Wyoming grizzlies are inching ever closer to Utah, but if they ever make it over the state line, they probably wouldnât be welcome to stay.Â
Lincoln County Sheriffâs Deputy Caleb Ellis photographed a grizzly next to Highway 233 near Kemmerer in April, which is certainly within a grizzlyâs walking distance to the Utah state line.Â
But if a grizzly made the journey, it wouldnât be welcome in Utah, which has no desire to have a population of the apex predators.
âIf I had to guess, if Utah had a choice (over whether to have grizzlies), I think they would avoid it,â Darren DeBloois, game mammals coordinator with the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, told Cowboy State Daily.Â
âItâs one thing that we probably donât need at this point,â he added.Â
If and when a grizzly does show up in Utah, most likely either from Wyoming or Idaho, it would probably be trapped and sent back to where it came from, he said.Â
Grizzlies Venture Far And Wide
Grizzlies have ventured farther out from their core habitats in Wyomingâs Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks, and Glacier National Park in Montana.Â
The last known report of grizzly in Utah was in 1923, and DeBloois said that as far as he knows, there hasnât been a verified sighting of one there since.Â
âPeople send in photos (of supposed grizzly bears), but theyâre almost always black bears in their brown color phase,â he said.Â
Even so, itâs likely a matter of when, not if, a grizzly shows up in Utah, he said.Â
âIn the next decade or so, if we got a solid sighting in Utah, I wouldnât be surprised,â DeBloois said. âIt would be unusual, but I wouldnât be shocked.â
Meanwhile, grizzlies have been claiming more territory in other states.Â
Theyâve wandered into some of the low country in Park County. A five-strand electric fence was built around the Gallagherâs Corn Maze & Pumpkin Patch near Clark to keep grizzlies from plundering it.  Â
Theyâve also been moving into Idahoâs lowlands. Last year, an Idaho farmer took video of a pair of grizzlies frolicking in his potato field.Â
Grizzlies are a native plains species and have been recolonizing Montanaâs high prairies. A female grizzly with two cubs was recently spotted in Montanaâs Missouri Breaks country.Â
And grizzlies in the Missouri Breaks has prompted speculation over whether they could continue going east all the way into North Dakota.Â
Grizzlies No, Wolves Yes
Grizzlies could make it to Utah from just about anywhere along the state lines with Wyoming or Idaho that is sparsely populated and theyâd have enough space to slip through unnoticed, DeBloois said.
A grizzly crossing into Utah would join a relatively robust population of black bears, he added. A âlow estimationâ of the stateâs black bear population would be roughly 4,000.Â
But thereâs probably no way grizzlies could reestablish a permanent population in Utah, Debloois said.Â
While the state does have some âwide open spaces,â the places where grizzlies might try to settle in would be too close to densely populated urban areas, he said.Â
âUtah isnât in the grizzly recovery zoneâ designated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), he said.Â
So, as long as grizzlies remain a federally protected species, Utah would cooperate with FWS to send any grizzly that wanders in back to where it came from.Â
If grizzlies are delisted from federal protection and management turned over to the states, Utah could probably make similar agreements with Wyoming Game and Fish and other state wildlife agencies, he said.Â
Meanwhile, there have been verified sightings of wolves in Utah over the past few years. Some of them likely came from Wyoming.
Utah expects at least a few wolves to stay, Debloois said.Â
His agency has drawn up a wolf management plan that allows for no more than two established packs in Utah.
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Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.