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What have bears taught him about being human?

COURTESY
SPRINGFIELD, Vt. — To celebrate this year’s 20thHerricks Cove Wildlife Festival, Ascutney Mountain Audubon Society is having a special program on Friday, May 3 at 7 p.m.

Ben Kilham, founder of the Kilham Bear Center and internationally known bear rehabilitator will present on “The Social Black Bear: What Bears Have Taught Me About Being Human.”

Black bears, thought to be solitary, have a different type of social behavior that possibly parallels early human behavior. They show evidence of reciprocal altruism, matri-linear hierarchy, and a mix of intentional and emotional communication. Bears can live for as many as 40 years, which allows them long-term benefits from forming relationships with fellow cooperators.

Ben Kilham, Ph.D is a wildlife biologist based in Lyme, New Hampshire. His love of and devotion to black bears has enabled him to study their habits and interact with them for more than two decades. He, his wife Debra and sister Phoebe have accepted orphaned bear cubs into their home and enabled them to successfully return to the wild. Ben has been the focus of several news articles and documentaries, including National Geographic’s A Man Among Bears and Animal Planet’s Papa Bear. He is also author of the books Among the Bears: Raising Orphaned Cubs in the Wild and Out on a Limb: Origins of Intuition and Intelligence.

The program is free and open to the public and will take place at United Methodist Church, 10 Valley St., Springfield, Vermont.

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