Alaska deer hunter found dead in apparent brown bear mauling, officials say

File photo of a brown bear in Alaska in 2015. (Becky Bohrer/The Associated Press)

50-year-old Tad Fujioka of Sitka, Alaska, was reported overdue Tuesday evening

A 50-year-old hunter has been found dead in an apparent brown bear mauling on an island in southeastern Alaska, authorities said Thursday.

Tad Fujioka, of Sitka, was reported overdue Tuesday evening after not returning from a solo daylong hunting trip on heavily forested Baranof Island, Alaska State Troopers said.

State wildlife troopers, the U.S. Coast Guard and Sitka search and rescue teams found Fujioka’s body Wednesday. Bears had apparently mauled Fujioka and consumed a deer he had killed.

A U.S. Coast Guard helicopter located three brown bears in the area of the deer kill and alerted crews searching on the ground, troopers spokesperson Tim DeSpain said in an email to The Associated Press.

Troopers, along with personnel from the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, searched for the bears until dark but did not find them, DeSpain said. Fujioka’s body was recovered and family notified.

Related stories from around the North: 

Canada: ‘Unbelievable I survived’: Yukon woman attacked by bear speaks out, CBC News

Norway: Could drones help prevent polar bear attacks on the Arctic archipelago of Svalbard?, The Independent Barents Observer

United States: Polar bear in fatal Wales attack was in poor health, The Associated Press

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