
Biologists track 60 habituated deer now living new lives in B.C.’s backcountry
CRANBROOK, B.C. — Sixty habituated mule deer are reacquainting themselves with the backcountry after being moved out of four southeastern British Columbia communities.
The problem deer were caught in Kimberley, Cranbrook, Invermere and Elkford and relocated as part of project to save, rather than cull them.
Twenty-nine of the deer were fitted with tracking collars.
“There was one deer that was predated by a cougar fairly early on in the project,” said senior wildlife biologist Ian Adams, whose employer, Vast Resources Solutions, monitors data from the collars.