(Crohn)-The Ministry of Fish and Wildlife in California said that a female female who is responsible for attacking the cart in the Eagle Point camp in Zamer Pay Governmental Park on June 22 was disposed of.
The attack occurred at 4:30 am, when the bear stormed the cart.
“After the bear woke up in an attempt to enter, the cart tried to intimidate the bear by hitting the pots and pans, screaming on the bear and making a high noise,” CDFW said. “Without deterrence, the bear imposed its way to the trailer and is passed on the cart, leaving it cuts and bruises on its arms and hand and requires an accompanying trip to the hospital.”
Later that morning, the bear himself stormed the cart with adolescents who sleep inside, alleged that more people were seen bothering with more people inside the camp itself.
The agency said that a California guard is a guard in the Eagle Point camp on June 23 and the animal’s calm, according to CDFW regulations. The DNA test confirmed that the bear was responsible for the attack.
CDFW and California State Parks have been working on the bear trap since June 17, due to the aggressive nature of the animal. Since the spring, the bear has created conflicts with humans over and over again by trying to storm homes and cars on the Cascade road in South Lake Tahoe and in the Eagle Point camp. On June 10, the bear entered a car with a child installed in the safety seat.
CDFW said: “The bear was not responding to multiple attempts to light the regions of the human being,” CDFW said. “The bear has been threatened by four different agencies, including CDFW, state parks, and American forest service on at least seven different occasions, yet the conflict behavior continued.”
CDFW said that the 5 -month -old cubs were arrested and transferred to a facility to rehabilitate wildlife in northern California in the hope that they will be rehabilitated and returned to the wilderness. Morgan Kelgour, regional director in the central northern region of CDFW, said the mother’s features can be transferred to her youngsters.
“Cubs learn the bear everything from their mothers – a good and both bad behavior.” “The mother who is constantly searching for the areas that a person occupies for abnormal food sources, and explodes in homes and vehicles, learn this behavior for its cubs and perpetuates another generation of human conflict.
Kelgour said that there is nothing that state garden officials can do in a different way to prevent this result.
She said: “As a professional in wildlife who devote our professional life to the health and welfare of fish and wildlife in California, essential killing is a measure of the last of the last.” “However, our first responsibility still protects human life and the safety of the Tahoe region.”