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Junior the bear settled under a suburban LA home. Why that’s a conservation win.

Bears, coyotes, and mountain lions are nothing new here in Los Angeles, where all the glitzy boulevards seem to begin or end in mountain wilderness. But there’s been an upsurge recently in bear sightings and excitement: bears under porches, bears opening doors, bears rolling around in backyard kiddie pools.

The foothill suburb of Sierra Madre is a “hot spot”: There were 91 sightings from March through May, according to the Los Angeles Daily News. And the latest sighting, a video of “Junior” meandering down a sidewalk in broad daylight near where he’s taken up residence in a crawl space under a home, went viral this week.

Why We Wrote This

The proliferation of bear sightings in the nation’s second-largest metropolitan area creates viral videos and TV news fodder that charm humans. And underlying the excitement is an environmental victory.

State wildlife officials acknowledge a marked increase in sightings. But an actual increase in bear-human encounters? They aren’t sure it isn’t just increased awareness – through improved reporting, home security cameras, and social media. 

Often forgotten is that a healthy bear population means environmental conservation is working. Steve Searles, a California bear expert, sees increased sightings as good news: “If you have mountain lions, gray fox, bears, I think it’s the coolest thing in the world because it gives me some hope that [we haven’t destroyed it all].” 

“Junior” meanders down a residential sidewalk in Sierra Madre, California, unbothered by whoever is recording his stroll from the safety of a car. The viral video of the large black bear is the latest in what seems like a steady stream of bear encounters in the greater Los Angeles area.  

Junior got his name from a couple under whose home the bear has decided to nest, and this week uniformed officers were checking out the property while local news outlets reported from the couple’s front lawn about whether the bear will be removed. 

Sierra Madre, which sits in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains on the eastern edge of LA, is a “hot spot” for human-black bear interactions. Police in this 3-square-mile suburb received 307 calls about bears in 2023 – triple that of the year before; and there were 91 from March through May this year, the Los Angeles Daily News reported in June. 

Why We Wrote This

The proliferation of bear sightings in the nation’s second-largest metropolitan area creates viral videos and TV news fodder that charm humans. And underlying the excitement is an environmental victory.

A less formal survey (internet search) highlights an abundance of LA-area bear videos: One bear cools off in a backyard kiddie pool in Monrovia, also in the San Gabriel foothills, on a 108-degree day. Another, a little farther west, rummages through trash cans in Pacific Palisades. And just last Sunday the Los Angeles Times ran a Page 1 story about bears’ ability to open doors.

National Park Service/AP/File

A 210-pound black bear was caught in a natural area of the Santa Monica Mountains near Los Angeles in May 2023. It was the first National Park Service capture and radio-collaring of a bear in that urban national park, where mountain lions have been studied for decades.

Generally speaking, says a spokesperson for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, trash is the greatest lure. And bears will return to places where they’ve been successful before – one bear, for instance, has been traveling back and forth for months between the San Gabriel Mountains and Malibu, where the county meets the sea. 

With 40 million people, and between 50,000 and 80,000 bears roaming the state, human-bear encounters here are not novel – more than 6,000 incidents of bear-human conflict were reported from 2017 through 2022, more than doubling in the last two years of that period.   

Officials say it may just be as much increased awareness – through improved reporting, home security cameras, and social media – as it is an increase in bear-human encounters.

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