(edited to add another link)
It took capturing the cubs to determine they were underweight because they were not considerate enough to step onto the scales that were put out in the campground.
"Wildlife officials have said she appeared to be healthy, but they intend to further study the body in hopes of explaining her behavior." "They should spend more time figuring out why so many cubs, and why they were malnourished or there may be problems with bears down the road."
Yes, they are going to dissect her to see if perhaps she had rabies or trichinosis or some other type disease which yes, bears in the wild do get. They are trying to figure out why she attacked sleeping humans and ate on one since this is atypical behavior for bears. Killing a bear is not done lightly and trying to figure out what happened is to protect other bears as well as people in the future.
You want them to figure out WHY this happened yet also want them to dump this bear and her cubs without understanding why "to open forests in Canada not far away where there would have been more food and no people."
I do not know where an "open forests in Canada not far away where there would have been more food and no people" might be. Where were you thinking?
You seriously want to take a mama bear with 3 starving cubs and put her in an unfamiliar place, where she doesn't know where food is, where water is, etc? IF, perchance, you found a place that has more food than the USA mountains, do you think there might be other bears there who might take exception to having mama bear with 3 starving cubs dropped into their area?
Good grief, did you not read the links?
http://www.yellowstoneinsider.com/20100801654/news/articles/should-killer-griz-been-allowed-to-live.phpFor the authorities, putting down a killer grizzly responsible for a Soda Butte Campground rampage was a no-brainer: any time a bear kills euthanasia is virtually automatic. But a surprising number of Internet commentators wanted to see the bear live -- though, as one official pointed out, the farther away they are from Cooke City the more likely they are to argue for clemency.
If the reaction on our Facebook page is any indication, there was a lot of sentiment to let the grizzly bear live. Before we get to those comments, let's review what happened. A grizzly sow weighing over 300 pounds and her three cubs went to the Soda Butte Campground early Wednesday morning, located seven miles east of the Yellowstone National Park East Entrance past Cooke City, and tore apart a tent containing Kevin Kummer, 48, of Grand Rapids. He was killed in the tent; his body was dragged 25 feet or so and then partially eaten by at least one griz. After that she and the cubs went after two other tents, biting Deb Freele of London, Ontario to the point where she required surgery to repaid the broken bones in her arms; Ronald Singer of Alamosa, Col. was bitten on the calf before fighting off the griz. (Our full coverage can be found in the links at the end of the article.)
All in all, this was a particularly vicious attack, both in its randomness and outcome; it certainly was not normal grizzly behavior. Chat with the locals at the Bear Claw Bakery or Miners Saloon and for the most part they're happy the griz was put down: it's been policy in wildlife-management circles for decades to put down a bear that's killed a human. Bears are creatures of habit; the thinking is that the chances would be pretty good that the bear would kill again. And that seems to have been borne out by what the mother griz did: after doing damage Wednesday she and the cubs returned to the scene of the crime Thursday, presumably to cause more havoc.
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Of course, Internet rhetoric is cheap, especially when you don't need to live with the consequences of what you preach; most of the residents of Cooke City we informally chatted with were just happy to know they could walk home from the bar or bakery and not worry about grizzly issues. But we don't think these commentators were totally on the fringe: there are a lot of people who love Yellowstone who questioned why the bear was put down, as opposed to living a life in captivity. (Releasing or relocating, we think, were not viable options here; no way the authorities would have released a killer back to the wild.) The cubs ended up in captivity at Billings' ZooMontana; surely that could have been considered for the mother griz.
That said, zoos do not like to take adult bears that have killed and eaten a person. I am sure if there were such a place they would have contacted them.