Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Manitoba

U.S. hunter guilty of killing rare Manitoba grizzly bear

A South Carolina man has been found guilty of illegally killing a grizzly bear while hunting in northern Manitoba.

Hunter from South Carolina ordered to pay $10K in fines and $2K in court costs: province

Grizzly bears were once thought extinct in Manitoba, but have slowly been making a return in the north. Grizzlies once roamed across the Prairies. (Jim Urquhart/Associated Press)

A South Carolina man has been found guilty of illegally killing a grizzly bear while hunting in Manitoba.

The province'sSustainable Development Department said the U.S. citizen was ordered Wednesday to pay $10,000 in fines plus $2,000 in court costs.

The grizzly bear was killed in June 2015 in northern Manitoba.DNA testing later confirmed the bear wasa grizzly, an animal protected under Manitoba'sEndangered Species and Ecosystems Act.

Conservation investigators were tipped off about the grizzly killing by a member of the public, Sustainable Development said.

Until the late 1800s, grizzly bears roamed across the Prairies, including in Manitoba'sRed River Valley.

The animals have long been considered extinct in the province, but officials say they are slowly making a return in the northern region of the province.

Researchers in Manitoba's Wapusk National Park have observed grizzlies entering into traditional polar bear habitat.

Parks Canada estimates about 20,000 grizzly bears remain in western Alberta,Yukon, the Northwest Territories and British Columbia.