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Yukon advocates want moratorium on grizzly bear hunting, gov't says population appears 'stable'

A group of advocates wants a moratorium on grizzly bear huntingin Yukon until the decades-old bear population estimate is updated,but the territorial government says bear numbers don't seem to be declining overall.

Yukon government working on new population estimate, last one updated decades ago

A grizzly bear in Yukon. According to the Yukon government's website, there are between 6,000 and 7,000 grizzly bears in the territory, but that range is based on data from the 1980s. (Government of Yukon)

A group of advocates wants a moratorium on grizzly bear huntingin Yukon until the decades-old bear population estimate is updated,but the territorial government says bear numbers don't seem to be declining overall.

Lucile Fressign, who is on the board of directors of Grizzly Bear Protection Yukon, said it won'tbe clearif the bears are being over-hunted unless there's an update.

The biologistsaid the group's ultimate goal is to get trophy hunting banned, somethingBritish Columbia did a few years ago.

"To go in those beautiful areas, wild areas in Yukon, and to kill, like, a majestic bear doing nothing wrong it doesn't really make sense," Fressign,who is conducting her own research on bear populations, said last week.

Lucile Fressign started the 'Operation Ursus Research using Scat' project this year. The biologist said Grizzly Bear Protection Yukon's ultimate goal is to get trophy hunting banned. (Steve Silva/CBC)

According to the Yukon government's website, there are between 6,000 and 7,000 grizzly bears in the territory, a range based on data from the 1980s.

As per the government-approved conservation plan for thebears, "this is an estimate with much uncertainty,"and "the true value is unknown."

"The best available information suggests that grizzly bear populations in Yukon are likely stable (i.e., neither increasing or decreasing significantly), although in some local areas there is a concern that the population is declining," reads the 2019 document.

Matt Clarke,acting director of the fish and wildlife branch in the Department of Environment, echoed this sentiment last week:"All evidence that we have points to a stable population, and there's no evidence to suggest that the population across the territory is declining."

Matt Clarke was the acting director of the fish and wildlife branch in Yukon's Department of Environment. (Cathie Archbould)

'A very small mortality rate'

About 90 human-caused bear deathsare reported in Yukonevery year, he said. Those include deaths on highways, and deaths due to hunting, and defence of life or property.

"That's a very small mortality rate," said Clarke.

Reporting these deaths is compulsory, and the government tracks them, and the sex of thebears, he said. Since the mid-1990s, those numbers have been "relatively consistent."

If there were6,000 grizzly bears in the territory,90 deaths would constitute 1.5 per cent of thepopulation.

In Yukon, there are about 30bear management units (BMUs), which cover different areas of the territory.

According to the conservation plan, a sustainable mortality rate for bears in a BMUis four per cent of the population. The rates for females and males in a BMU are up to two and six per cent, respectively.

"However, BMUs are not biologically-based but rather are largely aligned with Outfitter Concession Areas. The appropriateness of BMUs as the spatial scale from which to manage grizzly bears should be evaluated," reads the plan.

"Yukon's current grizzly bear population estimates and sustainable mortality rates were derived in the 1980s and may be outdated."

Resident hunters allowed to hunt 1 bear every 3 years

Clarke said the government monitors the number of deaths in BMUs, changing management approaches when necessary, so that bears aren't over-harvested.

He said he didn't have the specific number of new grizzly bears across the territory each year, but the government believes there are enough to balance out the losses, including deaths due to natural causes.

"If that mortality rate is stable and observations from people on the land, First Nations, renewable resources councils, all outfitters are all indicative that there are still healthy populations of bears out there, then we don't have cause for concern that there may be a decline happening," Clarke said.

Resident hunters are allowed to harvest a grizzly bear once every three years, he said. Hunters are supposed toget tags (also known as seals) first. In 2014, more than 2,000 were given out.

"If you were to assign a mortality to every tag that's issued, then you would see a drastic decline in the population. However, that's not what we're seeing," Clarke said.

There would be signs ifsignificantly more deathswereabout to occur, and they would promptthe government to change its approach, he added.

Hair-snag stations are going to be used by the Yukon government to update its population estimate of grizzly bears. (Government of Yukon)

The conservation plan calls for a new population estimate. Clarke said work on that has already started.

One way the bears are being counted is through DNA that's captured through hair-snag stations, which can require a helicopter to setup in remote areas.

An attractant lures bears to the stations where their hair gets caught on something, such as barbed wire. The samples are then sent to a lab for DNA analysis.

"It will be a piecemeal approach, and it will take a long time, and it will be a very expensive endeavour," Clarke said, adding the count could take longer than a decade to finish.