NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks with Kerry Gunther, the Bear Management Biologist for Yellowstone National Park, about the traffic jams caused by tourists gawking at grizzly bears.
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Yellowstone National Park visitor surprisingly defended for standing too close to bison during dangerous encounter
In a rare twist, one Yellowstone National Park visitor dangerously close to bison was defended by witnesses who said it ...
There's nothing like seeing a rumbling herd of bison. If there was a place to go to see North America’s largest land animal, it would be Yellowstone. Somewhere around 5,000 bison call Yellowstone ...
The Trump administration announced a final rule to rescind the Biden-era Conservation and Landscape Health rule, also known ...
See wild icons that define the American landscape and the Explorers urgently pursuing their protection. California is home ...
Warning: This article contains spoilers for the first episode of Dutton Ranch. The first two episodes of the new Yellowstone spin-off series Dutton Ranch have premiered on Paramount+ and the show ...
Deep within Romania’s Făgăraș Mountains, a vast, untouched forest of ancient woodland teems with wildlife. Could this be the ...
This article was published before the grizzly bear incident that left a Florida hiker dead in Glacier National Park. Read ...
In April, the Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior Chippewa reached the three-year mark of raising bison as part of a broader ...
In Yellowstone, Gunther said he relies on 10 professional staff to keep 5 million visitors each summer out of grizzly trouble. The park logged 602 grizzly jams (and another 922 black bear jams) in ...
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