The bear facts. Population of bears per state
#7882942
06/12/23 01:49 AM
06/12/23 01:49 AM
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Joined: Nov 2011
Idaho Falls, ID
Grandpa Trapper
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Nov 2011
Idaho Falls, ID
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Population of black bears. This comes from the website AZ. I rounded off some numbers. Alabama - 200 Alaska - 100,000 Arizona - 3,000 Arkansas - 3,000 California - 27,500 Colorado - 16,000 Connecticut - 900 Florida - 4,000 Georgia - 5,000 Idaho - 25,000 Kentucky - 1,000 Louisiana - 850 Maine - 35,000 Maryland - 2,000 Massachusetts - 4,500 Michigan - 17,500 Minnesota - 13,500 Mississippi - 120 Missouri - 1,000 MMontana - 15,000 Nevada - 500 New Hampshire - 4,900 New Jersey - 3,000 New Mexico - 5,500 New York - 7,000 North Carolina - 20,000 Oklahoma - 2,500 Ohio - 100 Oregon - 27,500 Pennsylvania - 16,000 Rhode Island - 10 South Carolina - 1,100 Tennessee - 5,575 Utah - 4,000 Vermont - 5250 Virginia - 19,000 Washington - 27,500 West Virginia - 13,000 Wisconsin - 24,000
States with unknown figures are Texas and Wyoming. States with no permanent Black Bear population are Delaware, Hawaii, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota and South Dakota.
An old man roaming the Rockies
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Re: The bear facts. Population of bears per state
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
#7882943
06/12/23 01:58 AM
06/12/23 01:58 AM
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Joined: Jan 2023
WA/AZ/NE/IA
DVinke
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2023
WA/AZ/NE/IA
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They took away spring bear in WA so populations wiill explode
Today is a gift, that is why it is called the present (rip my friend)
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Re: The bear facts. Population of bears per state
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
#7882944
06/12/23 02:13 AM
06/12/23 02:13 AM
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Joined: May 2009
Champaign County, Ohio.
KeithC
trapper
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trapper
Joined: May 2009
Champaign County, Ohio.
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I believe Ohio's bear population is much higher than 100 bears. I have seen a bear on my street 4 times, once here on my farm and once 20 some feet from my farm. I have found bear hair and scat in my black raspberries. I saw a bear outside of Fresno, Ohio too. My father had a bear go through his neighborhood, that was seen many dozens of times, 70 miles from here. I have a friends, who lives in Washington County, Ohio, who has gotten trail camera pictures of 6 different bears in a few weeks, counting cubs. I've talked to 4 other people who saw bears in different places in Ohio too. I very much doubt we were lucky enough to see some of the only 100 bears supposedly scattered across a state as large as Ohio. I would guess there are over 1000 bears in Ohio.
A quick search of news reports shows many dozens of bear sightings in counties the official Ohio site says have had no sightings in the years the sightings were reported by the news. It's sloppy work by ODNR at best, if not intentional fabrication to mislead the public.
Most of the other states have unbelievably low numbers of bears listed too.
Keith
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Re: The bear facts. Population of bears per state
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
#7882951
06/12/23 04:15 AM
06/12/23 04:15 AM
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Joined: Dec 2009
Central Texas - Erath- Real Co...
Ol' Smoke
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2009
Central Texas - Erath- Real Co...
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Texas didn't make the list. In the late 1800s Ol' Ben Lilly and his dogs tracked and killed most of the bears in Texas. If you don't know who he was, google it. He was (This word is unacceptable on Trapperman) on mountain lions too.
---- CAUGHT IN THE CROSSFIRE----Bye, Bye Miss American Pie----
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Re: The bear facts. Population of bears per state
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
#7882998
06/12/23 06:48 AM
06/12/23 06:48 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
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I doubted the 7,000 number for NY, that seems low to me. I looked it up and that is the number the NY DEC gives (6,000-8,000) for areas open to hunting. I'm guessing they base those numbers on reported hunter harvests.Bears in areas not open to hunting are not counted or estimated. So the actual number of bears statewide is probably significantly higher. .
Eh...wot?
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Re: The bear facts. Population of bears per state
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
#7882999
06/12/23 06:48 AM
06/12/23 06:48 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
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The PA population is currently listed at about 18,000 black bears by the Game Commission and the population has been growing steadily for thirty years. We kill about 3,500 a year and hunting seasons and areas have been expanding to try and stabilize the population and reduce conflicts with humans
Eh...wot?
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Re: The bear facts. Population of bears per state
[Re: KeithC]
#7883000
06/12/23 06:50 AM
06/12/23 06:50 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
Lugnut
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
SEPA
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I believe Ohio's bear population is much higher than 100 bears. I have seen a bear on my street 4 times, once here on my farm and once 20 some feet from my farm. I have found bear hair and scat in my black raspberries. I saw a bear outside of Fresno, Ohio too. My father had a bear go through his neighborhood, that was seen many dozens of times, 70 miles from here. I have a friends, who lives in Washington County, Ohio, who has gotten trail camera pictures of 6 different bears in a few weeks, counting cubs. I've talked to 4 other people who saw bears in different places in Ohio too. I very much doubt we were lucky enough to see some of the only 100 bears supposedly scattered across a state as large as Ohio. I would guess there are over 1000 bears in Ohio.
A quick search of news reports shows many dozens of bear sightings in counties the official Ohio site says have had no sightings in the years the sightings were reported by the news. It's sloppy work by ODNR at best, if not intentional fabrication to mislead the public.
Most of the other states have unbelievably low numbers of bears listed too.
Keith I agree with this. Your DNR does not. They actually have black bears listed as endangered in Ohio.
Eh...wot?
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Re: The bear facts. Population of bears per state
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
#7883086
06/12/23 08:25 AM
06/12/23 08:25 AM
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Joined: Jan 2009
Idaho, Lemhi County
Gulo
"On The Other Hand"
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"On The Other Hand"
Joined: Jan 2009
Idaho, Lemhi County
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As a game biologist who has spent many thousands of hours trying to scientifically estimate population sizes of bears (mostly grizzly and/or brown bears) and other large game species, I'd be the first one to ask for confidence limits around those published numbers. Also, how were the estimates derived? I suspect these were wild estimates based on somebody's guesses (PIOMAs) and are not derived from empirical field data. A lot like estimates of wolf numbers. Pretty much every case I'm aware of, when effort was put out to scientifically estimate population size of large animals, they were significantly higher than PIOMA estimates from guesses.
Books for sale on Amazon, Barnes & Noble etc. Poetic Injustice The Last Hunt Wild Life Long Way Home
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Re: The bear facts. Population of bears per state
[Re: Grandpa Trapper]
#7883153
06/12/23 10:18 AM
06/12/23 10:18 AM
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Joined: Dec 2010
central arkansas
the Blak Spot
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2010
central arkansas
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I thought California would be higher
the just shall live by faith
member FTA, ATA, EAFT 1776 - the year we told a tyrant we weren't to be under a dictator Caveat ater macula
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Re: The bear facts. Population of bears per state
[Re: Lugnut]
#7883195
06/12/23 12:19 PM
06/12/23 12:19 PM
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Joined: Nov 2011
Idaho Falls, ID
Grandpa Trapper
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Nov 2011
Idaho Falls, ID
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The PA population is currently listed at about 18,000 black bears by the Game Commission and the population has been growing steadily for thirty years. We kill about 3,500 a year and hunting seasons and areas have been expanding to try and stabilize the population and reduce conflicts with humans
I believe the population several years ago was 20,000 and then took this dip. It may be going back up again.
An old man roaming the Rockies
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Re: The bear facts. Population of bears per state
[Re: Gulo]
#7883210
06/12/23 12:32 PM
06/12/23 12:32 PM
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Joined: Jan 2007
Northern Minnesota
BernieB.
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2007
Northern Minnesota
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As a game biologist who has spent many thousands of hours trying to scientifically estimate population sizes of bears (mostly grizzly and/or brown bears) and other large game species, I'd be the first one to ask for confidence limits around those published numbers. Also, how were the estimates derived? I suspect these were wild estimates based on somebody's guesses (PIOMAs) and are not derived from empirical field data. A lot like estimates of wolf numbers. Pretty much every case I'm aware of, when effort was put out to scientifically estimate population size of large animals, they were significantly higher than PIOMA estimates from guesses. Pretty sure someone pulled them out of a hat to get clicks. I have seen these same numbers going around for nearly 20 years.
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