More Studies on Attitudes
Toward Bears Conducted by Responsive
Management
The Public and
Grizzly Bear Reintroduction in the Bitterroot Mountains of
Central Idaho (1995)
New Hampshire
Residents' Opinions and Attitudes Toward Deer, Moose and Bear
in New Hampshire (1995)
Washington
Residents' Opinions on Grizzly Bear Recovery in the North
Cascades Mountains (1996)
Public Opinion on
and Attitudes Toward Reintroducing Grizzly Bears to the
Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness Area of Idaho and Montana
(1997)
Public Attitudes
Toward Grizzly Bear Management in Wyoming (2001)
Public Attitudes
Toward Black Bear Management in Maryland (2004)
New Hampshire
Residents' and Hunters' Opinions on the Status and Management
of Big Game Populations (2004)
West Virginia
Residents' Opinions on Black Bears and Black Bear Hunting
(2006)
Public Opinion and
Knowledge Survey Regarding Grizzly Bears in the Cabinet-Yaak
Ecosystem (2008) (5.05MB
PDF)
............................
To see more studies
conducted by Responsive Management, including full reports in
downloadable PDF form, visit our website. A listing of Responsive
Management's recent and current projects can be found
here (372K
PDF). | |
RESPONSIVE
MANAGEMENT recently completed a major
study to measure public knowledge of and attitudes
toward black bears to help the Pennsylvania Game
Commission (PGC) meet its goals for successfully
managing the species in Pennsylvania. Areas of inquiry
include attitudes about black bears in general, opinions
on black bear population levels, opinions on the hunting
of black bears and black bear management, experience
with human-bear conflicts, and knowledge of black bears
and sources of information. Pennsylvania's
black bear population has increased substantially
in recent decades, and black bears are now near record
numbers in many areas of the state, according to the
PGC. At the same time, more people are moving into areas
of the state occupied by black bears, resulting in more
human-bear encounters. Public education on species
management, the habits of bears, and how to handle bear
encounters has therefore become more important than
ever. Equally important is the need to
integrate the biological and human aspects of black bear
management. In this study, Responsive Management's
research team integrated geographic information system
(GIS) data with census block group data so that a
statistically valid study sample of Pennsylvania
residents age 18 and older could be drawn based on
Pennsylvania's wildlife management units (WMUs). This
methodology will help state wildlife professionals to
more effectively manage the species by integrating
findings regarding public opinion and knowledge with the
goals of the state's Black Bear Management Plan on a
per-WMU basis.

There are 22
WMUs in Pennsylvania, and for this study they were
grouped into 5 regions, as shown in the above map:
Western, North Central, South Central, Northeastern, and
Southeastern. These regions were created for this study
alone and have no relation to the PGC's administrative
regions. Information on a per-WMU basis
was obtained for all but the Western and Southeastern
Regions, which have lower bear densities than the other
regions and therefore were of slightly less importance
to the study; for these two regions, information was
obtained at the regional level. For the remaining WMUs,
the sample size was large enough that comparing
results between WMUs was possible. The
researchers obtained 4,411 completed interviews.
Findings are reported at a 95% confidence interval. For
the entire sample, the sampling error is at most plus or
minus 1.48 percentage points. This means that, if the
survey were conducted 100 times on different samples
that were selected in the same way, the findings of 95
out of the 100 surveys would fall within plus or minus
1.48 percentage points of each other.
One major finding of the study was that
59% of Pennsylvania residents -- hunters and non-hunters
alike -- think that the black bear population in their
county should remain the same. "Most populations
appear to be at or slightly above social carrying
capacity," said PGC Wildlife Management Director Calvin
DuBrock. At least 50% of residents in each
WMU want bear populations to stay the same. In some
WMUs, however, that percentage was only at or slightly
above 50% (WMUs 2F, 2G, and 3A), whereas in others it
exceeded 60% (WMUs 3D, 4C, and 4E). Regarding levels of
opposition to a stable black bear population, results
among the WMUs were similar, but residents wanted
opposite outcomes depending on the WMU in which they
lived. For example, WMUs 2G and 4B both had about 43%
opposition to the stable population. Those opposed in
WMU 2G, in the center of Pennsylvania's black bear
range, tended to want a smaller population; those
opposed in WMU 4B, on the periphery of Pennsylvania's
black bear range, tended to want a larger population.

It appears
that most residents want some distance between
themselves and black bears but are otherwise amenable to
having them in their county: 15% are comfortable with
having black bears in their yard; 24% do not want them
in their yard but are comfortable having them in their
township; 40% say that they want black bears in their
county, but not in their township or city; and 21% are
uncomfortable having black bears in their county at all.
Respondents from the North Central and South Central
Regions exhibit the most comfort with having black bears
around, whereas respondents from the Western and
Southeastern Regions exhibit the least
comfort. Other findings of the study
include the following:
-- Self-professed
knowledge about black bears among Pennsylvania residents
is low: 27% say that they know a great deal or moderate
amount (with only 3% saying that they know a great
deal), and 73% say that they know a little or nothing.
Residents from the North Central, South Central, and
Northeastern Regions are slightly more likely than
respondents from the Western and Southeastern Regions to
say that they know a great deal or moderate amount about
black bears. -- The large majority of
Pennsylvania residents (70%) support the legal,
regulated hunting of black bears, while 23% oppose; 7%
don't know. Respondents from the North Central and South
Central Regions are slightly more likely than
respondents from other regions to support hunting of
black bears. Conversely, respondents from the
Southeastern Region are slightly more likely than
respondents from other regions to oppose hunting of
black bears. -- Common reasons for
supporting the hunting of black bears include that
hunting is the best way to control black bear
populations (49% of those who support), that population
control is needed (34%), that the respondent simply is
not opposed to hunting in general (18%), and that
hunting black bears in Pennsylvania is a tradition
(13%). The feeling that black bears threaten human
safety is not a particularly important reason - only 7%
of those who support hunting of black bears gave this
reason for supporting black bear
hunting. -- The most common reason for
opposing the hunting of black bears is a general
opposition to hunting - the top reason by far at 57% of
those who oppose. Other common reasons (but well below
the general opposition to hunting) are the respondent's
feeling that other methods of population control are
better (16%), an opposition to trophy hunting (8%), and
that the black bear population is too low (7%), among
others.
-- The large
majority of residents (79%) agree that black bears
should be managed to control their population size; even
in the southeast portion of the state, where bears and
human-bear conflicts are relatively uncommon, 77% of
respondents felt this way. Meanwhile, 14% oppose such
management. -- Regarding nuisance
bears, 5% of respondents report experiencing property
damage and/or other problems with black bears at their
primary home within the previous 2 years. North Central
Region respondents are the most likely to have had
problems with black bears in the past 2 years; Western
and Southeastern Region respondents are the least likely
to have had problems. -- There is
overwhelming support for non-lethal control of nuisance
black bears in different situations. The most support is
for capturing and relocating a bear that is causing
property damage (97%), followed by using non-lethal
repellents (e.g., pepper spray, rubber ammunition)
(91%), capturing and relocating a bear that has
attempted to enter or has actually entered a building
(88%), and capturing and relocating a bear that has
caused agricultural damage (87%). The full
report, including a detailed explanation of the study
methodology and correlations among individual responses
and among the regions designated for this study, is
available here (1.83MB PDF). A
printable version of this article can be downloaded
here (937KB
PDF).
PHOTOS: JOHN AND KAREN HOLLINGSWORTH / USFWS; HAL
KORBER / PENNSYLVANIA GAME COMMISSION.
Responsive
Management130 Franklin Street |
Harrisonburg, Virginia 22801 | 540-432-1888
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