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News Release

Bear euthanized after venturing into Jacksonville neighborhood

May 4, 2007
Contact: Karen Parker (386) 758-0525

A bear that ventured into a Jacksonville neighborhood Friday was too comfortable around people to return to the wild. Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) officials had no choice but to euthanize the animal.

“Public safety has to be our highest priority,” said Karen Parker, spokeswoman for the FWC. “We had relocated the bear several times in the past, and it continued to return to residential areas. That made it a potentially dangerous animal, leaving us no option but to euthanize the bear instead of releasing him as we had planned to do.”

The first time the bear, designated N-36 by the tag in his ear, got into conflict with the human population was in December 2005 when the FWC captured him in Seminole County and moved him to the Ocala National Forest. He then reappeared in Green Cove Springs in June 2006 and was returned to Ocala.

At the scene of Friday’s Jacksonville incident, FWC biologists thought they would be relocating him to the Osceola National Forest in Columbia County, but the animal’s record indicated that course of action could have placed people at risk.

“It was a difficult decision. Our biologists hated to have to put this animal down. However, we have to face reality and think about public safety,” Parker said.

Biologists determined that at some point in the bear’s life, people fed him, even though that is illegal. As a result, the animal lost his natural fear of people and continued to show up in neighborhoods. It could have been just a matter of time before something much more tragic than the bear’s humane euthanasia happened, Parker said.

“When a bear is fed, either intentionally or unintentionally, this can be the consequence,” Parker said. “Please, don’t feed bears. Enjoy them from a distance, but do not feed them.”

It is illegal to feed bears intentionally. However, the animals also can get into garbage cans or pet food left out in back yards. Bears also raid bird feeders.

FWC has a “Living with Bears” brochure available for downloading at MyFWC.com/bear/brochures/Livin_Bear_Cntry.pdf. This brochure gives homeowners good information about what to do if they see a bear.

While there are no documented bear attacks in Florida, black bears are large, powerful creatures.

“Even though they appear gentle, bears, like alligators, can become habituated and begin to associate humans with food,” Parker said. “We humanely euthanized the bear this afternoon.”

 

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