As Florida’s population expands, state wildlife officials have seen a more than 33 percent increase in calls for assistance related to wild animals during the past five years, according to a presentation that could go before the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission this week.
While no proposed changes are recommended to the agency’s Wildlife Assistance Program, the discussion comes as legislation awaits action by Gov. Ron DeSantis that would bolster self-defense arguments for people who kill bears on their property.
The presentation --- tentatively on the agenda as the commission prepares to meet Wednesday and Thursday at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach --- outlines how Florida’s growing human population is coinciding with an increase in people interacting with wildlife.
While calls include sightings and interactions involving animals such as bobcats, foxes, bats, raptors and snakes, Lisa Thompson, a spokeswoman for the agency’s Division of Habitat and Species Conservation, estimated in an email that about 33 percent involve bears. Another 16 percent are because of coyotes and 7 percent involve raccoons.
And while calls are received statewide, most are from the northeast and southwest regions of Florida, Thompson said. The number of calls grew from 10,575 during the 2018-2019 fiscal year to 14,184 during the 2022-2023 fiscal year.
Most involve such things as wildlife in populated areas, getting into trash or causing property damage, not imminent public-safety threats.
Alaska-native Kodiak bear cubs found roaming on Florida road Bear cubs on the road are not too uncommon to see in Florida. (WFTV)
“In most cases, unless there is an imminent safety concern, agency response does not include removing or relocating wildlife,” according to the presentation developed by Greg Kaufmann, the commission’s Wildlife Assistance Program administrator. “Messaging that incorporates current human-dimensions research and the best available science is an integral part of the program’s long-term approach to addressing human-wildlife conflict issues.”
The Wildlife Assistance Program, with an annual cost of about $630,000, was established in 2013, two years before Florida’s most-recent sanctioned bear hunt.
Meanwhile, requests have increased during the past year for the commission to approve another hunt, particularly due to human-bear conflicts in rural areas of Northwest Florida. Bear hunts have long been controversial.
Asked if the agency is feeling pressure from people seeking a bear hunt to make changes to prevent conflicts outlined in the presentation, Thompson said the commission continues “to focus on education and outreach as the primary ways in which to help prevent and mitigate human-wildlife conflicts.”
“As requests for assistance with conflicts with wildlife change or increase, staff will address to ensure we are responding appropriately,” Thompson added.
Lawmakers this year passed a bill (HB 87) that, in part, says people would not be subject to penalties for killing bears if they “reasonably believed that his or her action was necessary to avoid an imminent threat of death or serious bodily injury to himself or herself or to another, an imminent threat of death or serious bodily injury to a pet or substantial damage to a dwelling.”
Video: Bear caught on camera breaks into Lake Nona family’s shed, steals snow cone syrup (Brittany Caldwell, WFTV.com/WFTV)
People who shoot bears would be required to notify the agency within 24 hours and show they did not intentionally place themselves or pets in situations where they needed to kill bears. Also, people would not be allowed to possess or sell bear carcasses after the killings.
Supporters of the measure pointed to increased incidents of bears venturing into residential communities in Northwest Florida, with some advocating for a sanctioned bear hunt.
Rep. Jason Shoaf, a Port St. Joe Republican who sponsored the legislation, said during a Franklin County legislative delegation meeting in September that “this bear problem is out of control.”
“We’re inundated,” Shoaf said at the time. “We’ve got way too many. Until we do that, we’re going to continue to have these problems.”
Critics of the bill contend the change will result in increased deaths of once-threatened bears. They say the state should expand the BearWise program, which includes education and the promotion of containers to secure trash that could lure hungry wildlife.
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9 of Florida's most dangerous animals (WFTV)
American alligator (WFTV)
Alligator portrait close up (George Shelley Productions/Getty Images)
Alligator returned to zoo after 20 years Tewa, a female alligator stolen from a zoo as a baby, has been return 20 years after her kidnapping. (SUSAN RYDBERG/Getty Images/iStockphoto)
Alligator Authorities said a woman died in an alligator attack on Hilton Head Island in South Carolina on Tuesday, July 4, 2023. (passion4nature/Getty Images/iStockphoto, File)
Alligator bites off part of man’s leg (www.artushfoto.eu/Getty Images/iStockphoto)
‘See you later, alligator’: Officers take 9-foot alligator into custody near Tampa Bay stadium (Bkamprath/Getty Images/iStockphoto)
Alligator attack: File photo. A 7 1/2-foot-long alligator attacked a snorkeler on Monday in a north-central Florida spring. (Bob D'Angelo/Cox Media Group )
Elderly woman dies after alligator attack in Florida (passion4nature/Getty Images/iStockphoto)
Eastern diamond back rattlesnake (WFTV)
Diamondback rattlesnake The eastern diamondback rattlesnake is the largest and most dangerous of the snakes that are native to Florida. (Luke Smith)
Eastern diamondback The eastern diamondback rattlesnake is the largest and most dangerous of the snakes that are native to Florida. (Steve A. Johnson, U.S. Geological Society)
Rattlesnake, uranium, whiskey found during traffic stop A Texas man who thought “a few” snakes were under his house called professionals to remove the reptiles -- and learned 45 rattlesnakes had made themselves at home! (skeeze/Pixabay)
The Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake is the largest of the rattlesnake species, according to the University of Georgia. They are active all summer long, especially in the morning and evening. CONTRIBUTED BY SRELHERP.UGA.EDU
Eastern diamondback rattlesnakes WHAT: Eastern diamondback rattlesnakes - An urban legend claims that a 15-foot Eastern Diamondback was found in Florida. Though later proven to be false, this deadly snake can grow to 8 feet in length. (Kristian Bell)
Diamondback rattlesnake The eastern diamondback rattlesnake is the largest and most dangerous of the snakes that are native to Florida. (Luke Smith)
Eastern Diamondback snakes are the largest of the 32 species of rattlesnakes, according to Snake Facts.
Bull shark (WFTV)
Bull shark: A bull shark tried to take a bite out of the back of a boat as fishermen attempted to catch cobia. (Joseph Prezioso/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
A bull shark, similar to one that apparently attacked a Texas man, is pictured here. Photo: Wikicommons
Shark attacks, kills Pennsylvania woman snorkeling in Bahamas Stock photo of a bull shark. A Pennsylvania woman is dead after a shark attacked her during a snorkeling excursion in the Bahamas, officials said. (George Karbus Photography/Getty Images/Image Source)
10-year-old boy loses part of leg in shark attack while snorkeling in Florida File photo. The family said that they believed the shark was an 8-foot-long bull shark. (amanda cotton/Getty Images/iStockphoto)
Bull shark (Carcharhinus leucas) swims through deep water off Mexico Yucatan Peninsula.
Black widow spider (WFTV)
Fire officials say they believe a man trying to get rid of black widow spiders used a blowtorch and caught a house on fire.
black widow (Cortesy Wikipedia Common)
Black Widow spider (Q13Fox)
5-year-old bitten by Black Widow Spider in Mendon Black widow spider's body is about a third of an inch long but it has legs up to one and a third inches long. As dangerous as the name sounds, this spider is timid. Its first method of defense is to drop from its web and pretend to be dead.
GF Default - Firefighters ? Man Sets Home on Fire Trying to Kill Black Widow Spider with Blowtorch
(Photo) Black Widow spider (Photo) Black Widow spider
A Connecticut woman and her son had a close encounter with a black widow spider found crawling through a bunch of grapes. Photo: Pixabay
Florida cottonmouth (WFTV)
Cottonmouth Cottonmouth snakes are found in every Florida county. (Todd Pierson)
Cottonmouth moved out the street so it wouldnt get hit... dont kill snakes.
Western cottonmouth Western cottonmouth
Juvenile cottonmouth This species loves water and can be found along stream banks, in swamps, on the margins of lakes and in tree-bordered marshes. (Steve A. Johnson, U.S. Geological Society)
Cottonmouth Cottonmouth snakes are found in every Florida county. (Steve A. Johnson, University of Florida)
Cottonmouth snake captured in Lake Mary
When WFTV reporter Jeff Levkulich reported live from Florida's Seminole County on Tuesday afternoon, he was joined by animal expert Bob Cross and a very big, angry water moccasin.
American crocodile (WFTV)
crocodile FILE PHOTO: Florida wildlife officials removed an unwanted visitor from a home Tuesday -- a 12-foot crocodile. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Crocodile: A pier in Pompano Beach was a resting place for a crocodile on Monday morning. (City of Pompano Beach)
American Crocodile
Crocodile spotted: File photo. A Florida-based wildlife photographer captured photographs and videos of "Croczilla," a 14-foot American crocodile, in Everglades National Park. (National Park Service)
crocodile MIAMI, FL - SEPTEMBER 11: A crocodile is seen at the Dinner Key marina after hurricane Irma passed through the area on September 11, 2017 in Miami, Florida. Hurricane Irma made landfall in the Florida Keys as a Category 4 storm on Sunday, lashing the state with 130 mph winds as it moved up the coast. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images) (Joe Raedle)
Crocodile File photo of a crocodile
Police: Man arrested after crocodile, snakes and lizards removed from home
Florida black bear (WFTV)
Watch: Black bear roams southwest Florida golf community in viral videos, photos Stock photo of a black bear. A black bear appears to be making itself at home in a southwest Florida golf community. (Mlorenzphotography/Getty Images)
9 Florida men accused of baiting, abusing black bears FILE PHOTO (Peupleloup (Own work) [FAL], via Wikimed)
black bear FILE PHOTO: A Florida man was on his porch Wednesday evening when he was attacked by a black bear, wildlife officials said. (Pixabay/Pixabay)
Florida man accused of deliberately killing black bear and her cub
Black Bear (Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission)
Florida considers first black-bear hunting season in two decades A black bear wanders through its enclosure at the Palm Beach Zoo and Conservation Society on Thursday, August 14, 2014 in West Palm Beach. The black bears are part of the Art Gone Wild program in which animals create paintings that are sold to raise money to take care of the zoo animals. (Madeline Gray / The Palm Beach Post) (Madeline Gray)
Boat bear FILE PHOTO: A yacht club in Florida had an unexpected visitor. (steverts/Getty Images/iStockphoto)
Black bear captured at a Florida airport ( Tampa International Airport /Tampa International Airport)
Wild hog (WFTV)
Florida community seeking help for aggressive wild hogs File photo. A wild boar tromping through a wetland in Florida. (Matt Cuda/Getty Images/iStockphoto)
WHAT: Wild boars - Wild boar can be aggressive when cornered and some have tusks up to 6-inches long.
Wild boars wreaking havoc, on the prowl for mates in Florida Wild boars wreaking havoc, on the prowl for mates in Florida
Wild boars run rampant in Texas town. File photo. (Yuval Helfman/Getty Images/iStockphoto)
Remote cameras operated by motion detectors captured these photos of wild boars.
Wild boar Wild boars, like the one pictured in this file photo, reportedly have been destroying Lehigh Acres residents' lawns. (Sstaton/Getty Images/iStockphoto)
Burmese python (WFTV)
Biologists in Florida capture record-breaking 215-pound, 18-foot-long python This Feb. 2022 photo provided by the Conservancy of Southwest Florida shows biologist Ian Bartoszek with a 15-foot female Burmese python captured by tracking a male scout snake in Picayune Strand State Forest. (Conservancy of Southwest Florida via AP) (Conservancy of Southwest Florida/AP)
Biologists in Florida capture record-breaking 215-pound, 18-foot-long python This March 2022 photo provided by the Conservancy of Southwest Florida shows biologists Ian Easterling, left, and Ian Bartoszek with a 14-foot female Burmese python captured in mangrove habitat of southwestern Florida while tracking a male scout snake. (Conservancy of Southwest Florida via AP) (AP)
2 mama pythons, several hatchlings and eggs found in Florida preserve Stock photo of a Burmese python. Two mother pythons, several hatchlings and nearly two dozen unhatched eggs recently were removed from a southwest Florida wildlife preserve, officials said. (Hillary Kladke/Getty Images)
Snake seizure FILE PHOTO: A man in Utah is accused of not having permits to own 20 Burmese pythons. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Florida teenager catches 28 pythons File photo. (Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission/Andy Wraithmell/Florida Fish and)
Hunters Gather In Florida Everglades To Capture Pythons In "Python Bowl" SUNRISE, FLORIDA - JANUARY 10: A python is seen as Robert Edman, with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, gives a python-catching demonstration to potential snake hunters at the start of the Python Bowl 2020 on January 10, 2020 in Sunrise, Florida. The Florida Python Challenge 2020 Python Bowl taking place a few weeks before the Super Bowl being held in Miami Gardens, is a 10-day competition to remove Burmese pythons from the Florida Everglades due to the threat to the delicate ecosystem that they pose as they have no predators and reproduce rapidly. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images) (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Burmese Python
Burmese python FILE PHOTO: A Florida man snared a nearly 17-foot python while hunting for the invasive snakes in the Everglades. ( Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission/Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission)
But the program requires people to take steps to reduce lures to wildlife.
“We do have bear-proof garbage cans,” Rep. Allison Tant, D-Tallahassee said when the House approved the bill in March. “And you know what, oftentimes, after the garbage is picked up, the tops are not secured again. So, the bears come back and come back and come back.”
Tant supported the measure, pointing to an increase in bears threatening farmers’ livestock in her North Florida district.
The proposed fiscal year 2024-2025 budget includes $683,500 to provide bear-resistant trash containers to Franklin County, which is south of Tallahassee. The budget and the bill about shooting bears have not been formally sent to DeSantis.
The state had about 4,050 bears, according to a 2017 estimate by the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, the most recent available data.
The numbers had fallen to between 300 to 500 in the 1970s, but the species was able to rebound while listed by the state as threatened. That designation was lifted in 2012 when a new management plan was approved.
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