Research shows grizzly bears and wolves avoid towns, trails in Alberta’s Bow Valley
A study that looked at data on the movement of grizzly bears and wolves in Alberta’s Bow Valley shows the animals avoid towns and developed areas when lots of people are around.
Research published last month in the journal Movement Ecology analyzed two decades of global-positioning information from 34 grizzly bears and 33 wolves. The animals had been fitted with collars in and around Banff National Park west of Calgary.
“We wanted to really understand how grizzly bears and wolves were using the landscape and responding to our activities both inside and outside the national parks,” Jesse Whittington, a Banff park wildlife ecologist who was the study’s lead author, said in an interview.
The data, he said, included 156,000 GPS locations collected in an area that spanned about 17,000 square kilometres.