Banff Alberta - The biggest, baddest, bear, in Banff National Park, doesn't just eat other bears and impregnate females to demonstrate his
dominance, he also gets struck by a train and lives to tell the tale.
To say Bear 122 has a bit of a reputation would be a gross understatement, the 15-year-old bear weighs in at roughly 300 kilograms, has eaten a black bear, is
often the first bear out of hibernation, and is well known for having fathered many of the cubs in Alberta's Banff, Yoho, and Kootenay national
parks.
Steve Michel, a human wildlife conflict specialist with Banff National Park, said researchers believe "The Boss" grizzly was struck by a train
several years ago.
In spite of that, tracking data shows that the bear continues to use the railways heavily, for travel and foraging.
"He probably learned a lesson from that, making sure that he gets himself off the tracks when a train is approaching," Michel said.
According to Parks Canada mapping, the bear frequently crosses high-speed, heavy-traffic, highways, including the Trans-Canada Highway, and Highway
93S.
"I think he's actually been lucky in that he has been able to survive while utilizing these transportation corridors for so long," Michel
said.
Bear 122 has an enormous home range of more than 2,500 square kilometres and has grown "relatively habituated to humans" and their infrastructure
because of how frequently he sees and is seen by them while wandering.
"For many people it's the absolutely highlight of their visit here, if not the highlight of their life, because he's such an impressive animal to
see," Michel said.
"The interesting thing about that is, despite of all those many close-range situations where he's been observed by people on a regular basis, there's
never been any aggression on his part."
Tricia Lo.