Skip to main content
Go to search page

CONSERVATION MENU

Grizzly bear

Conservation > Wildlife Management Grizzly Bear Management and Conservation

Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks is committed to maintaining the long-term viability of grizzly bears while prioritizing human safety

Grizzly bears in Montana are an iconic native species with high value to people and cultures across the state and around the world and play important roles in Montana ecosystems and economies. At the same time, they can and do injure or kill people and livestock and cause property damage and economic loss, which may disproportionately affect individuals living and working in bear country. Their potential presence is both valued and feared.

Grizzly bears historically occupied most of Montana, as described in the journals of Lewis and Clark. By the 1930s, the population in the Northern Rockies dipped below an estimated 300 bears, most of which lived in Montana near Glacier and Yellowstone national parks. In 1975, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service listed the grizzly bear in the lower 48 states as a threatened species under the federal Endangered Species Act. Recovery efforts have been underway since, following a federal recovery plan.

Currently, all grizzly bears in the lower 48 states remain federally protected as threatened.


Montana Grizzly Bear Mortality Dashboard

FWP has a new online tool that provides up-to-date information on known grizzly bear mortalities across the state. The Grizzly Bear Mortality Dashboard displays mortality information, including the various factors that contribute to grizzly bear deaths in Montana, outside of Tribal lands. 

Launch Dashboard

Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks released the final Statewide Grizzly Bear Management Plan on Sept. 30, 2024. The release of the plan wraps up an extensive public process analyzing how the state intends to manage the iconic species while it’s federally protected and after it is turned over to state management. 

The statewide Grizzly Bear Management Plan outlines how FWP plans to manage grizzly bears where they exist today, to include areas between the four recovery zones in Montana: the Northern Continental Divide Ecosystem (NCDE), the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE), the Bitterroot Ecosystem and the Cabinet-Yaak Ecosystem. The plan prioritizes connectivity between ecosystems and working with people and communities to avoid conflicts with bears. 

The statewide management plan replaces two existing management plans – those for western Montana and for southwest Montana – with one statewide plan. The plan recognizes that connectivity between populations of bears is an important part of their continued conservation. That connectivity can be aided with outreach and education to help communities and homeowners understand the value of securing attractants and avoiding conflicts.

Bear Management

FWP Bear Specialists are busy from summer through fall managing Montana's grizzly bears. Here’s an inside look at what they deal with on a regular basis.