‘Something has changed:’ Three bear species found in same northern Manitoba spot
SASKATOON — A Saskatchewan scientist is telling a three bears story that has a very different ending than the familiar fairy tale.
Doug Clark of the University of Saskatchewan says he’s got the first recorded proof of grizzly, black and polar bears all using the same land.
“Scientifically, it has never been documented anywhere,” said Clark, whose paper was published in the journal Arctic Science.
Clark and his colleagues have been operating research camps in Wapusk National Park in northern Manitoba along Hudson Bay since 2011 to study bear-human interactions. But something unusual turned up on their motion-activated cameras.