Northeastern California Black Bear

In collaboration with Humboldt State University, the Integral Ecology Research Center, and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW), SCI Foundation will help shed light on bear demographics in northern California. Researchers intend to determine how black bears from Nevada and Oregon are entering the Warner Mountains inside the Modoc National Forest.

Species involved: Black Bear

Project partners: Integral Ecology Research Center, Humboldt State University, California Department of Fish and Wildlife

Total SCIF Investment: $50,000 (Funded by HLF) (Future funding need: $50,000)

Year SCIF began involvement: 2017 (Project timeline: 2017-2018)

Project Objectives

  1. Estimate abundance and sex ratio of black bears in northeastern California.
  2. Collect and build a database of bear DNA within the study area and estimate emigration rate.
  3. Engage local stakeholders in potential bear harvest management.

Anticipated Outcomes

This project will help determine when a black bear hunting season can potentially be established in the northeast counties of California. In addition, comparative evaluation of survey methods will guide future management actions.

Recent Project Update

We received a final report on the abundance and demographic surveys of black bears in California. This study used camera surveys to estimate abundance of bears in an area that was being considered for opening of bear harvest and was close to a larger area being surveyed by CDFW. The researchers placed 40 camera survey stations and monitored over 7‐8 weeks in the late summer and fall of 2017. They estimated bear density at 0.09 bears/km2 and found that observed bear density was highest at mid‐elevations and that bears were more abundant closer to primary roads. In addition to bears, the researchers documented 17 other species on camera, including mountain lions, badgers, bobcats, and spotted skunks.

Since 2000, SCI Foundation has provided more than $80 million to promote science-based conservation through wildlife research, capacity building in governments, youth and teacher education, and humanitarian programs that show the importance of the hunting community in society around the world. Growth of SCI Foundation has continued to gain momentum through charitable donations from SCI members and direct grants from local chapters and the SCI organization. Throughout the world, SCI’s approximately 50,000 members and 190 chapters contribute time, talent, and financial support to local, national, and international projects.

Company

About
Directors and Staff
Careers
Contact

How to Help

Make Your Donation
Monthly Giving
Estate/Planned Giving
AmazonSmile

Programs

Wildlife Conservation
Outdoor Education
Humanitarian Services

4800 W. Gates Pass Rd, Tucson, AZ 85745
520.620.1220
scifoundation@safariclub.org