Jason Moody with the Nuxalk Nation's fisheries and wildlife program said the research shows ecotourism done right is not a driving factor in conflict between bears and humans.
British's Columbia's Lower Wolf Creek is one ... serving as a vital corridor for wildlife such as grizzly bears, elk, and migratory birds like the trumpeter swan. SEE ALSO: How and where to ...
Ranging across British Columbia’s north coast ... "In my early years it was really something to see a grizzly bear," Doug Stewart tells me. As a fisheries patrolman, Stewart has been monitoring ...
Today, scientists estimate that fewer than five grizzly bears may remain in Washington’s North Cascades, and only a few are known to live just north in British Columbia, Canada. To restore the grizzly ...
Grizzly bears that visited ecotourism areas ... conflict with people in communities downstream, a new study by British Columbia-based researchers has found. Jason Moody with the Nuxalk Nation ...
A new study has found eco-tourism had no statistical impact on conflict with humans downstream of viewing sites.Emina Ida How do you track grizzly bears in the dense forests of British Columbia’s ...
Stretching for more than 250 miles along the coast of British Columbia, the 21-million-acre ... coastal gray wolves, grizzly bears, Sitka deer, cougars, mountain goats, orca, salmon, sea lions ...
The Powder Highway of British Columbia is famous for snow and skiing. Along the snow lined (up to 70 feet of it) ribbon of road is the most cat skiing, heli skiing, lift-accessed skiing and ...
Northeast Washington and British Columbia, and the North Cascades in north-central Washington. Idaho has an estimated grizzly bear population of just 200 animals with most of those living on the ...