FWC: Florida 2015 Bear Hunt Officially Over In All Four Areas That Offered Bear Hunting

By  //  October 26, 2015

295 bears taken statewide

ABOVE VIDEO: The Florida black bear is a unique subspecies of the American black bear and is the state’s largest land mammal. Black bears once ranged throughout Florida but now live in several fragmented areas across the state. This 15 minute video discusses the ecology and behavior of the Florida black bear and how people can coexist with them. (Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission video)

The 2015 bear hunt is officially over in all four of the state’s of Florida’s areas that offered bear hunting.

With the statewide bear harvest standing at 295 bears at the end of Day 2 of Florida’s bear hunt, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission closed the North and South bear management units to hunting on Sunday.

The East Panhandle and Central areas met their harvest objectives and closed to bear hunting on Saturday.

While hunter success was higher than expected in the East Panhandle and Central BMUs, success rates were comparable to other states with similar hunt structures and were within sustainable limits.

The 2015 bear hunt is officially over in all four of the state’s of Florida's areas that offered bear hunting. (FWC image)
The 2015 bear hunt is officially over in all four of the state’s of Florida’s areas that offered bear hunting. (FWC image)

The higher-than-expected harvest in the East Panhandle likely reflects a higher bear population in that unit. FWC expects the 2016 survey to show populations to be significantly higher than the East Panhandle’s 2002 population estimate of 600 bears.

While North and South BMUs are closed to bear hunting effective immediately, check stations within those BMUs will stay open through noon Eastern time on Oct. 26.

Whether taken on private or public land, hunters must check their bear within 12 hours of recovering it at any of the established bear check stations in the North and South BMUs.

FWC took a conservative approach to setting harvest objectives, building in buffers so the number of bears harvested would stabilize growing populations while ensuring a continuation of healthy bear numbers.  In addition, FWC had mechanisms in place for daily monitoring of the harvest and season closure, so when the harvest approached the statewide objective of 320, FWC was able to stop the hunt.

In addition to updated population information expected in 2016 for three additional BMUs (East Panhandle, West Panhandle and South), FWC also will use information from the 2015 hunt to guide management efforts in subsequent years.

Regulated hunting has a long, successful history of contributing to wildlife conservation in North America. Of the 41 states with resident bear populations, 33 of them conduct hunts and all have stable to increasing bear populations. 

The hunt is just one component of FWC’s overall bear management strategy, and FWC will continue to invest staff time and resources toward outreach and education, waste management, and removing bears that pose a threat to human safety.

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Bear permits were available from Aug. 3 to Oct. 23 and during that period 3,778 were sold. Bear permit sales totaled more than $376,900 and plans call for using that to help fund abatement of human/bear conflicts through comprehensive waste management efforts in Florida.

The four bear management units open to hunting reported the following combined harvest totals for Saturday, Oct. 24 and Sunday, Oct. 25:

Bear Management Unit Harvest Totals (295 total statewide)

• East Panhandle BMU = 112 bears – closed to further hunting

• Central BMU = 139 bears – closed to further hunting

• North BMU = 23 bears – closed to further hunting

• South BMU = 21 bears – closed to further hunting

What is the effect of lactating females being harvested?

Bears of either sex are allowed to be taken but the bear must weigh at least 100 pounds live weight and cubs must not be present. The timing of this hunt was selected because cubs would be old enough (8 to 9 months old) to survive on their own.

What violations occurred during this hunt?
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission law enforcement officers investigated criminal violations ranging from underweight bears and taking or attempting to take bears by baiting. In addition, FWC officers addressed a few out-of-season harvests and hunters without permits. Proactive enforcement efforts are ongoing. Overall, hunters exhibited good safety and ethics. Compliance with hunting regulations was high.

With the statewide bear harvest standing at 295 bears at the end of day 2 of Florida’s bear hunt, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) closed the North and South bear management units (BMUs) to hunting Sunday, Oct. 25. East Panhandle and Central BMUs met their harvest objectives and closed to bear hunting on Oct 24. (Shutterstock image)
With the statewide bear harvest standing at 295 bears at the end of day 2 of Florida’s bear hunt, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) closed the North and South bear management units (BMUs) to hunting Sunday, Oct. 25. East Panhandle and Central BMUs met their harvest objectives and closed to bear hunting on Oct 24. (Shutterstock image)