Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Second Banff Grizzly Dies After Being Struck By Vehicle: Parks Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jun, 2019 07:42 PM

    BANFF, Alta. — Motorists in Banff National Park are being urged to heed speed limits and report wildlife sightings after the second grizzly bear in three weeks died from a vehicle strike.


    A female yearling was found Saturday limping on the road leading to the Sunshine Village ski resort, Banff resource conservation manager Bill Hunt told reporters Monday.


    The animal had an open compound fracture on her right hind leg, an injury to her right front paw and was severely emaciated. Parks Canada staff euthanized her the next day.


    Ten days earlier, someone reported a family of grizzlies around where the Trans-Canada Highway meets the Sunshine access road. They were on the wrong side of a fence meant to keep wildlife from the highway.


    "The fence along the TransCanada highway through Banff helps deter wildlife from accessing the highway. But it is not impermeable," Hunt said.


    "Motorists still need to respect speed limits and be extremely cautious on all roadways. Together we can contribute to the successful co-existence of people and wildlife."


    Parks Canada investigators found blood on the highway near where the bears were spotted, leading them to conclude there had been a vehicle strike. No one reported the collision itself to Parks Canada.


    Hunt said if motorists see animals on the highway or hit one, they should report it quickly.


    "In a case like this, even if it didn't change the outcome, it would have prevented 10 days of suffering for this animal."


    It's believed the bear that died was with a grown female and another yearling. Video images suggest the other two bears survived and are in good health, Hunt said.


    Hunt said there are more bears in the valley around this time of year because it's still snowy at high elevations. He said there have not been an abnormal number of deaths this year of other animals along the highway, such as elk or sheep.


    On June 4, a male grizzly was hit by a semi-truck on Highway 93 South near the Trans-Canada Highway in Banff.


    That was the first human-caused grizzly death in the national park in five years.


    "I'm hopeful that this is more of a coincidence than a pattern," Hunt said of the two recent deaths. "Certainly when we look over the longer-term data, we've had quite good luck in recent years."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Political Antagonists, Alberta's Jason Kenney And PM Trudeau To Meet

    OTTAWA — Alberta Premier Jason Kenney is warning that if a federal bill overhauling environmental assessments passes in its current form, it will threaten Canadian unity and there will be "an immediate constitutional challenge."

    Political Antagonists, Alberta's Jason Kenney And PM Trudeau To Meet

    Vancouver Police Arrest Suspect In Andy Livingstone Park Stabbing

    Vancouver Police Arrest Suspect In Andy Livingstone Park Stabbing
    Vancouver Police have arrested a 20-year-old man in connection to a stabbing that occurred Monday in Andy Livingstone Park.

    Vancouver Police Arrest Suspect In Andy Livingstone Park Stabbing

    Surrey RCMP Police Academy Now Seeking Applicants

    Surrey RCMP Police Academy Now Seeking Applicants
    Youth applications are being accepted from May 1-31, 2019 while adult applications will be available from May 31-July 2, 2019.

    Surrey RCMP Police Academy Now Seeking Applicants

    Canadian Study Finds No Mental Health Benefits To Eating Human Placenta

    VANCOUVER — New research debunks the supposed mental health benefits of eating your own placenta.

    Canadian Study Finds No Mental Health Benefits To Eating Human Placenta

    Strategy 'Dramatically Exceeds' Target For More MRI Exams In B.C.: Minister

    Strategy 'Dramatically Exceeds' Target For More MRI Exams In B.C.: Minister
    The B.C. Surgical and Diagnostic Imaging Strategy includes a provision to operate magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI, machines around the clock, with more than 233,000 exams done in the first year of the initiative.

    Strategy 'Dramatically Exceeds' Target For More MRI Exams In B.C.: Minister

    Get Ready For The Grind: Grouse Grind Opens For Season On Friday, May 3

    The mountainous trail is a 2.9-kilometre trail up the face of Grouse Mountain and is also referred to as 'Mother Nature's Stairmaster.'

    Get Ready For The Grind: Grouse Grind Opens For Season On Friday, May 3