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Two Montana grizzly bears trucked to Wyoming to bolster genetic diversity, help states’ delisting case

One bear got dropped off at Togwotee Pass and another along a remote shoreline of Yellowstone Lake.

A subadult male grizzly bear runs out of a camera trap in a remote area along the shoreline of Yellowstone Lake. The bear was brought in from northern Montana to bolster the genetic diversity of the Yellowstone's region's grizzlies. (Screenshot from National Park Service video)

by Mike Koshmrl, WyoFile

To increase the genetic diversity of an island population of grizzly bears, Wyoming and Montana wildlife managers recently worked together to import fresh bloodlines into the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.

Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon and Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte sent word on Friday that two grizzlies had been moved from northern Montana’s Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem (sprawling out from Glacier National Park) to the Yellowstone region in late July. The operation, which was anticipated for months, imported a subadult female grizzly to the Togwotee Pass area on July 30 and a subadult male grizzly to a remote corner of southeastern Yellowstone National Park the following day. 

Future operations could move additional grizzlies north from Wyoming into Montana, Gordon said in a video message. Bears have already been documented moving south to north without human intervention, but not in the opposite direction — toward the isolated Yellowstone population.

“This arrangement is critical to delisting the grizzly bear in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem,” Wyoming’s governor said. “Today’s effort demonstrates our ability to further link genetics and maintain healthy populations of grizzly bears.”

Trucking bears from one ecosystem to another came about because of a judge’s decision. 

After the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service turned over jurisdiction of Yellowstone-area grizzly bears to the states of Wyoming, Montana and Idaho in 2017, environmental groups sued and won. The case was decided partly on genetic diversity concerns, and the ruling was upheld by the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco. 

Despite the court’s ruling, biologists most familiar with the Greater Yellowstone population say the current level of genetic diversity is not “in dire straits,” Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team Leader Frank van Manen told WyoFile in late 2023. 

“We have a little bit lower genetic diversity than other populations, but it’s not declining further,” he said. “It’s moderate genetic diversity, is how I would classify it.”

Grizzly bears, which once numbered an estimated 50,000 animals in the Lower 48, were first listed as protected animals under the Endangered Species Act in 1975. The regional population has steadily grown since it bottomed out during the 1980s, when there were as few as 136 of the bruins remaining. Nowadays there are an estimated 1,000-plus bears, and they’ve occupied much of the mountainous habitat in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, where grizzlies are likely to stay out of trouble. 

The governors’ announcement pressured the Fish and Wildlife Service to proceed with delisting grizzlies in the Yellowstone region. The agency announced late last month that it’s pushed back its timeline again, and now does not anticipate making any decisions until January.

Just 35 miles separate the occupied ranges of grizzly bears in the Greater Yellowstone and Northern Continental Divide ecosystems. In the absence of a bear being documented moving north to south, wildlife managers have trucked in two young grizzlies. (Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team)

“Wyoming’s grizzly bear recovery efforts are monumental, expensive and frustrating,” Gordon said. “We spend about $2 million a year managing this bear, and yet time and time again we meet a bar set by a court only to see that target moved over again.” 

Notably, the states’ translocation of bears will only work to shore up any lingering genetic diversity concerns if the two animals brought to Wyoming successfully reproduce. Wildlife managers fit the bruins with GPS collars and will continue regular genetic monitoring to ascertain if that happens. 

Environmental groups that have litigated grizzly bear management have indicated that trucking animals into the Yellowstone region does not placate their concerns.

“My perspective would be that it undermines their claim of recovery, if they have to translocate bears,” Western Environmental Law Center senior attorney Matthew Bishop told WyoFile in late 2023. “The goal should really be to get bears back in the Bitterroot [recovery area], and get some connectivity between subpopulations. Then maybe start thinking about delisting and recovery, but I don’t think we’re there yet.”


This article was originally published by WyoFile and is republished here with permission. WyoFile is an independent nonprofit news organization focused on Wyoming people, places and policy.

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