Bear Management
FWP Bear Specialists are busy from summer through fall managing Montana's grizzly bears. Here’s an inside look at what they deal with on a regular basis.
Grizzly bears in Montana are an iconic native species with high value to people and cultures across the state and around the world and play important roles in Montana ecosystems and economies. At the same time, they can and do injure or kill people and livestock and cause property damage and economic loss, which may disproportionately affect individuals living and working in bear country. Their potential presence is both valued and feared.
Grizzly bears historically occupied most of Montana, as described in the journals of Lewis and Clark. By the 1930s, the population in the Northern Rockies dipped below an estimated 300 bears, most of which lived in Montana near Glacier and Yellowstone national parks. In 1975, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service listed the grizzly bear in the lower 48 states as a threatened species under the federal Endangered Species Act. Recovery efforts have been underway since, following a federal recovery plan.
Currently, all grizzly bears in the lower 48 states remain federally protected as threatened.
FWP has a new online tool that provides up-to-date information on known grizzly bear mortalities across the state.
The Grizzly Bear Mortality Dashboard displays mortality information, including the various factors that contribute to grizzly bear deaths in Montana, outside of Tribal lands.
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks released the final Statewide Grizzly Bear Management Plan on Sept. 30, 2024. The release of the plan wraps up an extensive public process analyzing how the state intends to manage the iconic species while it’s federally protected and after it is turned over to state management.
The statewide Grizzly Bear Management Plan outlines how FWP plans to manage grizzly bears where they exist today, to include areas between the four recovery zones in Montana: the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem (NCDE), the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE), the Bitterroot Ecosystem and the Cabinet-Yaak Ecosystem. The plan prioritizes connectivity between ecosystems and working with people and communities to avoid conflicts with bears.
The statewide management plan replaces two existing management plans – those for western Montana and for southwest Montana – with one statewide plan. The plan recognizes that connectivity between populations of bears is an important part of their continued conservation. That connectivity can be aided with outreach and education to help communities and homeowners understand the value of securing attractants and avoiding conflicts.
The Final Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) on statewide grizzly bear management was released to the public on Sept. 11, 2024. This document analyzes two alternatives: a "no action" alternative and an alternative to "adopt a statewide grizzly bear management plan", which is the proposed alternative.
Issuing the final EIS is a key step in a process that started in December of 2022, when FWP originally released the draft EIS for two months of public comment. The draft EIS went out for an additional 30 days of public comment in February of this year to ensure partner agencies, affected county governments, and tribal agencies had a chance for review.
Executive Summary (PDF)
Final EIS (PDF)
Occupied range is an estimate of the minimum, roughly contiguous area within which bears have established residency or have demonstrated habitat use. It does not include occasional forays or low-density peripheral areas, and therefore does not represent the full extent of occurrences. Beginning in 2022, occupied range was estimated with consistent methodology in all ecosystems. Due to the smoothing inherent in the methodology, range estimates for neighboring populations may overlap, but this does not represent evidence of genetic and/or demographic connectivity.
A recovery plan for grizzly bears identified six recovery areas, or ecosystems, in the lower 48 states. These recovery zones were identified in the Grizzly Bear Recovery Plan and thought to support grizzly bears at the time of listing.
Four zones are partially or completely within Montana:
Northern Continental Divide in northwest Montana
Latest population estimate: Approximately 1,100 grizzly bears
Greater Yellowstone in portions of southwestern Montana, northwestern Wyoming, and eastern Idaho
Latest population estimate: Approximately 1,000 grizzly bears
Cabinet-Yaak in northwestern Montana and northern Idaho
Latest population estimate: Approximately 55 grizzly bears
Bitterroot in western Montana and northern Idaho
Latest population estimate: No confirmed resident bears
After decades of hard work by all Montanans, grizzly bear populations have reached and surpassed federal recovery goals in the Greater Yellowstone and Northern Continental Divide ecosystems. The number of grizzly bears in and around these two ecosystems has continued to increase slowly. Populations are expanding into areas where they have not been for decades, including connectivity areas between recovery zones. These areas include a greater percentage of working private lands and places where the human population is expanding, creating a greater potential for conflicts.
Throughout the year, FWP is called on to respond to wildlife. We maintain a table where you can track grizzly bears, black bears, mountain lions, and wolves that are trapped or otherwise captured and relocated to another area. Animals that are lethally removed in response to conflict are not represented.
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks has management plans for grizzly bears in various parts of the state to ensure the future success of conservation. These plans were developed to address the increase in number and distribution of bears in and around the Northern Continental Divide, the Greater Yellowstone, the Cabinet-Yaak, and the Bitterroot, as well as surrounding areas.
Although grizzly bears in the lower 48 states remain under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, much of the day-to-day management in Montana is done by FWP and Tribes within the bounds of what listing allows.
Western Montana Plan (PDF)
Southwest Montana Plan (PDF)
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks specialists work across the state and respond to human-bear conflicts, collaborate with landowners, and conduct education and outreach to promote safety and conflict prevention. These annual reports summarize their work in the field.
Note: Information on management response and conflicts in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem is contained in the Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team reports.
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
Grizzly bear conflict response is primarily conducted by state wildlife agencies, Tribes, and USDA Wildlife Services. These agencies work under the authority of the US Fish & Wildlife Service.
FWP staff work hand-in-hand with the public to address human-bear conflicts and promote conflict prevention measures.
It is illegal to harm, harass, or kill grizzly bears (PDF), except in cases of self defense or the defense of others.
Who do you call to report a conflict?
Livestock conflicts: USDA Wildlife Services
All other conflicts: Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks
Emergencies: 9-1-1
Preventing a conflict is easier than dealing with one
Montana is bear country. Learn how to stay safe through educational videos, events, and more outreach provided by FWP.
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, in cooperation with other state and federal agencies, initiated a program in 2004 to monitor the population trend of grizzly bears in NCDE.
The purpose of this long-term program is to monitor the vital population parameters of grizzly bears by assessing the survival and reproductive rates, and trend. This will be accomplished by radio-monitoring female grizzly bears.
This research works allows FWP biologist to monitor the survival and reproductive rates of female grizzly bears to determine population trend, monitor distribution of bears within and adjacent to the federal recovery zone, and collect information on other pertinent aspects of grizzly bear ecology.
The work of this program is summarized in the annual reports listed below.
Annual Reports
The Interagency Grizzly Bear Study Team (IGBST) is an interdisciplinary group of scientists and biologists responsible for long-term monitoring and research efforts on grizzly bears in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is responsible for the research and monitoring of the Cabinet-Yaak ecosystem population.
Peer Reviewed Scientific Publications
The influence of social identity on attitudes toward wildlife (PDF)
Bear deterrence with scare devices, a non‐lethal tool in the use‐of‐force continuum (PDF)
Grizzly Bear Movement Models Predict Habitat Use for Nearby Populations (PDF)
Enhancements To Population Monitoring of Yellowstone Grizzly Bears (PDF)
Grizzly Bear Habitat Selection Across the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem (PDF)
Predicted Connectivity Pathways Between Grizzly Bear Ecosystems in Western Montana (PDF)
The Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee (IGBC) was formed in 1983 to help ensure recovery of viable grizzly bear populations and their habitat in the lower 48 states through interagency coordination of policy, planning, management, and research.
The IGBC consists of representatives from the U.S. Forest Service, the National Park Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Geological Survey, various Tribal wildlife management agencies, and representatives of the state wildlife agencies of Idaho, Montana, Washington, and Wyoming.
FWP Bear Specialists are busy from summer through fall managing Montana's grizzly bears. Here’s an inside look at what they deal with on a regular basis.