Photo: Public domain. Source.
Grizzly bears were once native to California, from the redwoods all the way to the Mexican border. Euro-American settlers wiped out the species in roughly 75 years, with the last reported grizzly bear seen near what is now Sequoia National Park in 1924. Despite that literal absence from the state, grizzlies are also still everywhere: from the California state flag, to place names (like Los Osos, meaning “the bears” in Spanish), to college football team mascots, like the Berkeley Golden Bears. A new effort led by the Yurok and Tejon Tribes is proposing to study the feasibility of bringing back our grizzlies to the state. A new bill in the legislature, SB 1305 (Richardson), would direct the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to study potentially reintroducing the species to the state through scientific, socioeconomic and tribal consultations to assess its feasibility.
Tiana Williams-Claussen, director of the Yurok Tribe Wildlife Department, and Peter Alagona, professor at UC Santa Barbara, join the program to talk about grizzlies in California, both in the past and hopefully the future.
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