OSU graduate
students conduct
black bear
population studies
- By Sean HubbardPosted Mar. 30, 2015 at 3:00 PM
Updated at 6:57 PM
STILLWATER
As the weather warms and vegetation begins to grow,
the black bears living in southeastern Oklahoma will
begin to come out of their dens.
Before they do, however, graduate students in
Oklahoma State University’s Department of Natural
Resource Ecology and Management, went to the
known locations of several bears to gather some
information. Morgan Pfander, doing her graduate
research on the bear population in and around
the Ouachita Mountains, recently led a crew of
nearly 20 to check on a momma bear and her cub.
“We record weight,
chest girth, sex
and distinguishing
marks for the cubs,”
Pfander said. “We
also give it a PIT
tag, a passive integrated transponder, which we
can scan for identification purposes if we ever
catch the cub again.”
To date, the researchers have 66 bears
marked with the central objective of
determining the current population status of
American black bear in southeast Oklahoma.
“I am in the field throughout the year, running
trap lines in the summer to capture bears for
the mark/recapture portion of my study,
tracking collared bears to their dens in late
winter, and visiting dens in late spring to
collect reproduction data and vegetation
measurements at the den sites,” Pfander said.
Oklahoma black bears were all but eliminated
by the early 1900s, but recent decades have
seen bears recolonize in portions of their old
stomping grounds. After initial studies on
the species’ demographics and range, the
Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation
opened a hunting season on the bears in 2009.
Questions soon arose regarding the effects
of the hunting season on the population, leading
to the funding of several graduate projects,
including Pfander’s.
“Although we only have preliminary data,
we are finding a female-biased sex ratio,”
she said. “Ten years ago they didn’t find
that the sex ratio was statistically different
from 1-to-1.”
Female-biased sex
ratios have been noted in other core habitat
areas of well-established black bear
populations, so the thought is the population
has “settled in” a bit more since the early
studies, when the bears were just beginning
to reestablish themselves in the state.
“There are not many places where a large
carnivore species has been able to naturally
recolonize part of its former range, but
it has here in Oklahoma,” Pfander said.
“The timeline of this recolonization and
the implementation of a hunting season
presents us with a unique combination of
demographic influences, as well.”
It will not be long before the bears come
out of hibernation and start their cycle all
over again. Females will breed in the
summer, but delay the implantation of
the blastocyst until the fall, allowing
them to give birth in late winter during
hibernation.
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Monday, March 30, 2015
LIke in so much of the USA, Black Bears were virtually gone from Oklahoma at the turn of the 20th century.............In the late 1960s, the bears began making a comeback in Oklahoma after the successful reintroduction of 250 black bears in the Ouachita and Ozark Mountains of Arkansas..... That initial rewilding from northern Minnesota and Manitoba, Canada grew to several thousand bears in the mountains of Arkansas, which then expanded into southwest Missouri and eastern Oklahoma.......It is estimated that Oklahoma now houses some 500-1000 bruins with a hunting season that has been in effect since 2009...............Oklahoma State University has been studying the Bears and was excited to announce that female to male sex ratio of the bears has tilted female which suggests a stable population forming in the state
http://www.ardmoreite.com/article/20150330/NEWS/150339968
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