CPW Human-Bear Conflict Working Group

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As Colorado’s population and visitation continues to grow, and as climate-impacted food failures likely increase, Colorado’s black bears and humans are increasingly interacting. Human behavior and human presence are the primary causes of human-bear conflict. Keystone facilitated a 2-day workshop in March 2024 hosted by Colorado Parks and Wildlife (CPW), followed by a CPW Human-Bear Conflict Working Group that met monthly from June-December 2024. The workshop and working group sought to increase understanding about bear management challenges and opportunities; build relationships; identify recommendations for ongoing collaboration; and identify recommendations to enhance bear management, minimizing conflicts to the greatest extent possible while continuing to have a robust black bear population. Participants discussed collaboration and partnership; communication and education; and policy and funding. A cross-cutting theme was the opportunity for continued statewide knowledge-sharing that can support communities with relevant tools, resources, and examples for conflict minimization. Workshop and Working Group participants collectively reflected a range of roles and perspectives in human-bear conflict, including federal, state, and local partners; public, academic, and private/NGO sectors; and roles include wildlife management, policy and enforcement, education and outreach, research, grantmaking, and more.