Home Climate ChangeBlack Bears Are Thriving In Tennessee — So Why Is The Media Crying Wolf?

Black Bears Are Thriving In Tennessee — So Why Is The Media Crying Wolf?

by David Jones

Black Bears Are Thriving In Tennessee — So Why Is The Media Crying Wolf?
A story broadcast and posted by WPLN, Louisville Public Media, claims Tennessee’s black bear population is being threatened by climate change. [some emphasis, links added]

Data show this is false. Black bear populations are growing as conditions improve for them to flourish.

The biggest threat to black bears is conflict with humans, which is being driven by population growth for both bears and humans, urban expansion into bear habitat, and poor garbage storage.

WPLN reporter Caroline Eggers begins the story headlined, “Black bears are threatened by climate change. How can we help?” by writing, “Black bear encounters are on the rise in Tennessee, and climate change is often a hidden culprit…”

The problem with Eggers’ story is that its headline and lead sentence are woefully misleading. Most of the story’s details are pretty accurate.

She notes that before large-scale European occupation and widespread forest clearing, black bears were common across Tennessee. After a sharp decline, bear populations have made a big comeback with an estimated 6,000 bears across the state.

Bear populations are doing so well that they are increasingly seen in edge communities being developed in formerly wild areas and even in urban areas.

Black bear encounters with people are on the rise in Tennessee, and they are not always […] idyllic […]” writes Eggers. “Bears scrounge through trash, cars, and sometimes even homes for an easy source of calories.

“The furry creatures arguably have the best noses in the animal kingdom, 300 times better than people,” Eggers continued. “The trend is, in part, driven by convenience for the bears. They are opportunistic feeders.”

So far, so good, but then the story begins to go off the rails.

Eggers notes that rainfall from Hurricane Helene in 2024 caused flooding, knocking down a lot of trees, and then leaps to discuss a current drought in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

Yet neither of these events is historically unique or historically unusual.

Flooding and drought, while never the norm, have been common throughout Tennessee’s history, and there is no evidence in the data that hurricanes, droughts, and floods have become more common or severe over time in Tennessee, or in general elsewhere in the United States, as detailed in various Climate at a Glance posts here, here, and here, for example.

For Tennessee specifically, while rainfall amounts vary regionally across the state, data show no increasing trend in drought numbers or severity since 1895, but rather a modest increase in precipitation. (see the figure below)

Source: Tennessee Weather Stem

Temperatures in Tennessee have increased very modestly, about 0.5℉ over the past century. This is significantly below the national average rise in temperature and is likely due in large part to the urban heat island (UHI) effect from the growth of Tennessee’s large and midsized cities.

In fact, Tennessee’s maximum high temperature was set and matched on two dates in 1930, more than 90 years of “climate change” ago.

Concerning forests, the data clearly show that urban development and agriculture have replaced forests in some areas.

But overall, the amount of forested land has increased from lows set after initial European settlement, when many forests were cleared for small-scale farming and grazing.

In fact, forests cover approximately 52 percent of Tennessee, with coverage rebounding over the past 100 years. Natural forest coverage has doubled over the last century from 25 percent.

Bear populations are thriving, leading to increased sightings in developed and urban areas. AI image.

What’s more, connected forest cover and better precipitation have produced improved ecosystem conditions for bears, including increased animal and plant food sources, which largely explain Tennessee’s growing bear population.

Modest warming over the past hasn’t made habitat and ecological conditions worse for bears in Tennessee; rather, it has improved these conditions, contributing to a growing population and showing climate change can’t be “threatening” bear survival, as Eggers claims in her WPLN story.

Had Eggers not tried to drag climate change into her WPLN story about problems some Tennesseans are having with bears, she might have written a valuable and interesting story.

She could have explained the dangers bears face due to urban expansion, some people’s propensity to think of bears as cute and feed them, and improper garbage storage — all of which have led to problem bears and human/bear conflicts.

Instead, she opened with a misleading but perhaps attention-grabbing headline and then wandered off the trail to feed the media’s popular narrative that “climate change causes everything bad.”

In this case, climate change is harming bears—despite clear evidence that the black bear population is flourishing. There is no trend or evidence, none at all, suggesting this will change in the foreseeable future.

Read more at Climate Realism

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