Community Corner

Bear Roaming Mt. Tam

No one's seen it, but there's evidence of a black bear near Kent Lake

A black bear may be foraging in the Kent Lake area of the Mt. Tamalpais Watershed in Marin County, according to the Marin Municipal Water District.

A water district employee who was hiking and two bicyclists who were riding in that area in late August came upon scat about the size of what a black bear would leave, the district's watershed manager Mike Swezy said this morning.

The scat also contained Manzanita berries, which bears are known to eat, he said.

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"No one has actually seen the bear. All we've seen is what appears to be bear scat," Swezy said.

A black bear was seen in the Marin Headlands area in 2003, and there also were reports of a black bear in the Point Reyes National Seashore area last year, Swezy said.

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There is not much chance of a human encountering a bear, Swezy said.

California's black bear population has increased in recent years, and the animals have been seen in areas along the Central Coast and mountains of Southern California where they have not historically been known to live, according to the California Department of Fish and Game.

Between 25,000 and 30,000 black bears are now estimated to occupy 52,000 square miles of California, fish and game officials said.

Swezy said a black bear in Marin County would be noteworthy but not that uncommon.

QUICK FACTS:

Type: Mammal
Diet: Omnivore
Average life span in the wild: 20 years
Size: 5 to 6 ft (1.5 to 1.8 m) long
Weight: 200 to 600 lbs (90 to 270 kg)
Did you know? Black bears are not true hibernators. During their winter dormant period, though, they do not eat, drink, urinate, or defecate, but may wake up if disturbed.

— Bay City News


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