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Manitoba

Dozens rally in support of rescued bear cub Makoon

About 40 people rallied at Winnipeg's Assiniboine Park Zoo on Wednesday afternoon to voice their concerns about the fate of Makoon the orphaned bear cub.
Some of the approximately 40 people who attended a rally at Winnipeg's Assiniboine Zoo on Wednesday, calling on the province not to release Makoon the orphaned bear cub into the wild until it has been sufficiently rehabilitated. (Chris Glover/CBC)

About 40 people rallied at Winnipeg's Assiniboine Park Zoo on Wednesday afternoon to voice their concerns about the fate of Makoon the orphaned bear cub.

Makoon attracted headlines after it was rescued by Rene Dubois of St. Malo, Man., in a ditch near the community in March.

Dubois cared for Makoon at his home for almost two weeks untilManitoba Conservation seized the cubin early April and temporarily placed it at the zoo, where it is currently being rehabilitated by staff.

The provincial government had said the young bearwould be released into the wild in June, although officials now say no decision has been made about its future.

Mahv Wistoski, 12, holds up a sign she made for Wednesday's rally. (Chris Glover/CBC)

Those who attended Wednesday's rallyurged the province not to release Makoon into the wild at least until it has undergone enough rehabilitation so it can survive.

"He weighed five pounds, he didn't have any teeth, he wasn't weaned," said Judy Stearns, who organized the rally.

"He has virtually no survival skills. He wouldn't have any recollection of anything he learned, anyways."

Among the rally participants were 12-year-old Mahv Wistoski and her mother, Joanne, who held up signs saying, "Makoon deserves a 100 per cent chance."

Mahv said she feels "it's important that Makoon doesn't get released too early."

Stearns and other organizers have gathered 10,000 signatures in a petition to the province.

No decision made yet: official

Jim Duncan of Manitoba Conservation said no decision has been madeyet on whether to release Makoon into the wild or send it to a permanent home in captivity.

Makoon was cared for at the St. Malo, Man., home of Rene Dubois for almost two weeks until Manitoba Conservation seized the cub and temporarily placed it at the zoo. (CBC)

"We'remonitoring the bear's behaviour to determine how habituated to people it has become," he said.

"We recognize that when you release a rehabilitated animal, you're giving it a second chance at being a wild animal, and that's a successful outcome from a wildlife rehabilitation point of view," he added.

The cub's chance of survival in the wild ranges from 10 per cent to 50 per cent, Duncan said, adding that half of the cubs born in Manitoba each year do not survive.

Conservation Minister Gord Mackintosh said he is leaving decisions about Makoon's future to the province's wildlife experts.

Mackintosh said he has been told that Makoon currently weighs almost 14 kilograms and is growing everyday.

With files from the CBC's Chris Glover