
Parks Canada officials devastated to report white grizzly, known as Nakoda, has died
CBC
After hopes that Bear 178 would walk off her injuries and survive the car crash that left the grizzly limping, the bear affectionately known as Nakoda has died in Yoho National Park, in southeastern B.C., Parks Canada officials confirm.
On the evening of June 6, as wildlife management staff were repairing fencing along the Trans-Canada Highway, roughly 12 kilometres west of Lake Louise, they attempted "to encourage the bear to spend time away from the roadside," a Parks Canada statement said.
Bear 178 was then reportedly startled by a train, causing her to run onto the road in the path of two vehicles.
"One vehicle was able to swerve and avoid a collision, but a second vehicle was unable to react in time and struck the bear," said a Parks Canada spokesperson.
The incident occurred approximately 12 hours after the bear's two cubs were struck and killed on the highway early that morning.
The bear was known for her agility, striking platinum blond fur with a dark stripe along her back, and frequent roadside sightings, especially in the spring and early summer when dandelions line the Trans-Canada Highway ditches.
After she was hit, wildlife managers saw Nakoda climb a fence and run into the woods with a slight limp. On Saturday, June 8, the bear's GPS collar sent a mortality signal, meaning the device had been stationary for 24 hours. The wildlife management team then confirmed the bear's death, suspecting she had "succumbed to internal injuries related to the collision."
Nakoda's frequent roadside visits made the bear popular on social media, but parks officials said it also made her too comfortable with humans.
"It is an unfortunate reality that bears that become habituated to people often have negative outcomes," said Saundi Stevens, Parks Canada's wildlife management specialist with the Lake Louise, Yoho and Kootenay field unit, in a news conference on Monday.
Parks Canada's wildlife management team spent countless hours managing Nakoda, work that entailed following the bear from dawn to dusk.
"The team has developed a strong fondness and connection with GBF178, and her death has been devastating for the team that was so deeply invested in trying to prevent this outcome," read the statement.
Stevens said Parks Canada implemented a no-stopping zone and speed reduction in the area where the bear and her cubs were spotted along the highway earlier this spring.
While speculation on social media has pointed to the bear returning to the spot where her cubs were hit to grieve them, Stevens said this is not necessarily the case.
"This is an example of anthropomorphizing bear behaviour. In reality, bears often eat their deceased young, which humans might not see as an act of mourning.













