The grizzly bear population in the lower 48 states of the United States is the deadliest population of bears in the world. From 1975 to 2023, a population of under 2,000 grizzly bears has killed more people than all the grizzly/brown bears in Alaska.
The current population of grizzly bears in the lower 48 states has grown to about 2,000 bears from the low of about 700 to 800 bears estimated in 1975. If the population has grown at a constant rate over the last 48 years, the rate of growth would be about 2%, and the average population over the 48 years would be about 1300 bears. Grizzly bears were declared a threatened species in 1975 under the Endangered Species Act.
In 1975, grizzly bears in the lower 48 were listed as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act. The listing required recovering the species to a self-sustaining population, and it became illegal to kill, harass or harm grizzlies except in self defense.
Legal hunting of grizzly bears ended in the lower 48 states in 1975. The bears are concentrated in three states, Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming, with three or four dozen divided between Idaho and Washington State in the Selkirk ecosystem, which extends into Canada. Northwest Montana had a very limited season on grizzly bears until 1991 when a federal judge stopped the hunt.
All of the fatal grizzly bear attacks in the lower 48 states since 1975 occurred in places where it was illegal to hunt grizzly bears.
The other population of grizzly/brown bears in the United States is in Alaska. The population of grizzly/brown bears in Alaska has remained stable from 1975 to the present. Most Alaskan grizzly/brown bears are subject to hunting pressure and may legally be killed if they threaten life and/or property in Alaska. The population of grizzly/brown bears in Alaska has remained at about 32,000 for the last 48 years. Some of the grizzly/brown bears in Alaska live in national parks, wildlife refuges, and United States military bases, where grizzly bears may not be hunted. Most of the Alaskan bears live in territory where they can be legally hunted.
When people are killed by bears, it makes the news. Fatal bear attacks are collected by websites. The numbers are well known.
More people have been killed by the average population of 1300 grizzly bears in the lower 48 states than by the average population of 32,000 grizzly/brown bears in Alaska.
From 1975 to 2023, 24 people have been killed by wild grizzly bears in the lower 48 states. During the same period, 19 people were killed by wild grizzly/brown bears in Alaska.
What is the reason a population of bears in the lower 48 states, which has averaged only 4% of the population of United States grizzly/brown bears, has accounted for 56% of the humans killed? When grizzly/brown bears are hunted, they change their habits and learn to avoid people. Bold bears that initiate confrontations with humans are selected from the population. In Alaska, sows with cubs that initiate confrontations with humans are preferentially eliminated from the population. This is a classic selection process. In Alaska, bears willing to initiate conflict with humans are less likely to survive. Cubs that survive when their mother attacks a human and is killed are likely to learn to avoid confrontations with humans.
In the lower 48 states, outside of national parks, the same dynamic applied until a national law was created in 1975. Grizzly bears had learned to avoid humans in order to survive by the late 1800s. The avoidance of humans by grizzly bears was well documented in the memoirs of Montague Stevens, Meet Mr. Grizzly, about his experiences with grizzly bears in the 1890s. A similar phenomenon has been observed in Europe, with European brown bears (the same species as American brown/grizzly bears). After being intensely hunted, remaining brown bear populations became adept at avoiding confrontations with humans.
Since 1975, grizzly bears in the lower 48 states found that humans are not a threat. They have been rewarded for confronting humans. Human hunters are subject to serious fines if they defend their kill from being stolen by grizzly bears. Grizzly bears quickly learn threatening humans pays dividends in easy meals.
The existing evidence indicates brown/grizzly bear populations which are subjected to regular hunting pressure with firearms, are selected for and/or learn to avoid confrontation with humans.
Grizzly bear populations in the lower 48 states have met the population goals set in 1975. They have been taken off the threatened species list twice, and have been reinstated by activist judges.
Once bear populations are subjected to hunting, defense of life and property kills drop as the number of bear-human confrontations drops. In Alaska, the number of grizzly/brown bears killed in defense of life and property is only 5.1% of the total harvest of bears. The population of grizzly/brown bears has been stable in Alaska for nearly 50 years.
About Dean Weingarten:
Dean Weingarten has been a peace officer, a military officer, was on the University of Wisconsin Pistol Team for four years, and was first certified to teach firearms safety in 1973. He taught the Arizona concealed carry course for fifteen years until the goal of Constitutional Carry was attained. He has degrees in meteorology and mining engineering, and retired from the Department of Defense after a 30 year career in Army Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation.
“Human hunters are subject to serious fines if they defend their kill from being stolen by grizzly bears”
Then don’t tell on yourself. Don’t video, picture, post etc
Exactly. “Bear? What bear?” Here in Florida, the Florida panther is sacred. All a Florida Panthers are is a subset of mountain lions. Florida Game & Fish always underestimate how many there are. My cousin, a sheriff’s office lieutenant tried to report a sighting near our family community. They wouldn’t even take the report from her without a picture. How many people driving along have cameras ready to shoot pictures? This predates dash cams. I used to walk our private road at night. I’m always armed and carried at least 2 flashlights and, at the time, had a 125 lb… Read more »
The 3 s rule. Shoot – Shovel – Shutup!
how about relocating some grizzly bears to where the people who make up stupid rules that prohibit killing threatening bears live? that might help save some bears and a lot more people.
Gregs, Do you mean like the current proposal to develop a resident population of at least 200 bears in the North Cascades Mountains of Washington (State… not D.C.) by both protecting migrants from Canada and augmenting that increased presence by releasing grizzly bears brought in from elsewhere within the bear’s existing occupied range [I believe is from B.C., Canada]? Migration is a real source of ‘new [bear] blood’. An article published within in the last six to 8 months reported on a collared sow that departed from its home range and traveled 2800 miles over the course of a couple… Read more »
I worry little about bears. Of the talking bear population, I prefer the ones that maul commiecrats while saying “SIC SEMPER TYRANNIS!”
Remember, ONLY YOU CAN PREVENT COMMUNISM!
There is a strong argument to be made that it would be more beneficial to develop a large grizzly population (in both senses of the word) in D.C. instead of or in addition to WA. I wonder how they would fare at the southern border in locations where there was water and food that was easy to find.
It would work better to relocate those people to the bear habitat. Bears gotta eat!
British Columbia outlwed bear hunting a few years back. “Dont shoot our fluffy bears!”
Bear attacks have soared.
they have no fuking guns… they let their government disarm them!
Awhile back, I made this same suggestion on msn to a Californian that was protesting the wolf hunts in Wyoming. He had protested my comment that neither wolves nor Grizzlies were necessary in the lower 48. My final comment was “Now to the bigger question, where do you want your Grizzlies delivered?”
Wait a minute, Dean. You follow and know a bunch about this topic, have written on it regularly here on Ammoland, and I appreciate reading your stuff. BUT…. to my simple way of reckoning, the bears in the lower 48 are not more “deadly” than any other population of Griz. Might it not be that the lower 48 bears come in contact with more humans more often than the bears in Alaska? I been to Alaska once and most people there really don’t get all that far away from civilization. More than the lower 48 humans, for sure. But if… Read more »
If you feed a bear, you’ve sentenced him to death. You might also be killing a human. I have homes in SE Florida and NE Georgia. I deal with the ABCs of wildlife; Alligators, Bears, and Coyotes. I’ve seen all three species go from rare sightings to regular nuisances because people feed them, sometimes inadvertently and sometimes intentionally. Gators should not be walking on golf courses while humans are present, but are actually encouraged by many club managements. After all, Sand Traps and Water are nothing compared to a 12′ alligator eating your golf ball! You’ll remember that day, and… Read more »
Agreed.
I would have thought the C was Crocodiles.
And the apostrophe (‘s) stands for Snakes.
I do not discount that hunting changes animal behavior around humans. However, you must also take into account other factors. For example, in Alaska there are only 1.3 people per sq mi compared to 112 people per sq mile in the US excluding AK & HI. So there are a lot fewer wide open wild spaces for bears to roam without encountering humans.
The author seems to be pretty inept at hiding such disturbing things as supporting facts and statistics from fantastical liberal utopian pipe dreams. If he is not careful he could insensitively shatter some fragile illusions while he is ruffling feathers. Rainbows, unicorns and grizzly bears should all be allowed to roam freely and unmolested, you see.
Bill Clinton on the US 2nd Amendment: “I’ve always admired hunters”.
Yeah the people that he hired to hunt his opponents
democrats want to re introduce grizzlies to the PNW…
I don’t mind the occasional black bear i see, I keep my distance and respect..
But, you have no idea when some psycho brown bear is going to eat you for lunch… I’m strictly opposed to the Biden administration releasing brown bears in Oregon, Washington or Idaho…
I’d actually follow them out to the site and when they leave, kill that damn bear. Yep, libtards.. murder it.
I’m not going to say what I came here to say