BRAINERD — Last Thursday, on a snow-covered oak ridge a few miles south of town, a group of onlookers gathered as black bear researchers from the Minnesota DNR and medical professionals from the University of Minnesota and Medtronic Inc. performed a battery of tests on a female black bear.
The bear, roughly 7 or 8 years old, carried a GPS collar adorned with bright pink duct tape. She wore blue and yellow ear tags and was originally collared by the DNR in Camp Ripley. She chose, however, to den just outside the reservation boundaries in what would appear to us to be an unlikely spot. The den was above ground.
The 205-pound female had simply scrapped away a bit of turf beneath the branches of a fallen oak, curled up into a ball and gone to sleep.
A month or so ago, two cubs were born. Exposed the way the hibernating mama bear and cubs were, it's amazing they were able to stave off Old Man Winter.
Just how black bears survive the hibernation process, and how they are able to do so with minimal physical consequences, is being studied by a team of researchers from the U and Medtronic, in conjunction with the DNR.
Initially, the female bear was tranquilized and cubs were passed among various individuals, kept warm by being tucked into partially unzipped jackets. The cubs, the cutest little black balls of fur imaginable, looked on with bright blue eyes, occasionally yawning or bawling out as is they missed Mama. She had been carefully removed from the den and now lay atop a tarp, fully sedated and unaware of her and her cubs' popularity.
The DNR crew did its work first, performing a variety of meticulous measurements and note-taking. Their black bear objectives include mortality sources, range variability, cub production and survival and habitat requirements, among other goals.
Then the team of medical researchers went to work, studying the bear's physiology more closely.