British Columbia

Grizzly bear sow, 2 cubs trapped and relocated after moving into Nelson, B.C., area

A female grizzly bear and her two older cubs have been trapped and relocated after frequenting areas around Nelson in southeastern British Columbia.

WildSafeBC says 'super unusual' event might be due to abundance of unpicked fruit in the area

A female grizzly lay sedated on the ground.
A sedated grizzly sow is pictured before she and her two cubs were relocated from near Nelson, B.C., to a more suitable wilderness area. (Lisa Thomson/The Canadian Press)

A female grizzly bear and her two older cubs have been trapped and relocated after frequenting areas around Nelson in southeastern British Columbia.

Lisa Thomson, the regional co-ordinator with conservation charity WildSafeBC, says the trio was spotted about a week ago and had begun moving closer to town.

She says it was "super unusual" because grizzlies prefer to be in the mountains, but they may have been attracted to an abundance of fruit left hanging on trees in the Nelson area.

As the bears began to move into neighbourhoods and people's backyards, she says there was a risk they could become habituated to humans and conditioned to the available food.

Thomson says a bear biologist from Cranbrook, B.C., was called in and provincial officials, including conservation officers and those with B.C.'s Fish and Wildlife branch, worked on a plan to trap and relocate the three bears.

She says the operation went safely and smoothly, and the bears have been relocated to an area with plenty of shelter and natural food sources.

A radio collar has been placed on the sow and the male cubs have been tagged.

The cubs were nearly as tall as their mother and appeared to be about 2½ years old, Thomson says, adding all of the bears appeared to be in "great shape."