A senior ranger on the Kronotsky
Wildlife Reserve, Vitaly Nikolayenko battled
illegal hunting and fishing in the reserve. His patrols kept him in the
wilderness for months on end. He routinely spent each day from dawn to dusk following bears, documenting their feeding, mating, and social habits.
Interest in bears He compiled one of the most exhaustive
documentaries on the giant, cousins of the North American
grizzly bear,
Kamchatka brown bears, regularly filling what became hundreds of journals, a body of work viewed as one of the most important biographical records of brown bear behaviour in existence. Nikolayenko walked more than a year through the remote river valleys and coastal plains of
Kamchatka, where approximately 15,000 brown bears are under increasing threat from foreign hunters and poachers. He documented an average of 800 bear contacts each year. For over 20 years, Nikolayenko followed an enormous male he named Dobrynya, forming such an easy bond that the bear would often curl up to sleep just a few feet from him. Nikolayenko also documented several lucky escapes during his time with the bears. He described how he had fallen down bluffs to avoid charging bears and been chased up trees. He helped conduct an inquiry after
Michio Hoshino, the renowned
Japanese bear photographer, was pulled out of his tent and eaten by a bear in 1996 in the southern reserve, a more remote region neighbouring the Kronotsky state reserve where Nikolayenko was based.
Death In the winter of 2003, Nikolayenko had been out in the wilderness much longer than planned, probably because not all of the bears had yet gone into hibernation. He had been waiting for a helicopter flight out of the reserve and was last heard from in late December 2003. When a helicopter did eventually arrive to pick him up, the crew found no sign of the
researcher, and a search team was dispatched. On 1 January 2004, Russian authorities announced that the body of Nikolayenko, 66, had been found at a lake near his remote one-room hut on the
Tikhaya River. The pawprint of a medium-sized male bear was found next to his body, along with an empty can of
pepper spray with which Nikolayenko had apparently tried to defend himself. Victor Rebrikov, a tourist guide and longtime friend of Nikolayenko who was on the search team that found the body, said it appeared that Nikolayenko had followed a large male bear to the small, spring-fed lake that lies less than from the hut. "Vitaly must have begun to take pictures of the resting bear, but the tree trunks and branches were in the way, and he must have decided to get inside the grove. His footprints lead into the grove after the bear. He approached the bear at a distance of three meters", Rebrikov said. A large swath of orange pepper spray indicated that Nikolayenko tried to defend himself, and a flare gun was lying next to the body, unfired. His camera was broken and bloody nearby. Just two months before, American bear researcher
Timothy Treadwell and his girlfriend were killed and partially eaten by bears in the
Alaska Katmai National Park. ==Controversy==