Uttarakhand is facing an alarming spike in human–wildlife conflict as Himalayan black bears, once known to keep their distance from settlements, are increasingly entering villages and attacking people and livestock. In the past three months alone, the state has seen 71 bear attacks that have resulted in six human deaths and the loss of around 60 animals. Confronted with this sudden rise in aggression, district authorities have even issued shoot-at-sight orders for specific problem bears— a step never before seen in the state. Scientists and forest officials are now warning that the surge cannot be seen in isolation: it signals the acute and dangerous ways in which climate change is altering animal behaviour, especially by disturbing natural hibernation cycles that Himalayan bears have followed for generations.




