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A third of polar bears could be in imminent danger from global warming by 2025: report

Mark Thiessen, The Associated Press, Published Wednesday, July 1, 2015 3:20PM EDT, Last Updated Wednesday, July 1, 2015 7:15PM EDT, Source

 

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- About a third of the world's polar bears could be in imminent danger from greenhouse gas emissions in as soon as a decade, a U.S. government report shows.

 

The U.S. Geological Survey, the Interior Department's research arm, said updated scientific models don't bode well for polar bear populations across the world, especially in Alaska.

 

The report released this week is part of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's recovery plan for the polar bear. It is expected to be published Thursday in the Federal Register.

 

Greenhouse gases are blamed for the climate warming that's reducing the polar bear's summer sea ice habitat.

 

The effects of diminished sea ice will lead to population declines throughout the century. Scientists saw no rebound in population numbers in the projections that stretched to the year 2100.

 

The scientific models attempted to predict the effects on polar bear populations under two scenarios: one in which greenhouse gas emissions stabilized, and the other in which they continued unabated.

 

Under either scenario, the bears in the Alaska, Russia and Norway group -- with an estimated population of about 8,500 -- would start to be affected in either 2025 or 2030, said lead author Todd Atwood, an Alaska-based USGS research wildlife biologist.

 

He said the main reason is this part of the Arctic has suffered some of the most dramatic declines in summer sea ice.

 

Polar bears feed primarily on seals and use sea ice for feeding, mating and giving birth. When the sea ice retreats in the summer, polar bears are forced to land. A study earlier this year found the land-based food would not help a polar bear adapt to the loss of sea ice. The Office of Naval Research said the past eight years have had the eight lowest amounts of summer sea ice on record.

 

The USGS didn't predict specific number declines and instead projected whether a population would see a decreased or a greatly decreased population.

 

"That's not to say that we'll lose polar bears completely out of the area, but we think that they'll be at a greatly decreased distribution than what they currently are," Atwood said.

 

Polar bears in Canada and Greenland also could see dramatic population drops by 2050. Bears in the high Canadian Arctic fared the best in the two scientific models. They saw a "greatly decreased" population only under the worst-case scenario.

 

"Polar bears are in big trouble," said Rebecca Noblin, Alaska director for the Center for Biological Survey. "There are other steps we can take to slow the decline of polar bears, but in the long run, the only way to save polar bears in the Arctic is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions."

 

The Center for Biological Diversity originally petitioned for polar bears to be listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. In 2008, the species became the first to be listed because of global warming.

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Smell the flowers: Manitoba photographer snaps photos of frolicking polar bears

CTVNews.ca Staff, Published Saturday, August 22, 2015 3:30PM EDT, Source

 

A Manitoba-based photographer is turning heads online over a series of photos of playful polar bears stopping to smell the flowers.

 

Dennis Fast snapped the photos in 2008 during his time as a nature guide at Seal River Lodge, built on the shores of Hudson Bay about 60 kilometres from Churchill, Man. But they’ve recently earned renewed attention after being picked up by several photography websites, as well as Buzzfeed.

 

The images were captured on an unnamed island in the Hudson Bay that Fast calls “Fireweed Island” on account of a patch of bright fuschia flowers. He says it’s become somewhat of a summer getaway for polar bears.

 

“They come off the ice and they loaf all summer,” Fast said. “There are lots of beluga whales, and they try to catch those when they can. It’s just become a popular spot.”

 

To get the pictures, Fast positioned himself inside an electric fence, his camera at the ready.

 

“Any self-respecting bear could lean on it hard and it would be down,” he said. “Hopefully when they feel that little jolt in the nose, they’ll back off.

 

And they usually do.”

 

He estimates that “a dozen” bears were there the day he caught the pictures, and one got a little curious.

 

“We make it a policy not to get closer than 50 metres, but sometimes bears don’t follow the rules,” he said. “One bear had touched the electric fence, he was coming back and he wanted me in the worst way. I’m, gosh, 10 feet away from them?”

 

The photographer was armed with firecrackers and a gun, neither of which he needed to use; the bear eventually backed away, leaving Fast to focus on the shot.

 

Fast has been a nature photographer since the 1980s, and began visiting Churchill regularly in the 1990s to run photography workshops. His photos have been featured in several books, including “Touch the Arctic,” a coffee table book published in 2015.

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