Yellowstone kills aggressive bear near Heart Lake Grizzly bear Heart Lake Buckrail - Jackson Hole, news
This grizzly was showing signs of aggression and little fear as it raided campsites in the Heart Lake area of Yellowstone. (NPS)

JACKSON HOLE, WYO – Certainly it was an agonizing decision but park officials felt it necessary to put down a grizzly bear that had been causing trouble in the Heart Lake area.

On September 8, National Park Service biologists captured and killed a bear near Heart Lake in the southern part of Yellowstone National Park. The immature, male grizzly was repeatedly involved in conflicts with humans.

The bear began exhibiting bold behavior around people in 2015. At that time, Wyoming Game and Fish personnel captured the bear, tagged it, and relocated it to the Caribou-Targhee National Forest. In 2016, the same bear entered campsites in the Heart Lake area of Yellowstone and destroyed backpackers’ tents, sleeping bags, and sleeping pads. National Park Service staff attempted to change the bear’s dangerous behavior through the use of electric decoy tents, electric food sack decoys, and by hazing with bean bag rounds, rubber bullets, and cracker shells. These efforts failed. Attempts to trap the bear also failed.

Hikers reported observing the bear around campsites and investigating tents in the Heart Lake area again in 2017. On the evening of August 26, the bear forced a group of three backpackers out of their campsite near Heart Lake and consumed all of their food. In response, Yellowstone closed the area to backcountry camping on August 27, and set traps for the bear on September 1. The bear was captured and killed on the morning of September 8.