Arcadia

Watch: Mama Bear and Cubs Roam Through Scenic LA Arboretum in Arcadia

Visitors were evacuated after a mother bear and two cubs were seen on the arboretum property east of Los Angeles.

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Visitors were evacuated from the Los Angeles Arboretum and Botanic Garden Friday after three bears wandered through the site's lush landscape in Arcadia.

The bears were identified as a mother and her two cubs.

The bears were in a hilly area on the arboretum property. At one point, they appeared to be napping in a tree.

Authorities walked through the gardens, telling visitors, including a school group on a field trip, to leave the area and give the bears plenty of space.

The arboretum is a 127-acre garden and historical site in the San Gabriel Valley. Visitors can be part of walking tours in the gardens. Several peacocks also roam the property.

The location is just south of the San Gabriel Mountains wilderness.

A mother bear and two cubs are seen at the LA Arboretum Nov. 4, 2022.

About Bears in California

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Black bears, which can have different color coats, like to feed on plants, insects, nuts, berries and whatever else they think of as edible -- such as the contents of trash bins. If food is scarce in their natural habitat, bears are likely to forage elsewhere, bringing them into Southern California foothill neighborhoods.

California's black bear population has been on the rise over the last two decades, growing from an estimated 10,000 to 15,000 in the early 1980s to between 25,000 and 30,000 -- and that's a conservative estimate, according to the state department of fish and wildlife.

A bear cub makes a run for it at the LA Arboretum Nov. 4, 2022.

Black bears, recognized by their small, narrow heads and small ears, have coats that range in color from tan or brown to black. Females grow up to about 200 pounds and males can be a hefty 350 pounds with some giants weighing in at more than 600 pounds.

About half of the state's bear population can be found in the Sierra Nevada Mountains and areas to the north and west. Only an estimated 10 percent of the black bear population inhabits central western and southwestern California.

Although its on the state flag, the fearsome grizzly bear no longer can be found in the California wild. The last grizzly bear observed in California was shot in the early 1920s.

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