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An enormous grizzly bear stares at the camera
A grizzly is believed to have attacked and killed two people in Banff National Park. (Photo: Education Images / Getty Images)

A Grizzly Bear Killed Two People and Their Dog in Banff National Park

Officials found the victims on Saturday morning and euthanized a bear that exhibited aggressive behavior

Published: 
An enormous grizzly bear stares at the camera
(Photo: Education Images / Getty Images)

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A grizzly bear attacked and killed a couple and their dog in Canada鈥檚 Banff National Park on Friday, September 29, government officials said.

Parks Canada, the agency that manages Canada鈥檚 48 national parks, that officials received a message at 8 P.M. Friday night from a Garmin inReach device alerting rescuers of a bear attack. The message came from a GPS device located in the Red Deer River Valley, a scenic area located on the eastern side of the park.

Bad weather grounded a rescue helicopter, so parks officials traveled on foot to the area. Parks Canada sent its Wildlife Human Attack Response team to the site, and it arrived at 1 A.M.

Rescuers found two victims as well as a deceased dog. While at the site, they also encountered a grizzly bear that, according to the release, 鈥渄isplayed aggressive behavior.鈥 Parks Canada officials euthanized the bear.

Officials did not initially release the names of the victims. On Tuesday, October 3, the as Doug Inglis, 62, and Jenny Gusse, 62, of Lethbridge, Alberta, which is located two hours south of Calgary. Colin Inglis, the uncle of Doug Inglis, said the couple had been five days into a week-long camping trip through the Canadian Rockies when the attack took place. Colin Inglis told the CBC that Doug and Jenny Gusse had been together since college, and that they were passionate about camping and outdoor recreation.

鈥淭hey are a couple that loved each other and loved the outdoors. And they were highly, highly experienced in being out back, whether it be serious treks or canoeing, whitewater canoeing in the North country,鈥 he told the CBC.

Colin Inglis told the CBC that the couple had messaged him throughout the trip via a Garmin inReach. On the evening of the attack, he received a message saying the two were setting up camp. But later that evening, Colin Inglis received an SOS message from the two. 鈥淭he message said 鈥楤ear attack bad,鈥欌 he told the CBC.

Colin Inglis said rescuers found two empty canisters of bear spray in the couple鈥檚 campsite.

In a media release on October 3, Parks Canada said that investigators had conducted a necropsy on the bear killed near the campsite. Officials believe the female bear was approximately 25 years old.

Bear encounters are on the rise in U.S. , as more people venture into the backcountry for recreation. But fatal grizzly attacks are extremely rare. Kim Titchener, a specialist in human-wildlife conflicts, told the CBC that only 14 percent of grizzly attacks against people end in a death. 鈥”Often when people have encounters with grizzlies, usually the grizzly goes one direction and the people go in the other,鈥 she said.

But the few deadly run-ins that occur generate plenty of attention. In July, a grizzly 48-year-old Amie Adamson of Kansas聽outside Yellowstone National Park. Officials said Adamson had been on a trail run when the incident occurred. In September, officials killed the grizzly they believed attacked Adamson after it broke into a cabin in Montana.

Bear attacks often occur when backcountry travelers surprise an animal on a trail. Officials in Alberta do not know what caused the grizzly in Banff to attack the couple on Friday. October is an important feeding period for grizzlies as they prepare for hibernation, Titchener told the CBC. But she said there is no relationship between this period of increased feeding and attacks on humans.

鈥淭hey’re still trying to dig up root systems and just trying to eat what grasses are left and what berries are still around to get on those last few pounds so that they can start heading to their dens,” she said.

In its statement on Sunday, October 1, Parks Canada said that the section of Banff National Park where the attack occurred to visitors. The closures include Red Deer and Panther valleys. The closure runs through November 30.

鈥淭his is a tragic incident, and Parks Canada wishes to express its sincere condolences to the families and friends of the victims,鈥 the agency said in the release.

This story has been updated to reflect recent reporting.聽

Lead Photo: Education Images / Getty Images

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