Minnesota’s black bear range has been slowly expanding
southward and westward. To better understand and document this expansion, the
Minnesota Department of Natural Resources designed a new reporting
application on its website to gather bear sightings made by the public
outside the primary bear range.
Minnesota’s primary bear
range covers about 40 percent of state, matching the distribution of the
northern forests; however, bears also range south and west to where the
forest borders farmland, and beyond. A few bears have been seen near the
North Dakota and Iowa borders, and sightings are increasingly reported in the
Twin Cities metro suburbs.
“Nearly all of these
far-roaming bears are presumed to be wandering male bears, but one purpose of
gathering sightings on the website is to find out how far from the primary
range the females have expanded,” said Dave Garshelis, DNR bear project
leader. “The reporting tool enables sightings of bears with cubs to be
logged.”
The new web application also
allows citizen recorders to record whether bears are feeding on natural
foods, or non-natural foods like birdfeeders or crops. But the purpose is not
to register a complaint about a nuisance bear. That should be done through a
local wildlife manager.
Find office locations at mndnr.gov/contact/locator.html
or contact the DNR Information Center at 888-646-6367.
The only sightings being
recorded with the new tool are those outside the primary range. A map is
provided on the website to distinguish this area.
If a bear is seen outside the
primary range, the observer can zoom into the map provided and mark the
location. There is no need to enter an address or legal description. All
information about the identity of people registering a sighting is considered
private data and will only be used by DNR staff when it is necessary to
verify an unusual sighting.
“Hunters have long
contributed information about bears to assist our management program,”
Garshelis said. “This is the first time we’re asking all of the ‘citizen
scientists’ in the public to help.”
The reporting app will be
disabled for several weeks each year prior to and during hunting seasons.
The DNR bear sightings tool
runs on Android, iOS and Windows. The web application can be found at mndnr.gov/hunting/bear/bear-sightings.html
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