Experts Predict Polar Bear
Decline
Global Warming Is Melting Their Ice Pack Habitat
By
Thursday, July 7, 2005; A03
In a closed meeting here late last month, 40 members of the polar bear
specialist group of the World Conservation Union concluded that the imposing
white carnivores -- the world's largest bear -- should now be classified as a
"vulnerable" species based on a likely 30 percent decline in their
worldwide population over the next 35 to 50 years. There are now 20,000 to
25,000 polar bears across the
"The principal cause of this decline is climatic warming and its
consequent negative affects on the sea ice habitat of polar bears,"
according to a statement released after the meeting. Scientists from five
countries, including the
"All of the evidence is heading in the same direction, and the trend is
dramatic," said Scott Schliebe, who led the
A 30 percent drop
in the number of polar bears is expected as diminishing ice packs affect the
bears' ability to find food and to reproduce. (By Subhankar
Banerjee -- Associated Press)
Schliebe emphasized that he was speaking for the panel and not for the
The panel's conclusions became public this week as President Bush traveled
to a Group of Eight meeting in
The best longitudinal information on the effect of global warming on polar
bears comes from the western coast of Hudson Bay, in the Canadian
"We have seen with our own eyes that climatic warming is causing the ice to break up earlier, and that is affecting the survival of the bears," said Ian Stirling, a research scientist for the Canadian Wildlife Service.
Ice is melting there about three weeks earlier than it did 30 years ago,
said
"For a polar bear, not all weeks are created equal," he said. "They are losing three weeks at the best time of the year for feeding on the ice, when seal pups are abundant and bears put on fat that they store for the four months that they have to live onshore."
Having lost this critical hunting opportunity, polar bears in western Hudson Bay weigh about 15 percent less (about 150 pounds less for an adult male) than they did 30 years ago, Stirling said.
"The bears are losing their physical condition," he said. "It is a cumulative process that is causing a steady decline in survival, particularly for cubs and sub-adults. It is causing the population to decline."
In
Polar bears evolved from brown bears about a quarter-million years ago to become specialist carnivores, marine mammals that can thrive on ice packs and feast on seals. Climate change, though, is happening too fast for the bears to adapt, experts say.
"They don't have time to evolve backwards,"
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