KDVR – Colorado wildlife officials saved three orphan bear hunger in Durango last week, but officials said that the case raised some “disturbing” problems.
The Durango Police Department first posted a video on Friday about a small cub of black bear wandering in a local restaurant, to remind the residents to preserve the doors and windows guaranteed to bears.
Police said that the second cub ended in a middle school as well.
The Colorado Parks office and wildlife in Durango on Tuesday published the full account of the Cubar of the bear, and said: “We were struggling to say that everything ended without any harm.” The three cubs were suffering from severe weight loss, and the behavior showed by some people raised fears.
People chased the cubs across the city, tried to approach the pictures
Wildlife officials said that the restaurant cub was removed by an employee and ended up in a tree, where the officers rid him of his capture.
The officials said: “It was one of three cubs in that area that was all separated from each other because humans chased them,” the officials said. “While some people were interested in their well -being and contacted our office to submit reports updated on their site, others have approached this and spread them while trying to get pictures.”
The officials said this made hunting and unifying the cubs with each other “very difficult.”
Undoubtedly, orphan
The officials said when they finally arrested all the three cubs, their circumstances were “very bad.”
It was only one 10 pounds, and another was 14 pounds, and the largest was only 19 lbs.
The officials said: “This leads us to believe that they were separated from their mother several weeks ago and they were struggling to stay.” “Of all the reports we obtained from these cubs, no one has ever discovered a plantation, and our officers did not find a nearby transplant, perhaps their mother.”
Cubs were transferred to the CPW wildlife rehabilitation center in CPW in Del Norte, where they will get my weight, communicate with other cubs, and in the end they are released for a second chance in the wilderness.
CPW said that anyone who wants to report a bear scenes want to report humans who bother wildlife or need to report a human conflict can contact his office on the number 970-247-0855.