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Grizzly Bear In Yellowstone National Park Was Just Protecting Cubs, Say Park Rangers

Grizzly Bear

MATT VOLZ   07/ 8/11 11:22 PM ET   AP

YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. — Word spread quickly through Yellowstone National Park about a fatal grizzly bear mauling – the park's first in 25 years – but few visitors at the height of tourist season seemed inclined to change their vacations because of the news.

Thousands of people streamed into the park Thursday, a day after a 57-year-old California man was attacked and killed by a female bear on a backcountry trail. Officials said the sow was only defending its cubs, had not threatened humans before, and would be left to wander the wilderness.

"This is bear country," said Elizabeth Hoffman, a tourist from California who agreed with park officials' decision not to hunt the bear. "It's got babies. If someone came after a human mother, I don't think that we'd take her from her children."

Cars jammed Yellowstone's roadways for wildlife spottings, including a 20-minute delay while motorists gawked at two black bear cubs romping in a field while their mother rooted around in the grass nearby.

By late Thursday, most tourists seemed to know about the attack. Desk clerks at hotels inside the park told arrivals that there had been a bear incident. Worried relatives called or texted other visitors. And some were surprised that rangers didn't let them know when they entered the park that one popular destination – access to iconic Artist Point – had been temporarily closed.

"They didn't say one word about it at the gate," said Leslie Finch, who was visiting with her husband and two children from Missoula, Mont. "I would have thought they'd say this area is closed. But they didn't say anything."

The attack highlighted the potential dangers, however rare, that face tourists who come in record numbers each year to a park known for its burgeoning bear population and the Old Faithful geyser.

Whenever there is a run-in or attack involving bears, park officials must decide whether the attack was defensive or an act of aggression. In Wednesday's mauling, they based their conclusion on the account of the hiker's wife, who survived, as well as their knowledge of bear behavior.

Brian and Marylyn Matayoshi, of Torrance, Calif., were hiking in a backcountry meadow along a trail a mile and a half from the trailhead when they spotted the bear foraging about 100 yards away. The couple immediately turned and began walking away, officials said.

The grizzly charged and attacked Brian Matayoshi, then went for his wife, who ran for cover behind a tree. The grizzly lifted her off the ground by the day pack she was wearing and then dropped her.

She tried to call 911 on her cell phone, but couldn't get a signal. Other hikers in the area responded to her cries for help and managed to get through to emergency officials.

Marylyn Matayoshi told rescuers that the couple surprised the sow, its cubs nearby – one of the most dangerous situations possible for humans encountering grizzlies. Park officials believe the grizzly had two six-month-old cubs, based on previous sightings in the area and cub tracks where the attack occurred.

"It was not predatory and so we see no reason to take action against the bear," said Kerry Gunther, bear management biologist for Yellowstone.

The bear had never been documented before, never been tagged, and there was no reason to believe it had interacted with humans before, said park spokesman Al Nash.

Marylyn Matayoshi escaped injury and was no longer at the park, and officials declined to reveal her whereabouts.

In Torrance, neighbor Kathy Hester said Matayoshi and his wife kept their house immaculate and recently had put in a new lawn. "They are the sweetest people you'd ever want to meet," Hester said.

Park officials called the mauling a "1-in-3-million" encounter that shouldn't condition the sow to attack again. They collected DNA samples from fur at the attack site, so they can determine if the bear is involved in another attack, Gunther said.

Decades of research has established that grizzlies, while dangerous, rarely get aggressive with people except under very predictable circumstances, said Mark Bruscino, a Wyoming state bear biologist who has investigated some 40 attacks.

Grizzlies become aggressive when they are harassed, taken by surprise up close, are defending a food source or are defending their cubs, Bruscino said.

"You can almost explain every incident that occurs with a grizzly bear around those four," he said.

A bear that fatally attacked a man and seriously injured two people at a campground east of Yellowstone last July was killed in part because the circumstances didn't neatly fit into predictable bear behavior, he said.

Hunger and internal parasites afflicted that grizzly, but investigators said they could not explain its late-night rampage through the crowded campground near Cooke City, Mont. That grizzly was captured and euthanized. Its three cubs are now in a Billings, Mont., zoo.

Wednesday's mauling was the park's first fatal grizzly attack since 1986, but the third in the region in just over a year amid ever-growing numbers of grizzlies and tourists roaming the same wild landscape. In June 2010, a grizzly just released after being tranquilized for study killed an Illinois hiker outside the park.

Brett Clark, who was visiting Yellowstone from Steamboat Springs, Colo., and Jenny Alm of Wakefield, R.I., said they wouldn't change their plans because of the attacks. Clark appeared to grow concerned when he heard the Mayatoshis were hiking in the region he had planned to visit on Friday.

"It's interesting that they were doing what we would have done," Clark said. "It doesn't worry me. I feel like those things are bound to happen in areas with high density of animals."

__

Associated Press writers Mead Gruver in Cheyenne, Wyo., and Greg Risling in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

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YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. — Word spread quickly through Yellowstone National Park about a fatal grizzly bear mauling – the park's first in 25 years – but few visitors at the he...
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, Wyo. — Word spread quickly through Yellowstone National Park about a fatal grizzly bear mauling – the park's first in 25 years – but few visitors at the he...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
garylloyd
02:19 AM on 07/13/2011
Find the bear, put it down -- what's the problem?

This animal will kill again.
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04:16 AM on 07/11/2011
I agree with the ranger's decision, and I sympathize with Mrs. Matayoshi. That said, my personal observations of people in their encounters with wild animals has been sorry. While at the Grand Canyon, people are cautioned over and over about feeding animals, getting too close, or otherwise interfering, but that is all we saw, people wanting to have their picture taken while feeding the deer. My own trip to Yellowstone saw people rolling down their windows in the presence of small bears and bison to "feed" them, this is not a petting zoo, you morons!! That is NOT Bullwinkle! It is no wonder tourists are maligned by the natives.
01:13 AM on 07/11/2011
those rangers would have been just as forgiving of that hiker had he planted six rounds in the neck of that bear from the Kimber 45 he should have been packing.
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Cory111
Life is good...
10:05 PM on 07/10/2011
Always remembering, "We are just guests here."
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Moose Luck 99
Rand Paul is a LIAR!
09:37 AM on 07/10/2011
Imagine a jury deemed Casey Anthony innocent even when she choose not to explain how her daughter died while in her care. No consequence to a life taken and yet we blame a mother grizzly for defending her cubs. If Casey Anthony had acted like this mother bear her child would have been alive today.

Where is the justice when we are the ones that have intruded into the bear's world and not the other way around? The bear should be left alone.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
03:33 PM on 07/10/2011
Rather different situations.

An inadequate case made against a human.
No case to answer for a bear.

Animals don't have much in the way of rights, if any.
As compensation, they have no responsibilities either.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jhnnxn
When discussing tax revenues don't feel, th
05:03 PM on 07/09/2011
Going off into Grizzly country unarmed is just foolish. The hiker could have been legally armed and possibly defended himself and his wife. I certainly don't blame the bear for defending its young anymore than I would blame the hiker for defending himself. The rangers' actions after the fact are perfectly justified as well since she apparently poses no more threat than any other sow with cubs.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Indrid Cold
All that glitters . . . is . . . Cold . . .
01:31 PM on 07/09/2011
Interesting note about articles like this now - reading the below comments it seems I am not the only one that was expecting something like "The bear was destroyed . . . . "

Unfortunate tragedy . . .
06:09 AM on 07/11/2011
Unfortunate tragedy and another tragedy I noted in the article ... I wonder how a motel or hotel got into public lands? National Parks, protected lands with special interests building everywhere?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
benney44
09:07 PM on 07/08/2011
Hikers know the risks when they go out in bear country. I doubt the man that was killed would want harm to come to the bear. It's a tragedy for sure and I feel sad for the family but there's no reason to compound it by killing the bear. It was the right decision.
08:15 PM on 07/08/2011
Had the situation been similar but the animal had been a wolf, you would have seen a completely different and much more heavy-handed response. We pick and choose the large predators we like and don't like based on some formula I don't understand but which I suspect is mainly irrational.
07:49 PM on 07/08/2011
There have been a lot of positive comments here & I just want to add mine. I grew up in Montana and know what it's like to always be on the watch for grizzlies. I'm very glad to see that common sense (and perhaps a bit of behavioral science?) is being applied here. All too often the immediate reaction has been to kill the bear. Now if we can just see the same logic applied to wolves (no record of human attack), bison (no record of Brucellosis transfer to cattle) and mountain lions (very rare human interaction) I'll truly believe that policies have changed for the better.
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saami
Cranky old lady
07:21 PM on 07/08/2011
If the bear were a human mother defending her children there would be no story. She was doing what she was supposed to do. I am glad she remains free.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fonsini
Let there be pie.
05:29 PM on 07/08/2011
Quote "neighbor Kathy Hester said Matayoshi and his wife kept their house immaculate and recently had put in a new lawn".

I guess that could have enraged the bear.

(Quality reporting at its finest.)
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04:52 PM on 07/08/2011
A terrible thing, yes, but there was/is no need to kill the bear. This is the only incident I can bring to mind where the bear wasn't killed after a violent encounter with a human. Yellowstone is their home, not ours.
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imtruthmonger
Mongering for the common good! Omit Mitt!
06:16 PM on 07/08/2011
The bear was allowed to live. Good!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pammiethekid
03:20 PM on 07/08/2011
Why are people posting remarks about these people having gone after the bear, or done anything of the sort? they happened upon the bear, who took them as dangerous and tried to kill them both. Can't blame the bear, but you also can't assume that these hikers did anything wrong. Hiking in bear country can get you killed, but many people do it without encountering a problem.
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imtruthmonger
Mongering for the common good! Omit Mitt!
06:18 PM on 07/08/2011
They could easily have mistakenly stepped off a curb at home and been killed by a driver who had momentarily looked away. Such a driver would likely have been released after questioning. That's why they call such tragedies "accidents."