Survey suggests grizzly numbers have doubled in parts of Alberta Rockies since 2005
A new survey suggests grizzly bear numbers in Alberta’s central Rocky Mountains have doubled since 2005.
The survey says there are about 88 grizzlies in 7,300 square kilometres of summits and foothills between the Trans-Canada Highway and Highway 11 roughly 200 kilometres to the north. That’s up from 42 bears in 2005.
“That population has doubled,” said Gordon Stenhouse, the biologist who led the survey done between 2005 and 2018.
The results follow an earlier survey in another region that saw bear populations double. That work, also by Stenhouse, found that grizzly numbers in the northern Rockies had increased to 74 from 36 between 2004 and 2014.


