Authorities search for grizzly bear that killed bicyclist camping in Montana.
and killed a bicyclist who was camping in western Montana early Tuesday, triggering a search for the animal, authorities said.occurred before dawn at a remote campsite in Ovando, a tiny town with fewer than 100 residents, some 70 miles northwest of Montana's capital, Helena. First responders attempted to save the woman but she died from her injuries, a spokesperson for the Powell County Sheriff's Office told ABC News.
"Traps have been set in the area and searching will continue by ground and in the air with the priority of keeping the public safe from another encounter," the Powell County Sheriff's Office said in a statement on Tuesday evening."Campsites in Ovando have been closed until Sunday and we encourage anyone in the area to be cautious and aware that as of now the bear in question has not been located.
A video camera from a local business caught footage of a grizzly bear on Monday night. A bear also got into a chicken coop prior to the deadly attack at the campsite, according to a statement from the Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks.In this file photo taken on July 9, 2009, the Bob Marshall Wilderness cuts a jagged line across the horizon as patrons leave Trixi's Antler Saloon in Ovando, Montana.
Grizzly bears are common in Ovando, which is nestled in a valley between the Blackfoot River to the south and mountains to the north that stretch into the vast Bob Marshall Wilderness. Adult males typically weigh between 400 to 790 pounds, while adult females weigh approximately 290 to 400 pounds. In 1975, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service listed the grizzly bear as threatened in the continental United States under the Endangered Species Act, after population numbers dwindled from more than 50,000 to fewer than 1,000 due to habitat loss, hunting and conflicts with humans.