Current:Home > StocksTraps removed after no sign of the grizzly that killed a woman near Yellowstone -RiskRadar
Traps removed after no sign of the grizzly that killed a woman near Yellowstone
View
Date:2025-04-17 21:09:06
BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — Wildlife workers on Tuesday halted their efforts to capture a grizzly bear that killed a woman over the weekend near Yellowstone National Park after finding no sign of the animal since the day of the attack.
Amie Adamson, 48, was killed Saturday morning while running or hiking alone on a forest trail about 8 miles (12.87 kilometers) west of the park, officials said. The bear was traveling with one or more cubs, and officials believe it struck Adamson during a surprise encounter before fleeing the area.
“The information that we have suggests that this was defensive behavior, and it’s completely normal and natural for grizzly bears,” said Morgan Jacobsen with Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks. “We don’t know for sure because we have no witnesses and we haven’t recovered a bear.”
Other news Bear traps set for grizzly bear after fatal attack near Yellowstone National Park Wildlife workers searching for a grizzly bear that killed a woman along a forest trail near Yellowstone National Park are setting bear traps for a third night in hopes of catching the bruin. Young black bear wanders Washington D.C. neighborhood, sparking a frenzy before being captured A young black bear gave residents of a quiet northeast Washington neighborhood a start Friday morning when they woke to find a furry interloper wandering backyards and sniffing around garbage cans. Connecticut lawmakers vote to allow people to use deadly force as the bear population grows Connecticut lawmakers voted Friday to take steps to protect people from the state’s growing bear population. Environmental groups prevail on limit to grizzly bear deaths in Wyoming cattle grazing area CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — An appeals court is sending a plan to allow continued cattle grazing in a vast, mountainous area of western Wyoming back to federal forest and wildlife officials, telling them to consider limiting how many of the area’s female grizzly bears may be killed for preying on livestocTraps made from metal culverts and baited with meat were placed around the attack site over three nights with no success.
Game wardens will continue patrolling the area for at least another week as a precaution, Jacobsen said. National forest lands surrounding the site were ordered closed until Aug. 25 barring further notice.
Her mother, Janet Adamson, said her daughter — a former teacher from Kansas who left education to backpack across part of the U.S. and later wrote a book about her experiences — “died doing what she loved.”
“Every morning she’d get up early and she’d walk, hike or run. Every morning, she just was almost in heaven,” Janet Adamson told ABC’s “Good Morning America.”
The attack occurred along a trail used by hikers, horseback riders and offroad vehicles about 8 miles (12.87 kilometers) from West Yellowstone, a busy gateway community for the national park.
Amie Adamson did not have bear spray — a deterrent wildlife experts recommend people carry in areas frequented by grizzly bears. A hiker found her body around 8 a.m. Saturday. The cause of death was excessive blood loss caused by a bear mauling, the coroner’s office said.
“She wasn’t out, you know, somewhere she shouldn’t be. It was a well-traveled trail where a lot of people hiked,” Janet Adamson said.
Tracks of a grizzly and at least one cub were found at the attack scene, and on Saturday night a trail camera captured an image of a grizzly bear with two cubs in the area. There have been no subsequent sightings, Jacobsen said.
Grizzlies are protected under U.S. law outside of Alaska. Elected officials in the Yellowstone region are pushing to allow grizzly hunting, and in February the Biden administration took a preliminary step toward ending federal protections for the animals.
More than 1,000 grizzlies roam the Yellowstone region of Montana, Idaho and Wyoming. Roughly the same number live in northwestern Montana around Glacier National Park.
Since 2010, grizzlies in and around Yellowstone have killed at least nine people. That includes a backcountry guide killed just north of West Yellowstone two years ago when he was mauled by a large grizzly bear likely defending a nearby moose carcass.
Yet attacks are exceedingly rare compared to the large number of tourists. More than 3 million people visit Yellowstone annually, and almost as many visit Glacier.
In recent years grizzlies have been expanding out of dense wilderness and into parts of Montana where they hadn’t been seen for generations, including the plains in the central part of the state and the arid Pryor Mountains along the Wyoming border.
State officials last week warned visitors and residents of grizzly bear sightings throughout the state. They implored those camping and visiting parks to carry bear spray, store their food while outside and tend to their garbage.
___
For more AP coverage of bears: https://apnews.com/hub/bears
veryGood! (51684)
Related
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Squishmallows and Build-A-Bear enter legal battle over 'copycat' plush toys: What to know
- Taylor Swift and Sabrina Carpenter Enjoy an Enchanted Dinner Out During Australian Leg of Eras Tour
- Patriots' special teams ace Matthew Slater announces retirement after 16 NFL seasons
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- American Airlines is raising bag fees and changing how customers earn frequent-flyer points
- Los Angeles Angels 3B Anthony Rendon: '[Baseball]'s never been a top priority for me.'
- Jurors can’t be replaced once deliberations begin, North Carolina appeals court rules
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Georgia House leaders signal Medicaid expansion is off the table in 2024
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Louisiana governor urges lawmakers to pass tough-on-crime legislation
- Jimmy Graham to join 4-person team intending to row across Arctic Ocean in July 2025
- Big takeaways from the TV press tour: Race, reality and uncertainty
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Horoscopes Today, February 19, 2024
- Kentucky GOP lawmaker pitches his early childhood education plan as way to head off childcare crisis
- 'Something needs to change.' Woman denied abortion in South Carolina challenges ban
Recommendation
Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
OpenAI, Chat GPT creator, unveils Sora to turn writing prompts into videos: What to know
Community remembers Sam Knopp, the student killed at a university dorm in Colorado
Ruby Franke, former '8 Passengers' family vlogger, sentenced on child abuse charges
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
Attorneys for Georgia slave descendants urge judge not to throw out their lawsuit over island zoning
Two suspects arrested after children's bodies found in Colorado storage unit, suitcase
Adult and four kids die in Missouri house fire that police deem ‘suspicious’