Taken from the Montana Fish Wildlife & Parks site:
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Headlines - Region 1
A Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks employee was bitten by a black bear this morning during a trapping operation in the South Fork of the Flathead River Drainage above Hungry Horse Reservoir.
Clay Miller, accompanied by fellow employees Rick Mace and Erik Wenum, was approaching the bear with a tranquilizer pole that is used to administer a tranquilizer drug. The bear appeared to be caught and held securely in the cable foot snare that had been set to capture grizzly bears as part of the Northern Continental Divide (NCDE) grizzly bear monitoring program. When Miller approached, the bear charged to the end of the snare. The bear then retreated, but charged a second time and escaped from the snare. The bear charged Miller, biting him in the elbow. Miller pushed the bear aside and the bear ran away. This all took place in a few seconds. The men estimated that the black bear weighed about 250 pounds.
Mace immediately transported Miller to the North Valley Hospital Emergency Room in Whitefish. Miller’s elbow injury was examined by a physician. He was treated with antibiotics and discharged.
FWP has begun to investigate the trap site and review the trapping methods used in the project. This is the only human injury sustained during the last two decades of bear monitoring and research in western Montana.
Clay Miller is a wildlife technician on the FWP portion of the NCDE grizzly bear monitoring project. Wildlife Biologist Rick Mace is the project leader, and Erik Wenum is FWP’s Wildlife Conflict Specialist.
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Headlines - Region 1
A Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks employee was bitten by a black bear this morning during a trapping operation in the South Fork of the Flathead River Drainage above Hungry Horse Reservoir.
Clay Miller, accompanied by fellow employees Rick Mace and Erik Wenum, was approaching the bear with a tranquilizer pole that is used to administer a tranquilizer drug. The bear appeared to be caught and held securely in the cable foot snare that had been set to capture grizzly bears as part of the Northern Continental Divide (NCDE) grizzly bear monitoring program. When Miller approached, the bear charged to the end of the snare. The bear then retreated, but charged a second time and escaped from the snare. The bear charged Miller, biting him in the elbow. Miller pushed the bear aside and the bear ran away. This all took place in a few seconds. The men estimated that the black bear weighed about 250 pounds.
Mace immediately transported Miller to the North Valley Hospital Emergency Room in Whitefish. Miller’s elbow injury was examined by a physician. He was treated with antibiotics and discharged.
FWP has begun to investigate the trap site and review the trapping methods used in the project. This is the only human injury sustained during the last two decades of bear monitoring and research in western Montana.
Clay Miller is a wildlife technician on the FWP portion of the NCDE grizzly bear monitoring project. Wildlife Biologist Rick Mace is the project leader, and Erik Wenum is FWP’s Wildlife Conflict Specialist.