The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: March 21, 2025
Today: March 21, 2025

About 20% of Sweden’s brown bears to be killed in annual hunt

Brown bears with cubs cannot be hunted.
Sven-Erik Arndt/imageBROKER/Shutterstock/FILE via CNN Newsource
August 21, 2024
Issy Ronald - CNN

(CNN) — About 20% of Sweden’s brown bear population could be killed this hunting season after licenses were issued for 486 of the animals to culled, despite an outcry from conservation groups.

There’s currently an estimated 2,450 brown bears roaming the Swedish countryside, a number that has decreased in recent years because of increased licensed hunting, according to official figures released in 2023. Given the rapid decline of the bear population since 2022, that number could already be even lower.

For conservation group Sweden’s Big Five, the decision to continue issuing such high numbers of hunting licenses represents “100 years of brown bear conservation progress… being undone at an alarming speed,” it said in a statement.

About 20% of Sweden’s brown bears to be killed in annual hunt
About 20% of Sweden's brown bears to be killed in annual hunt

“Wild carnivores have to function in the ecosystem and so we’re not just talking about how many of these animals can be tolerated by humans. It’s also about how many do we need for the ecosystem to function,” Magnus Lundgren, a director at the Wild Wonders Foundation, which runs Sweden’s Big Five, told CNN Wednesday.

By the early 1900s, brown bears were almost extinct in Sweden after decades of policies that sought to eradicate them from the country.

Since then, however, strict protective measures have allowed them to reestablish themselves in their native habitat, and their population reached a peak of 3,298 in 2008.

“There has been a hundred years of trying to increase the numbers, but we see a change in the policy from the political government that is really aggressive now the last few years,” Lundgren added.

Decisions on the number of hunting licenses issued are now taken by county administrative boards, Hanna Ek, deputy head of unit at Sweden’s Environmental Protection Agency, told CNN, adding that the total number across the country this year added up to 486.

By law, several requirements must be met beforehand, Ek added, without stipulating their exact nature, and these decisions can be appealed.

“Licensed hunting is one of several tools in the Swedish management of large carnivores,” she said.

But for Lundgren and Steffan Widstrand, managing director of the Wild Wonders Foundation, the extensive use of licensed hunting is a capitulation of sorts to hunters, who have other reasons for killing bears than to manage the population.

“There are two reason hunters kill bears,” Widstrand told CNN. “One is because it’s fun or it’s exciting and there’s a macho dimension to it, I must say. And the other reason is because they want to get rid of them, as not to compete, because bears also eat moose or elk and… that’s the number one prey that (hunters) would like to kill.”

Similar policies toward wolves and lynx have also prompted an outcry from conservation groups. The Swedish Carnivore Association even filed a complaint against the country’s government for its lynx hunting policies in April, claiming that it contradicted the EU’s Habitats Directive, which classifies lynx, bears and wolves as “in need of strict protection.”

Due to these policies and the government’s recent decision to allow almost 500 hunting licenses, Sweden’s Big Five claims that the government intends to reduce the brown bear population “as close as possible to a defined minimum level… which would mean about 1,400 bears.”

Brown bears are particularly “sensitive to a high hunting pressure,” Jonas Kindberg, leader of the Scandinavian Bear Project and a researcher at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, said in a statement.

“Bears take three to four years to mature, they have only a few cubs at a time and only every two to three years,” he added. “During the hunt, it is very difficult to tell females from males, and the females are much more valuable to the population. Therefore, you risk to end up in a situation that may take a very long time to repair.”

Instead of hunting brown bears, Widstrand and Lundgren said there are other strategies that can allow them to co-exist alongside humans like using fences to separate them from livestock or encouraging ecotourists to watch the wildlife, bringing money into the local communities.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2024 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

Related Articles

Indonesia orders the halting of tourism projects linked to Trump over environmental issues Trump administration will consider redrawing boundaries of national monuments as part of energy push Baby shark mysteriously born in aquarium tank housing only females Think you can bellow like a stag? German hunters compete in a national deer calling championship
Share This

Popular

Asia|Business|Economy|Environment|Political

Most Japan firms stay committed to diversity despite US moves, Reuters survey shows

Most Japan firms stay committed to diversity despite US moves, Reuters survey shows
Economy|Environment|Political|US

Trump administration to open more Alaska acres for oil, gas drilling

Trump administration to open more Alaska acres for oil, gas drilling
Environment|Political|US

US agency kills Colorado wolf in Wyoming where it was suspected of killing sheep

US agency kills Colorado wolf in Wyoming where it was suspected of killing sheep
Environment|Health|Lifestyle|US

Hero Dad: Loved ones of Oklahoma wildfire victim who saved son share his story

Hero Dad: Loved ones of Oklahoma wildfire victim who saved son share his story

Environment

Americas|Environment|Science|World

Chile's resilient Patagonian Ice Dragon insect at risk from dwindling glaciers

Chile's resilient Patagonian Ice Dragon insect at risk from dwindling glaciers
Business|Environment|Europe|Travel|World

Swarms of midges are bugging a Tuscan beach town, which wants an emergency declared to help

Swarms of midges are bugging a Tuscan beach town, which wants an emergency declared to help
Environment|Technology|US

Train stuck after sparking brush fire then catching fire itself

Train stuck after sparking brush fire then catching fire itself
Environment|Science|Travel|US

Hawaii's Kilauea volcano resumes dazzling show with lava fountains hundreds of feet high

Hawaii's Kilauea volcano resumes dazzling show with lava fountains hundreds of feet high

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In