New Study Predicts Grizzly Bear Habitat Use in the Bitterroot Ecosystem of Montana and Idaho

USGS Cooperative Research Unit Corner

New Study Predicts Grizzly Bear Habitat Use in the Bitterroot Ecosystem of Montana and Idaho

A new study co-authored by scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey and Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks helps to identify where in the Bitterroot Ecosystem grizzly bears could call home through reintroduction or recolonization. The study was announced in a USGS state news release issued on September 4, 2024.

Grizzly bear

In the study, “Predicting future grizzly bear habitat use in the Bitterroot Ecosystem under recolonization and reintroduction scenarios,” the researchers predicted that grizzly bears would favor large wilderness areas and extensive multiple-use public lands in the region, especially in the northern part of the Bitterroot Ecosystem.

The research predicts that, over time, grizzly bears will move into the ecosystem, which spans part of Montana and Idaho, but exactly where and when they will arrive remains unknown. The study is a follow-up to previous research that predicted potential connectivity pathways among the existing grizzly bear populations in Montana.

“To help both people and grizzlies, wildlife managers need to know where they can expect grizzly bears to reestablish,” said Sarah Sells, USGS research ecologist and lead study author at the Montana Cooperative Wildlife Research Unit, at the University of Montana. “By using movement models, we developed for a nearby population of grizzly bears, we were able to simulate where bears might choose to go in the Bitterroot of today.”

In fact, GPS collar data from bears that have moved near or across the Bitterroot Ecosystem on their own aligned well with the study’s predicted habitat use.

Grizzly bears disappeared from the Bitterroot Ecosystem by the 1950s because of over harvesting and habitat loss. In recent years, nearby populations of grizzles have been increasing and expanding their range toward the Bitterroot. While the heart of the ecosystem is one of the largest wilderness complexes in the contiguous U.S., there have been some changes in the region since grizzlies were extirpated, namely a lot more people are there today.

“Because there is no remnant backcountry population to start from in the Bitterroot Ecosystem, reestablishment is expected to involve the presence of some grizzly bears in the more human-populated landscapes between ecosystems,” said Cecily Costello, study co-author and Montana FWP research wildlife biologist. “By predicting where bears might be in the future, our goal is to help agencies and communities prepare now so that both people and grizzly bears will thrive.”

The study predicted differences in habitat use depending on how the grizzles arrive to the Bitterroot Ecosystem, which could directly inform recovery efforts. Specifically, it predicted that if grizzly bears naturally recolonize the Bitterroot Ecosystem, their habitat use would be concentrated in Montana but over time become more uniform across the northern extent of the region in Idaho. If grizzly bears were reintroduced to the region by people, their habitat use would be more concentrated in east-central Idaho. Finally, if natural recolonization continues even if grizzly bears are reintroduced, their habitat use would be widespread across the northern half of the Bitterroot Ecosystem and surrounding areas.

Read the study for additional details and to see maps of predicted grizzly bear habitat use in the Bitterroot Ecosystem.

The ONB features articles from Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Units across the country. Working with key cooperators, including WMI, Units are leading exciting, new fish and wildlife research projects that we believe our readers will appreciate reading about. This state news release was written by Sarah Sells, ssells@usgs.gov and Michelle Collier, mcollier@usgs.gov

|
Photo Credit
Jake Davis, Revealed in Nature
|
October 15, 2024