Saturday May 25, 2013


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Mother bear, two cubs perish on highway

Orphaned cub 'Noah' captured, taken to Langley rehab facility
Photo courtesy of Critter Care

Noah, a 40-pound male bear cub orphaned when its mother and two siblings were killed in a Sept. 14 collision on Highway 99 near Brackendale, gets used to its new surroundings at Critter Care, a Langley wildlife rehabilitation centre.

Three of the four members of a black bear family that had been living in and around Brackendale this year were killed in collision on Highway 99 last week.

The mother bear and two of her three cubs were struck and killed late Friday (Sept. 14), Meg Toom, Squamish Bear Aware coordinator, wrote in an email to The Chief.

Conservation officers captured the surviving cub, a 40-pound male that was not injured in the incident, and transported him to Critter Care in Langley, “where he will spend the winter,” Toom wrote.

It's been a challenging year for Squamish-area bears and those responsible for managing human-wildlife conflicts. Officers have shot and killed at least 10 bears this year after the animals had become habituated to non-natural food sources and were deemed a public safety threat.

Authorities have issued a number of violation tickets and dangerous wildlife protection orders (DWPOs) to home and business owners for failing to properly manage garbage, failing to pick ripened fruit or failing to keep bird or pet food out of the reach of hungry bears and other wildlife.

It's not known how many have been killed in collisions with vehicles this year.

“Our community is like an obstacle course for bears,” Toom wrote. “They get stuck within our neighbourhoods, attracted to and reliant on non-natural food sources that we leave out for them.”

The Brackendale cub, named Noah by the staff at Critter Care, was brought to the Langley wildlife rehabilitation centre on Saturday (Sept. 15). For more information visit www.crittercarewildlife.org

To report a bear sighting or other wildlife-related incident, phone the Ministry of Environment’s toll-free, 24-hour hotline at 1-877-952-7277.


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