(BDN) -- It’s a little bit early, but one of Maine’s most iconic animals is awake and on the hunt for food.
Black bears, except for those in the colder, snow-covered northern areas, are coming out of hibernation sooner than usual, thanks to the warm, mild winter in most of the state, according to Maine’s bear biologist.
Their early arrival on the scene is catching people off guard, and bears are taking advantage of bird feeders and unsecured trash cans. The Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife has already had a handful of complaints about bear raids, said Caitlin Drasher, the state’s bear biologist.
“It’s too early for severe or chronic issues (between bears and people). We try not to move bears because they usually just come back,” Drasher said.
It’s better to try to scare them off and to remove what is attracting them to a person’s yard, she said.
Lone males and females, including those with yearling cubs, started coming out of hibernation in mid-March, an entire month sooner than usual. Sows with new cubs are just starting to come out, but might stay in their dens a little longer if the weather deteriorates again, Drasher said.
Bears have been known to leave their dens in winter to take a stroll on a warm, sunny day, but they go back to hibernating when there’s no evident food. Once the bears start eating, they stay awake, she said.
Bears will eat early vegetation such as skunk cabbage and sedges when they first come out of hibernation, but it’s generally a difficult time of year for food. Spring temperature drops can kill early vegetation, which adds to their problems.
“The bears were in great shape in the fall when they went into hibernation and their weights are higher this spring than what they would be in a lean year,” Drasher said.
Last fall was a banner year for acorns so there are still some of those around this spring, plus lots of early vegetation.
But it’s much easier to stroll into a yard and snag a full bird feeder or raid unsecured trash cans, which means bears and humans get uncomfortably close to each other.
Here are some tips from Drasher and the MDIF&W:
Maine really doesn’t have a lot of bear-human conflicts, said Dresher, who came to the state in January from Connecticut where there were dozens more. She highlighted Maine’s vast forested areas and its hunting and trapping seasons as the primary reasons.
Connecticut outlawed bear hunting several decades ago, but there are certain circumstances in which it is legal to kill one, including to defend human life or to protect farm animals, according to the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection.