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The Sunday Times (UK)
December 18, 2005
Polar bears drown as ice shelf melts
Will Iredale
SCIENTISTS have for the first time found evidence that polar bears
are drowning because climate change is melting the Arctic ice shelf.
The researchers were startled to find bears having to swim up to 60
miles across open sea to find food. They are being forced into the
long voyages because the ice floes from which they feed are melting,
becoming smaller and drifting farther apart.
Although polar bears are strong swimmers, they are adapted for
swimming close to the shore. Their sea journeys leave them them
vulnerable to exhaustion, hypothermia or being swamped by waves.
According to the new research, four bear carcases were found
floating in one month in a single patch of sea off the north coast
of Alaska, where average summer temperatures have increased by 2-3C
degrees since 1950s.
The scientists believe such drownings are becoming widespread across
the Arctic, an inevitable consequence of the doubling in the past 20
years of the proportion of polar bears having to swim in open seas.
“Mortalities due to offshore swimming may be a relatively important
and unaccounted source of natural mortality given the energetic
demands placed on individual bears engaged in long-distance
swimming,” says the research led by Dr Charles Monnett, marine
ecologist at the American government’s Minerals Management Service.
“Drowning-related deaths of polar bears may increase in the future
if the observed trend of regression of pack ice continues.”
The research, presented to a conference on marine mammals in San
Diego, California, last week, comes amid evidence of a decline in
numbers of the 22,000 polar bears that live in about 20 sites across
the Arctic circle.
In Hudson Bay, Canada, the site of the most southerly polar bears, a
study by the US Geological Survey (USGS) and the Canadian Wildlife
Service to be published next year will show the population fell 22%
from 1,194 in 1987 to 935 last year.
New evidence from field researchers working for the World Wildlife
Fund in Yakutia, on the northeast coast of Russia, has also shown
the region’s first evidence of cannibalism among bears competing for
food supplies.
Polar bears live on ice all year round and use it as a platform from
which to hunt food and rear their young. They hunt near the edge,
where the ice is thinnest, catching seals when they make holes in
the ice to breath. They typically eat one seal every four or five
days and a single bear can consume 100lb of blubber at one sitting.
As the ice pack retreats north in the summer between June and
October, the bears must travel between ice floes to continue hunting
in areas such as the shallow water of the continental shelf off the
Alaskan coast — one of the most food-rich areas in the Arctic.
However, last summer the ice cap receded about 200 miles further
north than the average of two decades ago, forcing the bears to
undertake far longer voyages between floes.
“We know short swims up to 15 miles are no problem, and we know that
one or two may have swum up to 100 miles. But that is the extent of
their ability, and if they are trying to make such a long swim and
they encounter rough seas they could get into trouble,” said Steven
Amstrup, a research wildlife biologist with the USGS.
The new study, carried out in part of the Beaufort Sea, shows that
between 1986 and 2005 just 4% of the bears spotted off the north
coast of Alaska were swimming in open waters. Not a single drowning
had been documented in the area.
However, last September, when the ice cap had retreated a record 160
miles north of Alaska, 51 bears were spotted, of which 20% were seen
in the open sea, swimming as far as 60 miles off shore.
The researchers returned to the vicinity a few days later after a
fierce storm and found four dead bears floating in the water. “We
estimate that of the order of 40 bears may have been swimming and
that many of those probably drowned as a result of rough seas caused
by high winds,” said the report.
In their search for food, polar bears are also having to roam
further south, rummaging in the dustbins of Canadian homes. Sir
Ranulph Fiennes, the explorer who has been to the North Pole seven
times, said he had noticed a deterioration in the bears’ ice habitat
since his first expedition in 1975.
“Each year there was more water than the time before,” he said. “We
used amphibious sledges for the first time in 1986.”
His last expedition was in 2002, when he fell through the ice and
lost some of his fingers to frostbite.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-1938132,00.html
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