earlier in the bear season, tracks, claw marks on pine and aspen trees, bear trails and more. Some of the tracks and scat were very recent.

A rubbing post with bear hair and bite and claw marks began the sign of bear activity. The wind conditions were perfect for all to survive the bear pepper spray talk and demonstration as well. (click on photos for larger versions).




Part of the group stands next to a bunch of bear tracks in the wash, some of the tracks being very recent.



Group photos alongside the bear tracks in the wash.

Fresh bear scat consisting of mainly chokecherries. Notice the purplish color and the telltale round buckshot-sized seeds.
 
Looking at older bear claw marks on aspen trees.


We all learned a bit more on how black bears live in the wild. The host much enjoyed the great company and extends a very special thanks to all for your enthusiasm, good spirits and tales - and for sharing a really nice morning in the woods.

p.s. for those of you on the hike, here is a photo of elk chew marks on aspen from last spring for comparison.

To see more photo examples of bear sign from our area visit here on our facebook page.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Fall Bear Hike Oct. 3



Join Bear Smart Durango on Saturday, October 3, from 10:00 – 11:45 a.m. in Perins Peak SWA for a hike in fall bear country with director Bryan Peterson. The hike is easy to moderate, but involves some bushwhacking thru oakbrush. 

We will hopefully see sign of bears and attendees should leave with a better understanding of how black bears live in the wild. There will also be a brief talk and demonstration on using bear pepper spray.

Registration is required and space is limited. Long pants and Colorado Division of Wildlife habitat stamps are suggested. Members are free/$10 non-members. For complete information and directions, visit the blog at www.bearsmartdurango.org. Email bp@frontier.net or call 749-4262 to reserve a spot.

 

• Fall Bear Hike with Bear Smart Durango

• Saturday, October 3 from 10:00 – 11:45 a.m. 

• Perins Peak SWA. Meet at the gravel parking lot (click on map above) at the junction of CR 207 (Lightner Creek) and CR 208 (Dry Fork Rd). Lightner Creek Rd is a few miles west of Durango, past Wildcat Canyon Rd  towards Mancos.

•Please be prompt.

• Please: no dogs, or food in daypacks. 

Monday, July 27, 2009

Bears, Beer & Live Music!!!


As part of the 7th Annual Be Bear Smart Week, Bear Smart Durango hosts an evening slideshow presentation titled “The Tangled Fates of Bears and Humans: the roles bears and people play in sharing the same world’ by retired Alaska Department of Fish and Game bear biologist John Hechtel.

• Thurs. Sept. 3 at 7 PM

• Smiley Theater

Doors open at 6:15 PM with free Ska beer courtesy of Ska Brewing Company and Wildcat Canyon Liquors, and live music by Cheryl & Tim.

Admission is $7 for adults and $5 for kids and students, with admission to benefit Bear Smart Durango.

This event was made possible with the generous support of The Durango Herald, Bank of the San Juans, The Smiley BuildingCheryl & TimSka Brewing Company and Wildcat Canyon Liquors.

For more information about this event, contact Bryan Peterson at bp@frontier.net or 749-4262.

-------

About John Hechtel: John retired from the Alaska Department of Fish and Game after a 28 year career there. He has worked in Alaska and Yukon Territory on the research and management of grizzly and black bears for nearly 30 years. His  main interests involve bear behavior, bear safety, bear attacks, bear viewing, reducing bear/human conflicts and bear conservation.

John lectures on bears and conducts bear safety and bear management training courses for the public and industry, as well as for state and federal agencies. He teaches classes in non-lethal bear management techniques for hazing and aversive conditioning bears as well.

He served 6 years on the Council of the International Association for Bear Research and Management (IBA), the professional association of biologists working on the conservation of the world's 8 bear species and is now a member of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Bear Specialist group’s Human-Bear Conflict Expert Team. He is also a founding member of the non-profit Safety in Bear Country Society.

Friday, June 19, 2009

Bear Smart Slideshow Presentation


Beer and bears! What could be better? Grab a beer and some grub and watch a fabulous summary of the local bear issue.

Bear Smart Durango will host a slideshow presentation titled "No thanks. I already ate. Bear-human conflict in the Durango area" from 6 to 7 PM, Thursday, June 25 in the back bar at Carvers. This presentation by staff/director Bryan Peterson features photos from the 2007 & 2008 local bear seasons and discusses wild and "urban" bears, bear foods, area bear-human conflict issues and solutions from other communities.

Food & drinks will be available at a cash bar. There is a $5 suggested donation, that goes to the organization. This event is sponsored by Twin Buttes, LLC

WHAT: Bear Smart Slideshow Presentation
WHEN: TH, June 25 from 6-7 PM
WHERE: Back bar, Carver Brewing Co, 1022 Main Ave.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Non-hunter bear mortality for Area 15






The graphs above show Non-hunter bear mortality (bears killed outside of hunting) in our area, Area 15 of the Colorado Division of Wildlife. The DOW records bear information in DAU's (Data Analysis Units) for tracking hunting and non-hunting mortality. It's a little difficult to say what comprises "our area" as La Plata County is made up of two different DAU's. So all numbers reflect Area 15, although most incidents occurred in the greater Durango area.

Non-hunter bear mortality includes: bears killed by wildlife officials as nuisance or conflict bears, shot by landowner, hit by vehicle, electrocuted, and any found mortality.

The results of bad natural bear food seasons are easily identified. The drought seasons of 2001 and 2002 and the massive food failure resulting from late frosts in 2007. (Data courtesy: Colorado Division of Wildlife).

Monday, April 20, 2009

books & bears fundraiser at The Mail Room


Looking for the perfect gift for kids or teachers? The Mail Room is taking part in a fundraiser for Bear Smart Durango. Located at 10 Town Plaza, The Mail Room is selling a children's book, "We Are Bears," by authors Molly Grooms and Lucia Guarnotta, as well as adorable stuffed animals called Barney Bears.

A portion of the proceeds will benefit Bear Smart Durango, allowing the organization to continue working to reduce bear and human conflict in our area. For more information, call the Mail Room.

The Mail Room
10 Town Plaza (next to Kroegers)
(970) 385-4494

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

2008 bear & human conflict maps



These maps (click to enlarge) were created from data collected in 2008 by the Colorado Division of Wildlife, Bear Smart Durango and the City of Durango's Refuse Enforcement Officer. GIS maps were generously provided by Rob Bergstrom with the La Plata County GIS Department. Thank you so much Rob for your expertise and assistance.  Data was compiled and entered into Excel by Bear Smart Durango.

Data includes bear sightings (bear(s) seen) and incidents (bears in trash, in human foods, broke into homes, etc.) in the city and county. It does not include bear management or non-hunter bear mortality data, (euthanization, capture and relocation, predation or bear-vehicle mortality). Absent from maps this year are calls to the Herald Bear Tracker, as those records were not preserved. That has been remedied.

There were 228 total reports, down from 1,271 in 2007. Of the 228 reports, 132 were in the city and 96 in the county. 121 (or 53%) were directly trash-related.

Acknowledgements: Colorado Division of Wildlife, Bear Smart Durango, City of Durango and La Plata County.

Note: These maps are for visual representation only and care must be taken in analyzing and interpreting the information contained.



Thursday, January 29, 2009

bear smart imax film & food fundraiser

Bear Smart Durango hosts a heart-warming Valentine's fundraiser with the award-winning IMAX film "BEARS" on Friday, Feb. 13th at 7PM at the Smiley Theater. Come at 6PM for a pre-screening chili (meat or veggie) & chip reception courtesy of Carver Brewing and Zuberfizz. Bring a bear, any bear, be it soft, fuzzy, hard, toy, a painting or photo for our Bear Gift Sale with all proceeds benefitting Bear Smart Durango. (No live bears, please). 

Fri. Feb. 13
Smiley Theater
6 PM: food and bear sale
7 PM: IMAX BEARS film
$12 adults ($10 film only)
$7 children ($5 film only)
Tickets available in advance at Maria's Bookshop, Magpies Newsstand Cafe and Southwest Sound.
 
This event is sponsored by: AJ Construction, LeGrand Construction, Tile Art, Advanced Concrete Solutions and Roseberry's Plumbing & Heating and is presented by Mara Legrand and Skydancer Productions.

Special thanks to: Carver Brewing, Zuberfizz, New Ice, City Market and Primesco Productions

About the film: The fourth and most anticipated giant-screen film produced by the National Wildlife Federation, "BEARS" explores the mythical past and fragile future of some of the most misunderstood predators on the planet. From polar bears in the arctic tundra to grizzlies in Alaska and black bears in Montana, "BEARS" presents these enterprising omnivores in the full glory of their natural habitats and depicts the challenges facing each species.