MISSOULA — An investigation has been completed into one of two recent deadly attacks by grizzly bears in Montana, but a review board is still looking into the attack that killed a biker who was camping in Ovando.
Leah Davis Lokan was killed while sleeping in her tent at an Ovando campground on July 6.
The bear was found and euthanized after several days of searching.
The Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee (IGBC) was told a review board is still analyzing the details of that attack.
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But investigators determined the Spring attack that killed 40-year-old Charles Mock at a campground outside West Yellowstone happened when he ran across a grizzly feeding on a moose carcass.
Hillary Cooley of the US Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWS) told her colleagues the mid-April attack happened between the highway and the Madison River.
Mock died shortly after the attack, and investigators believe the bear's aggressiveness was caused by the proximity of the kill.
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"Why was the bear so agitated? It was there for three days, very agitated. We don't know. But we hypothesize that maybe the bear had defended or claimed the moose carcass from another bear,” Cooley said. “And that might have contributed to the extended aggressive defense of the moose carcass."
Cooley says the incident again shows the need for safety precautions, even close to town.
While bear spray helped curtail this attack, carcasses can present a real hazard in grizzly country.
Click here to learn more about how to "Be Bear Aware."