Site icon West Virginia Division of Natural Resources

WVDNR reports increased nuisance bear activity around the state

News Release: September 1, 2020

BECKLEY, W.VA. — Due to an increase in nuisance bear activity being reported in West Virginia, the state Division of Natural Resources is asking residents to remove food and other attractants from around their homes to help reduce future incidents.
 
The WVDNR has received more than 1,600 bear complaints in 2020 and bears have been spotted looking for food in rural backyards, suburban neighborhoods and busy cities and around people.

“Once a bear gets a taste for human food, they can become more of a nuisance as they search it out,” said DNR wildlife biologist Colin Carpenter. “Trapping and relocating bears causing these problems is logistically impossible and biologically unsound. West Virginia has a statewide bear population, so there are no places to move large numbers of bears where they don’t currently exist.”

By taking extra precautions, residents can help prevent bears from becoming a nuisance.

Here’s how to avoid attracting bears to your neighborhood:

Bears typically rely on the soft mast of summer (blackberries, raspberries, blueberries) until hard mast (acorns, hickory nuts, beech nuts) is available in the fall. However, because of the weak soft mast crop this year, bears are taking advantage of whatever human food is available. Bears prefer natural food when it is available, which is why nuisance activity usually subsides in the fall. 

The WVDNR also would like to remind West Virginians that it is illegal to feed bears. Biologists recommend that people stay away from bears and not get between a bear and any kind of food.  

“The simplest way to avoid attracting bears to your home is to remove all food attractants from around your home before a bear becomes a problem,” Carpenter said. “All West Virginians play a role in keeping bears wild.”

To learn more about living with bears in your neighborhood, visit www.bearwise.org.

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