It was round 5 pm on March 15, and the sunshine was fading quick, when Constantin and Tatiana had been attacked by the bear. The younger couple, aged 29 and 31 and recognized in native media studies solely by their first names, had been Belarusians dwelling in Poland. However Constantin had been working for the winter as a ski teacher in Jasná, a preferred resort in neighboring Slovakia. The winter season was coming to an finish, and on a break day he’d determined to go mountaineering along with his girlfriend beneath the 4,718 foot-high peak of Na Jame, within the Slovak nationwide park surrounding the resort.
What occurred subsequent just isn’t precisely clear, however newspaper studies recommend that when the couple encountered the bear—a younger male weighing about 265 kilos—they ran in numerous instructions. Discovering himself alone, Constantin tried calling Tatiana. When he did not get a response, he known as mountain rescue. It was darkish once they finally discovered Tatiana’s physique, with the assistance of a search canine. She’d apparently fallen down a ravine, sustaining deadly accidents to her head.
As with earlier bear-related fatalities, each in Slovakia and throughout Europe, the incident has sparked accusations that conservationists are defending bears on the expense of individuals’s security. In 2021, a 57-year-old man was killed by a bear in the identical nationwide park, stoking group tensions about their presence and resulting in requires a cull. Because it stands, nonetheless, searching the animals is banned beneath each Slovakian and European legislation, and specialists argue vociferously {that a} lack of training—fairly than a give attention to conservation—is the first explanation for the issue.
“It’s actually kicked off right here, with the press and politicians I believe making some unjustified statements,” says British-born zoologist Robin Rigg. A specialist in massive carnivores, Rigg is the chair of the Slovak Wildlife Society, which he arrange in 1998, two years after shifting to the nation. Preliminary studies recommended that Tatiana might need been killed by the bear itself fairly than by her fall, Rigg explains. “And it’s been mentioned in public—really by somebody from the Ministry of the Setting—that it was a predatory assault. However I don’t see the proof for that.”
Though the animal was close to the physique when rescuers discovered Tatiana, “that doesn’t imply the bear was desiring to kill and devour her,” Rigg says. He stresses that he hasn’t seen all of the proof, so any conclusions are provisional. However he has seen a few of the grisly photographs that had been leaked to the media, “and none of them present indicators of consumption.” Puncture marks discovered within the younger lady’s leg, he says, “appear to be claw marks—they’re not indicators of feeding.”
“It is extraordinarily uncommon in Europe to have predatory assaults, and it’s not a typical factor anyplace on the earth,” Riggs says. This incident occurred in an space the place bears are recognized to hibernate, at a time of yr when they’re simply waking up. “And what can generally occur is that the bear reacts aggressively in defending itself, which is what I believe is most probably to have occurred on this case—that it was startled by these two folks showing,” Rigg says.
Sadly, this sort of nuance doesn’t typically characteristic in protection of bear assaults. “You’re really extra probably, statistically, to get hit by lightning or have an allergic response to a bee sting,” Rigg says, “however folks don’t fear as a lot about that as they do a few huge animal with sharp enamel and claws. It goes again to an instinctive worry that’s been with us since prehistoric occasions.”
The argument that Slovakia’s bears are nothing to be afraid of was additional undermined when footage emerged of an animal galloping down a important avenue in Liptovský Mikuláš simply two days after Tatiana’s dying. The animal was filmed lunging aggressively at pedestrians, who jumped over fences to flee. Nobody was significantly damage, however the video went viral. “And now,” Rigg says, “we’ve had these two incidents inside 48 hours of one another, inside just a few kilometers of one another. So the tendency is to take a look at them collectively and ask, ‘What ought to we do about bears?’”
It’s a query that’s turn into more and more urgent in recent times—not simply in Slovakia however all through Europe. Having been hunted to the purpose of extinction in lots of nations, brown bears had their “strictly protected” standing enshrined in EU legislation in 1992. In most areas the place they’re current, bear populations are growing, and there at the moment are an estimated 17,000 brown bears dwelling in rural areas throughout the continent. The restoration of this keystone species has been celebrated as an enormous win by biologists and biodiversity specialists—nevertheless it’s not been with out its issues.
Within the Pyrenees, the mountains that straddle the border between France and Spain, French and Spanish farmers’ unions, sick of coping with injury to crops, beehives, and livestock, have known as for bear numbers to be reduce. Within the northern Italian province of Trentino, the place bears had been reintroduced as a part of an EU-funded rewilding undertaking, the tragic dying of path runner Andrea Papi in April 2023 introduced simmering resentments effervescent as much as the floor. To the horror of native scientists, Trentino’s right-wing populist president, Maurizio Fugatti, proposed killing half of the fastidiously nurtured inhabitants of round 120 bears in a single day.
But, specialists say, culling bears is way from the easiest way to forestall future tragedies. Within the wake of Andrea Papi’s dying, the native pure historical past museum invited Tom Smith, a bear administration specialist from Utah’s Brigham Younger College, to present a discuss how such points are handled in North America. In an indication of how excessive group tensions had been operating, the museum took the weird step of posting an armed guard on the entrance.
In his speak, Smith recommended that the options had been comparatively easy: “What you could have right here isn’t essentially a bear downside, it’s a folks downside,” he mentioned. In contrast to in North America, the place folks in bear areas have grown up with the animals, Europeans dwelling close to not too long ago recovered populations don’t essentially know methods to behave. However with some fundamental bear-awareness coaching—of the type that’s taught “in kindergarten” in some Canadian provinces—the variety of harmful or deadly encounters may very well be vastly diminished.
Smith runs the North American Human-Bear Battle Database, which comprises detailed data on 2,175 historic assaults, with “a quarter-million information factors.” “What I’ve realized by finding out these occasions,” he advised the gang, “is that 60 % of them had been completely pointless—and will have been prevented if folks had behaved in a different way.” In an interview just a few days later, Smith talked particularly about Papi’s dying, telling WIRED, “I can undergo the main points and say, ‘It’s best to by no means do this, or that, or that,’ and it’s not sufferer blaming, it’s making an attempt to say, look, this was totally preventable.”
Tragically, this additionally seems to have been the case in Slovakia. “Sadly, the route that they selected was a really dangerous one,” Rigg says. “It’s not a acknowledged mountaineering route, and it’s part of the park that’s strictly protected, in order that they shouldn’t have been there. Added to that, it’s a limestone space, and that’s an space I’d count on there could be denning bears.” The encounter occurred round nightfall, when crepuscular creatures like brown bears are typically extra energetic.