Grizzlies
Gone, Black Bears Spill into New Areas
Critters beginning to explore outlying counties of Bay Area.
by Michael McCabe
San Francisco Chronicle, June 11, 2001
Get used to bears galumphing into town. Recent sightings of black bears in Salinas
and Carmel are no fluke, biologists believe. Over the past five years, the animals
have rapidly expanded their territory around California, moving from the deeply
wooded, mountainous areas into parts of Monterey, Napa and Sonoma counties.
There is even solid evidence that black bears have been exploring the mountainous
areas of Santa Cruz, Santa Clara, San Mateo and San Diego counties.
They are prospering and spreading, thanks in part to changes in bear-hunting
laws and a gradual expansion into territory historically occupied by the now-extinct
California grizzly bear.
But as they embark on their rural sprawl and humans continue their urban sprawl,
conflict is inevitable, biologists say.
"We probably have nearly twice as many black in the state now than we had
in the early 1980s," said Doug Updike, a Fish and Game wildlife biologist
and statewide black bear program coordinator. "Its reached the point
where weve been forced to redraw the boundary lines for black bear range
in California."
In the early 1980s, biologists estimated that there were at least 12,000 black
bears in the states core area, defined as their traditional stomping grounds
in the mountainous region of the Sierra and a small portion of the Coastal range
far south of San Francisco.
Today, that figure has nearly doubled to 23,000, Updike said. Taking into account
the new areas the bears are pushing into, the number is probably closer to 30,000,
Updike said.
The expansion will probably continue, Updike said, until the bears reach a natural
barrier, something as thickly urban as San Francisco.
While the bear incursion into more populated areas has been gradual over the
past 50 years, there is plenty of anecdotal evidence that they have been prowling
around in, or near, populated areas in greater numbers over the past two to
five years, according to bear experts.
In Monterey County, where the locals are more used to human tourists than Big
Foot types, noises in the night are no longer dismissed as skunks or cats in
heat.
Vincent Colburn could hardly believe what he was seeing last month when a black
bear came ambling near his home. Operating on pure adrenaline, the 37- year-old
veterinary technician said he grabbed his pocket camera and started shooting.
"He turned around, looked right at me and snorted real loud," Colburn
said. "Thats when the hair stood up on the back of my neck."
Nonetheless, Colburn, who says he was as excited as the bear was hungry that
night of May 18, followed the bear from a garbage bin not far from his house
on Highway 68 in rural Salinas and up a hill, until he had shot all 24 pictures
in his camera. The bear vanished into the evening twilight.
Colburn's mother, Lorna, 77, who also saw the bear, is still a bit nervous.
"Ive lived right here along this road since I was 6 years old, and
this is the first bear Ive ever seen or heard of," she said.
Either the same bear or a different one revisited the area several times over
the next several days, stopping by Dumpsters near the Toro Place Cafe and Blanchards
Wood Sculpture store and yard -- which is populated by artist Steve Blanchards
redwood sculptures of bears -- before dropping by a school and another restaurant.
The bear ended up at Laguna Seca race track, where it helped itself to some
frozen meat left out all night in the media tent, said Terry Palmisano, a senior
wildlife biologist for Fish and Game.
Monterey County is still aflutter over all the bear activity, including visits
by bears into central Salinas and downtown Carmel in recent weeks. Some locals
are convinced more than two bears are involved.
On May 23, a young black bears adventure through downtown Carmel ended
tragically when it fell more than 50 feet out of a tree to its death after being
tranquilized by a state game warden.
On June 1, another bear strolled into Salinas, this time climbing over a 10-
foot-tall wrought-iron fence and running through a plate glass door at Hertz
Equipment Rental to escape police. All ended happily when the young male bear
was safely tranquilized inside the building and hauled away. Later that day,
he was deposited deep inside Los Padres National Forest.
Two years ago, bears created a ruckus in places like Sand City in Monterey County
and Glen Ellen in Sonoma County.
Whats going on here?
Contrary to rumors, Fish and Game has not been kidnapping rogue bears from Yosemite
and "relocating" them in Monterey County, Palmisano said.
"We do not do that, never, never, never," she said. "This is
vicious and unfounded talk. The bears are relocating themselves."
Black bears are expanding mainly because, after eight decades, they are finally
taking advantage of the demise of their large and far more aggressive cousin,
the California grizzly, biologists say. Grizzlies are extinct in the state;
the last reports of a grizzly were in Sequoia National Park in 1924.
Historically, black bears hung out in the state's mountainous regions, while
grizzlies made certain they did not invade their own territory in the valleys
and lowlands. As black bears have slowly proliferated, they are discovering
that the big, bad grizzlies are no longer around to swat them back into the
mountains.
In addition, the state has altered the rules governing bear hunting. In 1982,
Fish and Game forbade the practice of hunting bears with dogs for training purposes
during the non-hunting season, effectively putting less pressure on their population,
Updike said.
Fish and Game officials are convinced that the recent bear sightings are not
a fluke, largely because they are keeping track of their movements through the
use of "can of sardine" monitoring stations scattered about in several
counties. In wilderness areas, the monitoring consists of nailing an unopened
can of sardines to a post or tree.
"The bear, which of course has a tremendous sense of smell, will smell
that sardine can from a very long way off," Updike said. "They tear
the can off the post, and chew it until theres nothing left inside it
anymore, finally spitting it out like a gum wrapper. We can tell if a black
bear has been there by the teeth marks, or the bears tracks, or by the
bear scat."
While there have been no confirmed sightings of bears in Santa Cruz, Santa Clara
or San Mateo counties, Updike has no doubt that they are there, or have visited
there, and that they are liable to increase. The chewed-up sardine cans, bear
tracks and bear scat dont lie.
"I am sure there is a breeding population in Santa Cruz County, although
we have no reports yet of cubs spotted," Updike said. "As to whether
they are breeding in Santa Clara and San Mateo counties, that is more difficult
to say.
"All this is part of black bears natural ability to expand into neighboring
good habitat, and they will continue to do that until they reach a natural barrier,
until reaching San Francisco probably."
Unless they sniff out a sardine sandwich in Golden Gate Park.