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Polar bear

The polar bear (Ursus maritimus) is a hypercarnivorous bear whose native range lies largely within the Arctic Circle, encompassing the Arctic Ocean, its surrounding seas and surrounding land masses. It is the largest extant bear species, as well as the largest extant land carnivore.[6][7] A boar (adult male) weighs around 350–700 kg (770–1,540 lb),[8] while a sow (adult female) is about half that size. Although it is the sister species of the brown bear,[9] it has evolved to occupy a narrower ecological niche, with many body characteristics adapted for cold temperatures, for moving across snow, ice and open water, and for hunting seals, which make up most of its diet.[10] Although most polar bears are born on land, they spend most of their time on the sea ice. Their scientific name means "maritime bear" and derives from this fact. Polar bears hunt their preferred food of seals from the edge of sea ice, often living off fat reserves when no sea ice is present. Because of their dependence on the sea ice, polar bears are classified as marine mammals.[11]

Polar bear
Temporal range: Pleistocene-recent[1]
Sow near Kaktovik, Barter Island, Alaska, United States
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[3]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Ursidae
Genus: Ursus
Species:
U. maritimus
Binomial name
Ursus maritimus
Phipps, 1774[4]
Subspecies[5]

Ursus maritimus tyrannus(?)

Polar bear range
Synonyms

Ursus eogroenlandicus
Ursus groenlandicus
Ursus jenaensis
Ursus labradorensis
Ursus marinus
Ursus polaris
Ursus spitzbergensis
Ursus ungavensis
Thalarctos maritimus

Because of expected habitat loss caused by climate change, the polar bear is classified as a vulnerable species. For decades, large-scale hunting raised international concern for the future of the species, but populations rebounded after controls and quotas began to take effect.[12] For thousands of years, the polar bear has been a key figure in the material, spiritual, and cultural life of circumpolar peoples, and polar bears remain important in their cultures. Historically, the polar bear has also been known as the "white bear".[13] It is sometimes referred to as the "nanook", based on the Inuit term nanuq.[14]

Naming and etymology

Constantine John Phipps was the first to describe the polar bear as a distinct species in 1774 in his report about his 1773 expedition towards the North Pole.[4][2] He chose the scientific name Ursus maritimus, the Latin for "maritime bear",[15] due to the animal's native habitat. The Inuit refer to the animal as nanook (transliterated as nanuq in the Inupiat language).[16][14] The Yupik also refer to the bear as nanuuk in Siberian Yupik.[17] In the Chukotko-Kamchatkan languages of Alyutor and Koryak, the name of the polar bear is umqa, while in the related Chukchi, it is umqə.[18] In Russian, it is usually called бе́лый медве́дь (bélyj medvédj, 'white bear'), though an older word still in use is ошку́й (Oshkúj, which comes from the Komi oski, "bear").[19] In Quebec, the polar bear is referred to by the french terms ours blanc ('white bear') or ours polaire ('polar bear').[20] In Norwegian, one of the primary languages of the Svalbard archipelago,[21] the polar bear is referred to as isbjørn ('ice bear') or kvitbjørn ('white bear').[22]

The polar bear was previously considered to be in its own genus, Thalarctos.[23] However, evidence of hybrids between polar bears and brown bears, and of the recent evolutionary divergence of the two species, does not support the establishment of this separate genus, and the accepted scientific name is now therefore Ursus maritimus, as Phipps originally proposed.[2]

Taxonomy and evolution

 
Polar bears have evolved adaptations for Arctic life. For example, large furry feet and short, sharp, stocky claws give them good traction on ice.

The bear family, Ursidae, is thought to have split from other carnivorans about 38 million years ago.[24] The subfamily Ursinae originated approximately 4.2 million years ago.[25] The oldest known polar bear fossil is a 130,000 to 110,000-year-old jaw bone, found on Prince Charles Foreland in 2004.[26] Fossils show that between 10,000 and 20,000 years ago, the polar bear's molar teeth changed significantly from those of the brown bear.[27] Polar bears are thought to have diverged from a population of brown bears that became isolated during a period of glaciation in the Pleistocene[5] from the eastern part of Siberia (from Kamchatka and the Kolym Peninsula).[27]

The evidence from DNA analysis is more complex. The mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) of the polar bear diverged from the brown bear, Ursus arctos, roughly 150,000 years ago.[26] Further, some clades of brown bear, as assessed by their mtDNA, were thought to be more closely related to polar bears than to other brown bears,[28] meaning that the brown bear might not be considered a species under some species concepts, but paraphyletic.[29] The mtDNA of extinct Irish brown bears is particularly close to polar bears.[30] A comparison of the nuclear genome of polar bears with that of brown bears revealed a different pattern, the two forming genetically distinct clades that diverged approximately 603,000 years ago,[31] although the latest research is based on analysis of the complete genomes (rather than just the mitochondria or partial nuclear genomes) of polar and brown bears, and establishes the divergence of polar and brown bears at 400,000 years ago.[32]

However, the two species have mated intermittently for all that time, most likely coming into contact with each other during warming periods, when polar bears were driven onto land and brown bears migrated northward. Most brown bears have about 2 percent genetic material from polar bears, but one population, the ABC Islands bears, has between 5 percent and 10 percent polar bear genes, indicating more frequent and recent mating.[33] Polar bears can breed with brown bears to produce fertile grizzly–polar bear hybrids;[5][34] rather than indicating that they have only recently diverged, the new evidence suggests more frequent mating has continued over a longer period of time, and thus the two bears remain genetically similar.[33] However, because neither species can survive long in the other's ecological niche, and because they have different morphology, metabolism, social and feeding behaviours, and other phenotypic characteristics, the two bears are generally classified as separate species.[35]

When the polar bear was originally documented, two subspecies were identified: the American polar bear (Ursus maritimus maritimus) by Constantine J. Phipps in 1774, and the Siberian polar bear (Ursus maritimus marinus) by Peter Simon Pallas in 1776.[36] This distinction has since been invalidated.[37][38][39] One alleged fossil subspecies has been identified: Ursus maritimus tyrannus, which became extinct during the Pleistocene. U.m. tyrannus was significantly larger than the living subspecies.[5] However, recent reanalysis of the fossil suggests that it was actually a brown bear.[1]

Population and distribution

 
Bears investigate the submarine USS Honolulu 450 kilometres (280 mi) from the North Pole

The polar bear is found in the Arctic Circle and adjacent land masses as far south as Newfoundland. Due to the absence of human development in its remote habitat, it retains more of its original range than any other extant carnivore.[40] While they are rare north of 88°, there is evidence that they range all the way across the Arctic, and as far south as James Bay in Canada. Their southernmost range is near the boundary between the subarctic and humid continental climate zones. They can occasionally drift widely with the sea ice, and there have been anecdotal sightings as far south as Berlevåg on the Norwegian mainland and the Kuril Islands in the Sea of Okhotsk. It is difficult to estimate a global population of polar bears as much of the range has been poorly studied; however, biologists use a working estimate of about 20–25,000 or 22–31,000 polar bears worldwide.[2][41][42]

With the discovery of a southeast Greenland population in 2022,[43][44] there are 20 generally recognized, discrete subpopulations of polar bears.[41][45] The subpopulations display seasonal fidelity to particular areas, but DNA studies show that they are not reproductively isolated.[39] The 14 North American subpopulations range from the Beaufort Sea south to Hudson Bay and east to eastern Greenland and account for about 54% of the global population.[46]

Bears play-fighting

The usual range includes the territory of five nations: Denmark (Greenland), Norway (Svalbard), Russia, the United States (Alaska) and Canada. These five nations are the signatories of the International Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears, which mandates cooperation on research and conservation efforts throughout the polar bear's range.[47] Bears sometimes swim to Iceland from Greenland—about 600 sightings since the country's settlement in the 9th century, and five in the 21st century as of 2016—and are always killed because of their danger, as well as the cost and difficulty of repatriation.[48]

Modern methods of tracking polar bear populations have been implemented only since the mid-1980s, and are expensive to perform consistently over a large area. The most accurate counts require flying a helicopter in the Arctic climate to find polar bears, shooting a tranquilizer dart at the bear to sedate it, and then tagging the bear. In Nunavut, some Inuit have reported increases in bear sightings around human settlements in recent years, leading to a belief that populations are increasing. Scientists have responded by noting that hungry bears may be congregating around human settlements, leading to the illusion that populations are higher than they actually are.[49] The Polar Bear Specialist Group of the IUCN Species Survival Commission takes the position that "estimates of subpopulation size or sustainable harvest levels should not be made solely on the basis of traditional ecological knowledge without supporting scientific studies."[50]

Of the 19 polar bear subpopulations recognized in 2017, one was in decline, two were increasing, seven were stable, and nine had insufficient data.[51]

Habitat

 
Polar bear jumping on fast ice in Spitsbergen Island, Svalbard Archipelago, Norway

The polar bear is a marine mammal because it spends many months of the year at sea.[52] However, it is the only living marine mammal with powerful, large limbs and feet that allow them to cover kilometres on foot and run on land.[53] Its preferred habitat is the annual sea ice covering the waters over the continental shelf and the Arctic inter-island archipelagos. These areas, known as the "Arctic ring of life", have high biological productivity in comparison to the deep waters of the high Arctic.[40][54] The polar bear tends to frequent areas where sea ice meets water, such as polynyas and leads (temporary stretches of open water in Arctic ice), to hunt the seals that make up most of its diet.[55] Freshwater is limited in these environments because it is either locked up in snow or saline. Polar bears are able to produce water through the metabolism of fats found in seal blubber,[56] and are therefore found primarily along the perimeter of the polar ice pack, rather than in the Polar Basin close to the North Pole where the density of seals is low.[57]

Annual ice contains areas of water that appear and disappear throughout the year as the weather changes. Seals migrate in response to these changes, and polar bears must follow their prey. In Hudson Bay, James Bay, and some other areas, the ice melts completely each summer (an event often referred to as "ice-floe breakup"), forcing polar bears to go onto land and wait through the months until the next freeze-up.[54] In the Chukchi and Beaufort seas, most polar bears retreat each summer to the ice further north that remains frozen year-round, though a large portion of the population (15–40%) has been observed spending all summer on land every year in these areas since the 1980s.[58]

Physical characteristics

 
Skull
 
Polar bear skeleton
Captive bear swimming
 
A female bear at the Ranua Zoo

The only other bear of comparable size to the polar bear is the Kodiak bear, which is a subspecies of brown bear.[59] Adult male polar bears weigh 350–700 kg (770–1,500 lb) and measure 2.4–3 metres (7 ft 10 in – 9 ft 10 in) in total length.[60] Around the Beaufort Sea, however, mature males reportedly average 450 kg (1,000 lb).[61] Adult females are roughly half the size of males and normally weigh 150–250 kg (330–550 lb), measuring 1.8–2.4 metres (5 ft 11 in – 7 ft 10 in) in length. Elsewhere, a slightly larger estimated average weight of 260 kg (570 lb) was claimed for adult females.[62] When pregnant, however, females can weigh as much as 500 kg (1,100 lb).[60] The polar bear is among the most sexually dimorphic of mammals, surpassed only by the pinnipeds such as elephant seals.[63] The largest polar bear on record, reportedly weighing 1,002 kg (2,209 lb), was a male shot at Kotzebue Sound in northwestern Alaska in 1960. This specimen, when mounted, stood 3.39 m (11 ft 1 in) tall on its hindlegs. The shoulder height of an adult polar bear is 122 to 160 cm (4 ft 0 in to 5 ft 3 in).[64][65] While all bears are short-tailed, the polar bear's tail is relatively the shortest amongst living bears, ranging from 7 to 13 cm (2.8 to 5.1 in) in length.[66]

Compared with its closest relative, the brown bear, the polar bear has a more elongated body build and a longer skull and nose.[35] As predicted by Allen's rule for a northerly animal, the legs are stocky and the ears and tail are small.[35] However, the feet are very large to distribute load when walking on snow or thin ice and to provide propulsion when swimming; they may measure 30 cm (12 in) across in an adult.[67] The pads of the paws are covered with small, soft papillae (dermal bumps), which provide traction on the ice. The polar bear's claws are short and stocky compared to those of the brown bear, perhaps to serve the former's need to grip heavy prey and ice.[35] The claws are deeply scooped on the underside which assists in digging in the ice of the natural habitat. Research of injury patterns in polar bear forelimbs found injuries to the right forelimb to be more frequent than those to the left, suggesting, perhaps, right-handedness.[68] Unlike the brown bear, polar bears in captivity are rarely overweight or particularly large, possibly as a reaction to the warm conditions of most zoos.[citation needed]

The 42 teeth of a polar bear reflect its highly carnivorous diet. The cheek teeth are smaller and more jagged than in the brown bear, and the canines are larger and sharper. The dental formula is 3.1.4.23.1.4.3.[35]

Polar bears are superbly insulated by up to 10 cm (4 in) of adipose tissue,[67] their hide and their fur. Polar bear fur consists of a layer of dense underfur and an outer layer of guard hairs, which appear white to tan but are actually transparent.[67] Two genes that are known to influence melanin production, LYST and AIM1, are both mutated in polar bears, possibly leading to the absence on this pigment in their fur.[69] The guard hair is 5–15 cm (2–6 in) over most of the body.[70] Polar bears gradually moult from May to August,[71] but, unlike other Arctic mammals, they do not shed their coat for a darker shade to provide camouflage in summer conditions.[72] The hollow guard hairs of a polar bear coat were once thought to act as fiber-optic tubes to conduct light to its black skin, where it could be absorbed; however, this hypothesis was disproved by a study in 1998.[73]

The white coat usually yellows with age. When kept in captivity in warm, humid conditions, the fur may turn a pale shade of green due to algae growing inside the guard hairs.[74] Males have significantly longer hairs on their forelegs, which increase in length until the bear reaches 14 years of age. The male's ornamental foreleg hair is thought to attract females, serving a similar function to the lion's mane.[75]

The polar bear has an extremely well developed sense of smell, being able to detect seals nearly 1.6 km (1 mi) away and buried under 1 m (3 ft) of snow. Its hearing is about as acute as that of a human, and its vision is also good at long distances.[76]

The polar bear is an excellent swimmer and often will swim for days.[77] One bear swam continuously for 9 days in the frigid Bering Sea for 700 km (400 mi) to reach ice far from land. She then travelled another 1,800 km (1,100 mi). During the swim, the bear lost 22% of her body mass and her yearling cub died.[78] With its body fat providing buoyancy, the bear swims in a dog paddle fashion using its large forepaws for propulsion. Polar bears can swim at 10 km/h (6 mph). When walking, the polar bear tends to have a lumbering gait and maintains an average speed of around 5.6 km/h (3.5 mph).[79] When sprinting, they can reach up to 40 km/h (25 mph).[80]

Life history and behaviour

 
Subadult males frequently play-fight. During the mating season, actual fighting is intense and often leaves scars or broken teeth.

Unlike brown bears, polar bears are not territorial. Although stereotyped as being voraciously aggressive, they are normally cautious in confrontations, and often choose to escape rather than fight.[81] Satiated polar bears rarely attack humans unless severely provoked.[82][83] However, due to their lack of prior human interaction, hungry polar bears are extremely unpredictable, fearless towards people and are known to kill and sometimes eat humans.[84] Many attacks by brown bears are the result of surprising the animal, which is not the case with the polar bear. Polar bears are stealth hunters, and the victim is often unaware of the bear's presence until the attack is underway. Whereas brown bears often maul a person and then leave, polar bear attacks are more likely to be predatory and are almost always fatal.[85] However, due to the very small human population around the Arctic, such attacks are rare. Michio Hoshino, a Japanese wildlife photographer, was once pursued briefly by a hungry male polar bear in northern Alaska. According to Hoshino, the bear started running but Hoshino made it to his truck. The bear was able to reach the truck and tore one of the doors off the truck before Hoshino was able to drive off.[86]

In general, adult polar bears live solitary lives. Yet, they have often been seen playing together for hours at a time and even sleeping in an embrace,[84] and polar bear zoologist Nikita Ovsianikov has described adult males as having "well-developed friendships."[81] Cubs are especially playful as well. Among young males in particular, play-fighting may be a means of practicing for serious competition during mating seasons later in life.[87] Polar bears are usually quiet but do communicate with various sounds and vocalizations. Females communicate with their young with moans and chuffs, and the distress calls of both cubs and subadults consists of bleats.[88] Cubs may hum while nursing.[89] When nervous, bears produce huffs, chuffs and snorts while hisses, growls and roars are signs of aggression.[88] Chemical communication can also be important: bears leave behind their scent in their tracks which allow individuals to keep track of one another in the vast Arctic wilderness.[90]

In 1992, a photographer near Churchill took a now widely circulated set of photographs of a polar bear playing with a Canadian Eskimo Dog (Canis familiaris) a tenth of its size.[91][92] The pair wrestled harmlessly together each afternoon for 10 days in a row for no apparent reason, although the bear may have been trying to demonstrate its friendliness in the hope of sharing the kennel's food. This kind of social interaction is uncommon; it is far more typical for polar bears to behave aggressively towards dogs.[91]

Hunting and diet

 
The polar bear's long muzzle and neck help it to search in deep holes for seals, while its powerful hindquarters enable it to drag massive prey[93]

The polar bear is the most carnivorous member of the bear family, and throughout most of its range, its diet primarily consists of ringed (Pusa hispida) and bearded seals (Erignathus barbatus).[94] The Arctic is home to millions of seals, which become prey when they surface in holes in the ice in order to breathe, or when they haul out on the ice to rest.[93][95] Polar bears hunt primarily at the interface between ice, water, and air; they only rarely catch seals on land or in open water.[96]

The polar bear's most common hunting method is called still-hunting:[97] the bear uses its excellent sense of smell to locate a seal breathing hole, and crouches nearby in silence for a seal to appear. The bear may lie in wait for several hours. When the seal exhales, the bear smells its breath, reaches into the hole with a forepaw, and drags it out onto the ice. The polar bear kills the seal by biting its head to crush its skull. The polar bear also hunts by stalking seals resting on the ice: upon spotting a seal, it walks to within 90 m (100 yd), and then crouches. If the seal does not notice, the bear creeps to within 9 to 12 m (30 to 40 ft) of the seal and then suddenly rushes forth to attack.[93] A third hunting method is to raid the birth lairs that female seals create in the snow.[97]

A widespread legend tells that polar bears cover their black noses with their paws when hunting. This behaviour, if it happens, is rare – although the story exists in the oral history of northern peoples and in accounts by early Arctic explorers, there is no record of an eyewitness account of the behaviour in recent decades.[79]

 
Bear feeding on a bearded seal

Mature bears tend to eat only the calorie-rich skin and blubber of the seal, which are highly digestible,[98] whereas younger bears consume the protein-rich red meat.[93] Studies have also photographed polar bears scaling near-vertical cliffs, to eat birds' chicks and eggs.[99] For subadult bears, which are independent of their mother but have not yet gained enough experience and body size to successfully hunt seals, scavenging the carcasses from other bears' kills is an important source of nutrition. Subadults may also be forced to accept a half-eaten carcass if they kill a seal but cannot defend it from larger polar bears. After feeding, polar bears wash themselves with water or snow.[79]

Although polar bears are extraordinarily powerful, its primary prey species, the ringed seal, is much smaller than itself, and many of the seals hunted are pups rather than adults. Ringed seals are born weighing 5.4 kg (12 lb) and grown to an estimated average weight of only 60 kg (130 lb).[100][101] They also in places prey heavily upon the harp seal (Pagophilus groenlandicus), the harbour seal (Phoca vitulina), or the hooded seal (Cystophora cristata).[102] The bearded seal, on the other hand, can be nearly the same size as the bear itself, averaging 270 kg (600 lb).[101] Adult male bearded seals, at 350 to 500 kg (770 to 1,100 lb) are too large for a female bear to overtake, and so are potential prey only for mature male bears.[103] Large males also occasionally attempt to hunt and kill even larger prey items.[104] It can kill an adult walrus (Odobenus rosmarus),[101][105] although this is rarely attempted. At up to 2,000 kg (4,400 lb) and a typical adult mass range of 600 to 1,500 kg (1,300 to 3,300 lb), a walrus can be more than twice the bear's weight,[106] has extremely thick skin and has up to 1-metre (3 ft)-long ivory tusks that can be used as formidable weapons. A polar bear may charge a group of walruses, with the goal of separating a young, infirm, or injured walrus from the pod. They will even attack adult walruses when their diving holes have frozen over or intercept them before they can get back to the diving hole in the ice. Yet, polar bears will very seldom attack full-grown adult walruses, with the largest male walrus probably invulnerable unless otherwise injured or incapacitated. Since an attack on a walrus tends to be an extremely protracted and exhausting venture, bears have been known to back down from the attack after making the initial injury to the walrus.[105] Polar bears have also been seen to prey on beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas)[101] and narwhals (Monodon monoceros),[101] by swiping at them at breathing holes. The whales are of similar size to the walrus and nearly as difficult for the bear to subdue.[107][108] Most terrestrial animals in the Arctic can outrun the polar bear on land as polar bears overheat quickly, and most marine animals the bear encounters can outswim it. In some areas, the polar bear's diet is supplemented by walrus calves and by the carcasses of dead adult walruses or whales, whose blubber is readily devoured even when rotten.[84] Polar bears sometimes swim underwater to catch fish like the Arctic charr or the fourhorn sculpin.[95]

 
Some characteristic postures:
  1. at rest;
  2. assessing a situation;
  3. when feeding

With the exception of pregnant females, polar bears are active year-round, although they have a vestigial hibernation induction trigger in their blood. Unlike brown and black bears, polar bears are capable of fasting for up to several months during late summer and early fall, when they cannot hunt for seals because the sea is unfrozen.[109] When sea ice is unavailable during summer and early autumn, some populations live off fat reserves for months at a time,[110] as polar bears do not 'hibernate' any time of the year.[111]

Being both curious animals and scavengers,[106][112] polar bears investigate and consume garbage where they come into contact with humans.[101][106] Polar bears may attempt to consume almost anything they can find, including hazardous substances such as styrofoam, plastic, car batteries, ethylene glycol, hydraulic fluid, and motor oil.[106][112] The dump in Churchill, Manitoba was closed in 2006 to protect bears, and waste is now recycled or transported to Thompson, Manitoba.[113][114]

Dietary flexibility

Although seal predation is the primary and an indispensable way of life for most polar bears, when alternatives are present they are quite flexible. Polar bears consume a wide variety of other wild foods, including muskox (Ovibos moschatus), reindeer (Rangifer tarandus), birds, eggs, rodents, crabs, other crustaceans, fish[102] and other polar bears. They may also eat plants, including berries, roots, and kelp;[115] however, none of these have been a significant part of their diet,[106] except for beachcast marine mammal carcasses. Given the change in climate, with ice breaking up in areas such as the Hudson Bay earlier than it used to, polar bears are exploiting food resources such as snow geese and eggs, and plants such as lyme grass in increased quantities.[116]

When stalking land animals, such as muskox, reindeer,[115] and even willow ptarmigan (Lagopus lagopus), polar bears appear to make use of vegetative cover and wind direction to bring them as close to their prey as possible before attacking. Polar bears have been observed to hunt the small Svalbard reindeer (R. t. platyrhynchus), which weigh only 40 to 60 kg (90 to 130 lb) as adults, as well as the barren-ground caribou (R. t. groenlandicus), which is about twice as heavy as the former.[117][118] Adult muskox, which can weigh 450 kg (1,000 lb) or more, are a more formidable quarry.[119] Although ungulates are not typical prey, the killing of one during the summer months can greatly increase the odds of survival during that lean period. Like the brown bear, most ungulate prey of polar bears is likely to be young, sickly or injured specimens rather than healthy adults.[118] The polar bear's metabolism is specialized to require large amounts of fat from marine mammals, and it cannot derive sufficient caloric intake from terrestrial food.[120][121]

In their southern range, especially near Hudson Bay and James Bay, Canadian polar bears endure all summer without sea ice to hunt from.[115] Here, their food ecology shows their dietary flexibility. They still manage to consume some seals, but they are food-deprived in summer as only marine mammal carcasses are an important alternative without sea ice, especially carcasses of the beluga whale. These alternatives may reduce the rate of weight loss of bears when on land.[122] One scientist found that 71% of the Hudson Bay bears had fed on seaweed (marine algae) and that about half were feeding on birds[101] such as the dovekie and sea ducks, especially the long-tailed duck (53%) and common eider, by swimming underwater to catch them. They were also diving to feed on blue mussels and other underwater food sources like the green sea urchin. 24% had eaten moss recently, 19% had consumed grass, 34% had eaten black crowberry and about half had consumed willows.[115] This study illustrates the polar bear's dietary flexibility but it does not represent its life history elsewhere. Most polar bears elsewhere will never have access to these alternatives, except for the marine mammal carcasses that are important wherever they occur.

In Svalbard, polar bears were observed to kill white-beaked dolphins during spring, when the dolphins were trapped in the sea ice. The bears then proceeded to cache the carcasses, which remained and were eaten during the ice-free summer and autumn.[123]

Reproduction and lifecycle

 
Cubs are born helpless and typically nurse for two and a half years

Courtship and mating take place on the sea ice in April and May, when polar bears congregate in the best seal hunting areas.[124] A male may follow the tracks of a breeding female for 100 km (60 mi) or more, and after finding her engage in intense fighting with other males over mating rights, fights that often result in scars and broken teeth.[124] Polar bears have a generally polygynous mating system; recent genetic testing of mothers and cubs, however, has uncovered cases of litters in which cubs have different fathers.[125] Partners stay together and mate repeatedly for an entire week; the mating ritual induces ovulation in the female.[126]

After mating, the fertilized egg remains in a suspended state until August or September. During these four months, the pregnant female eats prodigious amounts of food, gaining at least 200 kg (440 lb) and often more than doubling her body weight.[124]

Maternity denning and early life

 
Mother and cub on Svalbard, Norway

When the ice floes are at their minimum in the fall, ending the possibility of hunting, each pregnant female digs a maternity den consisting of a narrow entrance tunnel leading to one to three chambers. Most maternity dens are in snowdrifts, but may also be made underground in permafrost if it is not sufficiently cold yet for snow.[124] In most subpopulations, maternity dens are situated on land a few kilometres from the coast, and the individuals in a subpopulation tend to reuse the same denning areas each year.[40] The polar bears that do not den on land make their dens on the sea ice. In the den, she enters a dormant state similar to hibernation. This hibernation-like state does not consist of continuous sleeping; however, the bear's heart rate slows from 46 to 27 beats per minute.[127] Her body temperature does not decrease during this period as it would for a typical mammal in hibernation.[110][128]

Between November and February, cubs are born blind, covered with a light down fur, and weighing less than 0.9 kg (2.0 lb),[126] but in captivity they might be delivered in the earlier months. The earliest recorded birth of polar bears in captivity was on 11 October 2011 in the Toronto Zoo.[129] On average, each litter has two cubs. The family remains in the den until mid-February to mid-April, with the mother maintaining her fast while nursing her cubs on a fat-rich milk. By the time the mother breaks open the entrance to the den, her cubs weigh about 10 to 15 kilograms (22 to 33 lb). For about 12 to 15 days, the family spends time outside the den while remaining in its vicinity, the mother grazing on vegetation while the cubs become used to walking and playing. Then they begin the long walk from the denning area to the sea ice, where the mother can once again catch seals. Depending on the timing of ice-floe breakup in the fall, she may have fasted for up to eight months.[124] During this time, cubs playfully imitate the mother's hunting methods in preparation for later life.[130]

Cub nursing

Female polar bears have been known to adopt other cubs. Multiple cases of adoption of wild cubs have been confirmed by genetic testing.[131] Adult bears of either sex occasionally kill and eat polar bear cubs.[132][133] As of 2006, in Alaska, 42% of cubs were reaching 12 months of age, down from 65% in 1991.[134] In most areas, cubs are weaned at two and a half years of age, when the mother chases them away or abandons them. The Western Hudson Bay subpopulation is unusual in that its female polar bears sometimes wean their cubs at only one and a half years.[124] This was the case for 40% of cubs there in the early 1980s; however by the 1990s, fewer than 20% of cubs were weaned this young.[135] After the mother leaves, sibling cubs sometimes travel and share food together for weeks or months.[84]

Later life

Females begin to breed at the age of four years in most areas, and five years in the area of the Beaufort Sea. Males usually reach sexual maturity at six years; however, as competition for females is fierce, many do not breed until the age of eight or ten.[124] A study in Hudson Bay indicated that both the reproductive success and the maternal weight of females peaked in their mid-teens. Maternal success appeared to decline after this point, possibly because of an age-related impairment in the ability to store the fat necessary to rear cubs.[136]

Polar bears appear to be less affected by infectious diseases and parasites than most terrestrial mammals.[137] Polar bears are especially susceptible to Trichinella, a parasitic roundworm they contract through cannibalism,[138] although infections are usually not fatal. Only one case of a polar bear with rabies has been documented, even though polar bears frequently interact with Arctic foxes, which often carry rabies.[137] Bacterial leptospirosis and Morbillivirus have been recorded. Polar bears sometimes have problems with various skin diseases that may be caused by mites or other parasites.[citation needed]

Life expectancy

Polar bears rarely live beyond 25 years.[139] The oldest wild bears on record died at age 32, whereas the oldest captive was a female who died in 1991, age 43.[140] The causes of death in wild adult polar bears are poorly understood, as carcasses are rarely found in the species's frigid habitat. In the wild, old polar bears eventually become too weak to catch food, and gradually starve to death. Polar bears injured in fights or accidents may either die from their injuries, or become unable to hunt effectively, leading to starvation.[137]

Ecological role

The polar bear is the apex predator within its range, and is a keystone species for the Arctic.[141] Several animal species, particularly Arctic foxes (Vulpes lagopus) and glaucous gulls (Larus hyperboreus), routinely scavenge polar bear kills.[79]

The relationship between ringed seals and polar bears is so close that the abundance of ringed seals in some areas appears to regulate the density of polar bears, while polar bear predation in turn regulates density and reproductive success of ringed seals.[96] The evolutionary pressure of polar bear predation on seals probably accounts for some significant differences between Arctic and Antarctic seals. Compared to the Antarctic, where there is no major surface predator, Arctic seals use more breathing holes per individual, appear more restless when hauled out on the ice, and rarely defecate on the ice. The baby fur of most Arctic seal species is white, presumably to provide camouflage from predators, whereas Antarctic seals all have dark fur at birth.[79]

Brown bears tend to dominate polar bears in disputes over carcasses,[142] and dead polar bear cubs have been found in brown bear dens.[143] Wolves are rarely encountered by polar bears, though there are two records of Arctic wolf (Canis lupus arctos) packs killing polar bear cubs.[144] Adult polar bears are occasionally vulnerable to predation by orcas (Orcinus orca) while swimming, but they are rarely reported as taken and bears are likely to avoid entering the water if possible if they detect an orca pod in the area. The melting sea ice in the Arctic may be causing an increase of orcas in the Arctic sea, which may increase the risk of predation on polar bears but also may benefit the bears by providing more whale carcasses that they can scavenge.[145][146] The remains of polar bears have been found in the stomachs of large Greenland sharks (Somniosus microcephalus), although it certainly cannot be ruled out that the bears were merely scavenged by this slow-moving, unusual shark.[147][148] A rather unlikely killer of a grown polar bear has reportedly included a wolverine (Gulo gulo), anecdotally reported to have suffocated a bear in a zoo with a bite to the throat during a conflict. This report may well be dubious, however.[149] Polar bears are sometimes the host of arctic mites such as Alaskozetes antarcticus.[79]

Long-distance swimming and diving

Researchers tracked 52 sows in the southern Beaufort Sea off Alaska with GPS system collars; no boars were involved in the study due to males' necks being too thick for the GPS-equipped collars. Fifty long-distance swims were recorded; the longest at 354 kilometres (220 mi), with an average of 155 kilometres (96 mi). The length of these swims ranged from most of a day to ten days. Ten of the sows had a cub swim with them and after a year, six cubs survived. The study did not determine if the others lost their cubs before, during, or some time after their long swims. Researchers do not know whether or not this is a new behaviour; before polar ice shrinkage, they opined that there was probably neither the need nor opportunity to swim such long distances.[150] As noted above, there have been 600 recorded instances of polar bears in Iceland since the 9th century. These presumably swam from Greenland, about 300 kilometres (190 mi).

The polar bear may swim underwater for up to three minutes to approach seals on shore or on ice floes.[151][152]

Hunting

Indigenous people

 
Skins of hunted bears

Polar bears have long provided important raw materials for Arctic peoples, including the Inuit, Yupik, Chukchi, Nenets, Russian Pomors and others. Hunters commonly used teams of dogs to distract the bear, allowing the hunter to spear the bear or shoot it with arrows at closer range.[153] Almost all parts of captured animals had a use.[154] The fur was used in particular to make trousers and, by the Nenets, to make galoshes-like outer footwear called tobok; the meat is edible, despite some risk of trichinosis; the fat was used in food and as a fuel for lighting homes, alongside seal and whale blubber; sinews were used as thread for sewing clothes; the gallbladder and sometimes heart were dried and powdered for medicinal purposes; the large canine teeth were highly valued as talismans.[155] Only the liver was not used, as its high concentration of vitamin A is poisonous. As a carnivore, which feeds largely upon fish-eating carnivores, the polar bear ingests large amounts of vitamin A that is stored in their livers. The resulting high concentrations cause hypervitaminosis A,[156] Hunters make sure to either toss the liver into the sea or bury it in order to spare their dogs from potential poisoning.[155] Traditional subsistence hunting was on a small enough scale to not significantly affect polar bear populations, mostly because of the sparseness of the human population in polar bear habitat.[157]

History of commercial harvest

In Russia, polar bear furs were already being commercially traded in the 14th century, though it was of low value compared to Arctic fox or even reindeer fur.[155] The growth of the human population in the Eurasian Arctic in the 16th and 17th century, together with the advent of firearms and increasing trade, dramatically increased the harvest of polar bears.[110][158] However, since polar bear fur has always played a marginal commercial role, data on the historical harvest is fragmentary. It is known, for example, that already in the winter of 1784/1785 Russian Pomors on Spitsbergen harvested 150 polar bears in Magdalenefjorden. In the early 20th century, Norwegian hunters were harvesting 300 bears per year at the same location. Estimates of total historical harvest suggest that from the beginning of the 18th century, roughly 400 to 500 animals were being harvested annually in northern Eurasia, reaching a peak of 1,300 to 1,500 animals in the early 20th century, and falling off as the numbers began dwindling.[155]

In the first half of the 20th century, mechanized and overpoweringly efficient methods of hunting and trapping came into use in North America as well. Polar bears were chased from snowmobiles, icebreakers, and airplanes, the latter practice described in a 1965 New York Times editorial as being "about as sporting as machine gunning a cow."[159] Norwegians used "self-killing guns", comprising a loaded rifle in a baited box that was placed at the level of a bear's head, and which fired when the string attached to the bait was pulled.[160] The numbers taken grew rapidly in the 1960s, peaking around 1968 with a global total of 1,250 bears that year.[161]

Contemporary regulations

 
Road sign warning about the presence of bears. The Norwegian text translates into "Applies to all of Svalbard".

Concerns over the future survival of the species led to the development of national regulations on polar bear hunting, beginning in the mid-1950s. The Soviet Union banned all hunting in 1956. Canada began imposing hunting quotas in 1968. Norway passed a series of increasingly strict regulations from 1965 to 1973, and has completely banned hunting since then. The United States began regulating hunting in 1971 and adopted the Marine Mammal Protection Act in 1972. In 1973, the International Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears was signed by all five nations whose territory is inhabited by polar bears: Canada, Denmark, Norway, the Soviet Union, and the United States. Member countries agreed to place restrictions on recreational and commercial hunting, ban hunting from aircraft and icebreakers, and conduct further research.[162] The treaty allows hunting "by local people using traditional methods". Norway is the only country of the five in which all harvest of polar bears is banned. The agreement was a rare case of international cooperation during the Cold War. Biologist Ian Stirling commented, "For many years, the conservation of polar bears was the only subject in the entire Arctic that nations from both sides of the Iron Curtain could agree upon sufficiently to sign an agreement. Such was the intensity of human fascination with this magnificent predator, the only marine bear."[163]

Agreements have been made between countries to co-manage their shared polar bear subpopulations. After several years of negotiations, Russia and the United States signed an agreement in October 2000 to jointly set quotas for indigenous subsistence hunting in Alaska and Chukotka.[164] The treaty was ratified in October 2007.[165] In September 2015, the polar bear range states agreed upon a "circumpolar action plan" describing their conservation strategy for polar bears.[166]

The species is listed in Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) meaning international trade, including in parts or derivatives, is controlled by the CITES system of permits and certificates.[3] The United States government has proposed that polar bears be transferred to Appendix I of CITES which would ban all commercial international trade in polar bear parts.[167] The decision to leave the species listed under Appendix II was endorsed by the IUCN and TRAFFIC, who determined that such an uplisting was unlikely to confer a conservation benefit.[168]

Canada

 
Dogsleds are used for recreational hunting of polar bears in Canada

Polar bears were designated "Not at Risk" in April 1986 and uplisted to "Special Concern" in April 1991. This status was re-evaluated and confirmed in April 1999, November 2002, and April 2008. Polar bears continue to be listed as a species of special concern in Canada because of their sensitivity to overharvest and because of an expected range contraction caused by loss of Arctic sea ice.[169]

More than 600 bears are killed per year by humans across Canada,[51] a rate calculated by scientists to be unsustainable for some areas, notably Baffin Bay.[41] Canada has allowed sport hunters accompanied by local guides and dog-sled teams since 1970,[170] but the practice was not common until the 1980s.[171] The guiding of sport hunters provides meaningful employment and an important source of income for northern communities in which economic opportunities are few.[49] Sport hunting can bring CDN$20,000 to $35,000 per bear into northern communities, which until recently has been mostly from American hunters.[172]

The territory of Nunavut accounts for the location 80% of annual kills in Canada. In 2005, the government of Nunavut increased the quota from 400 to 518 bears,[172] despite protests from the IUCN Polar Bear Specialist Group.[173] In two areas where harvest levels have been increased based on increased sightings, science-based studies have indicated declining populations, and a third area is considered data-deficient.[174] While most of that quota is hunted by the indigenous Inuit, a growing share is sold to recreational hunters. (0.8% in the 1970s, 7.1% in the 1980s, and 14.6% in the 1990s)[171] Nunavut polar bear biologist, Mitchell Taylor, who was formerly responsible for polar bear conservation in the territory, has insisted that bear numbers are being sustained under current hunting limits.[175] In 2010, the 2005 increase was partially reversed. Government of Nunavut officials announced that the polar bear quota for the Baffin Bay region would be gradually reduced from 105 per year to 65 by 2013.[176] The Government of the Northwest Territories maintain their own quota of 72 to 103 bears within the Inuvialuit communities of which some are set aside for sports hunters.[citation needed] Environment Canada also banned the export from Canada of fur, claws, skulls and other products from polar bears harvested in Baffin Bay as of 1 January 2010.[176]

Because of the way polar bear hunting quotas are managed in Canada, attempts to discourage sport hunting would actually increase the number of bears killed in the short term. Canada allocates a certain number of permits each year to sport and subsistence hunting, and those that are not used for sport hunting are re-allocated to indigenous subsistence hunting. Whereas northern communities kill all the polar bears they are permitted to take each year, only half of sport hunters with permits actually manage to kill a polar bear. If a sport hunter does not kill a polar bear before his or her permit expires, the permit cannot be transferred to another hunter.[49]

In August 2011, Environment Canada published a national polar bear conservation strategy.[177]

Greenland

In Greenland, hunting restrictions were first introduced in 1994 and expanded by executive order in 2005.[45] Until 2005 Greenland placed no limit on hunting by indigenous people. However, in 2006 it imposed a limit of 150, while also allowed recreational hunting for the first time.[178] Other provisions included year-round protection of cubs and mothers, restrictions on weapons used and various administrative requirements to catalogue kills.[45]

Norway

Polar bears were hunted heavily in Svalbard, Norway throughout the 19th century and to as recently as 1973, when the conservation treaty was signed. 900 bears a year were harvested in the 1920s and after World War II, there were as many as 400–500 harvested annually. Some regulations of hunting did exist. In 1927, poisoning was outlawed while in 1939, certain denning sights were declared off limits. The killing of females and cubs was made illegal in 1965. Killing of polar bears decreased somewhat 25–30 years before the treaty. Despite this, the polar bear population continued to decline and by 1973, only around 1000 bears were left in Svalbard. Only with the passage of the treaty did they begin to recover.[179]

Russia

The Soviet Union banned the harvest of polar bears in 1956; however, poaching continued, and is estimated to pose a serious threat to the polar bear population.[45] In recent years, polar bears have approached coastal villages in Chukotka more frequently due to the shrinking of the sea ice, endangering humans and raising concerns that illegal hunting would become even more prevalent. In 2007, the Russian government made subsistence hunting legal for indigenous Chukotkan peoples only, a move supported by Russia's most prominent bear researchers and the World Wide Fund for Nature as a means to curb poaching.[180]

Polar bears are currently listed as "Rare", of "Uncertain Status", or "Rehabilitated and rehabilitating" in the Red Data Book of Russia, depending on population.[181] In 2010, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment published a strategy for polar bear conservation in Russia.[182]

United States

The Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 afforded polar bears some protection in the United States. It banned hunting (except by indigenous subsistence hunters), banned importing of polar bear parts (except polar bear pelts taken legally in Canada), and banned the harassment of polar bears. On 15 May 2008, the United States Department of the Interior listed the polar bear as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act, citing the melting of Arctic sea ice as the primary threat to the polar bear.[183] It banned all importing of polar bear trophies. Importing products made from polar bears had been prohibited from 1972 to 1994 under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, and restricted between 1994 and 2008. Under those restrictions, permits from the United States Fish and Wildlife Service were required to import sport-hunted polar bear trophies taken in hunting expeditions in Canada. The permit process required that the bear be taken from an area with quotas based on sound management principles.[184] Since 1994, hundreds of sport-hunted polar bear trophies have been imported into the U.S.[185] In 2015, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service published a draft conservation management plan for polar bears to improve their status under the Endangered Species Act and the Marine Mammal Protection Act.[186]

 
Polar bear in Denver Zoo.

Conservation status, threats, and controversies

 
Map from the U.S. Geological Survey shows projected changes in polar bear habitat from 2001 to 2010 and 2041 to 2050. Red areas indicate loss of optimal polar bear habitat; blue areas indicate gain.

Polar bear population sizes and trends are difficult to estimate accurately because they occupy remote home ranges and exist at low population densities. Polar bear fieldwork can also be hazardous to researchers.[187] As of 2015, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) reports that the global population of polar bears is 22,000 to 31,000, and the current population trend is unknown. Nevertheless, polar bears are listed as "Vulnerable" under criterion A3c, which indicates an expected population decrease of ≥30% over the next three generations (~34.5 years) due to "decline in area of occupancy, extent of occurrence and/or quality of habitat". Risks to the polar bear include climate change, pollution in the form of toxic contaminants, conflicts with shipping, oil and gas exploration and development, and human-bear interactions including harvesting and possible stresses from recreational polar-bear watching.[2]

According to the World Wildlife Fund, the polar bear is important as an indicator of Arctic ecosystem health. Polar bears are studied to gain understanding of what is happening throughout the Arctic, because at-risk polar bears are often a sign of something wrong with the Arctic marine ecosystem.[188]

Climate change

The key danger for polar bears posed by the effects of climate change is malnutrition or starvation due to habitat loss. Polar bears hunt seals from a platform of sea ice. Rising temperatures cause the sea ice to melt earlier in the year, driving the bears to shore before they have built sufficient fat reserves to survive the period of scarce food in the late summer and early fall.[135] Reduction in sea-ice cover also forces bears to swim longer distances, which further depletes their energy stores and occasionally leads to drowning.[189] Thinner sea ice tends to deform more easily, which appears to make it more difficult for polar bears to access seals.[96] Insufficient nourishment leads to lower reproductive rates in adult females and lower survival rates in cubs and juvenile bears, in addition to poorer body condition in bears of all ages.[40]

The International Union for Conservation of Nature, Arctic Climate Impact Assessment, United States Geological Survey and many leading polar bear biologists have expressed grave concerns about the impact of climate change, with some predicting extinction by 2100.[190]

 
Mothers and cubs have high nutritional requirements, which are not met if the seal-hunting season is too short

In addition to creating nutritional stress, a warming climate is expected to affect various other aspects of polar bear life: changes in sea ice affect the ability of pregnant females to build suitable maternity dens.[34] As the distance increases between the pack ice and the coast, females must swim longer distances to reach favoured denning areas on land. Thawing of permafrost would affect the bears who traditionally den underground, and warm winters could result in den roofs collapsing or having reduced insulative value. For the polar bears that currently den on multi-year ice, increased ice mobility may result in longer distances for mothers and young cubs to walk when they return to seal-hunting areas in the spring.[40] Disease-causing bacteria and parasites would flourish more readily in a warmer climate.[96]

Problematic interactions between polar bears and humans, such as foraging by bears in garbage dumps, have historically been more prevalent in years when ice-floe breakup occurred early and local polar bears were relatively thin. Increased human-bear interactions, including fatal attacks on humans, are likely to increase as the sea ice shrinks and hungry bears try to find food on land.[191]

 
Starving bear near Svalbard

The effects of climate change are most profound in the southern part of the polar bear's range, and this is indeed where significant degradation of local populations has been observed.[192] The Western Hudson Bay subpopulation, in a southern part of the range, also happens to be one of the best-studied polar bear subpopulations. This subpopulation feeds heavily on ringed seals in late spring, when newly weaned and easily hunted seal pups are abundant. The late spring hunting season ends for polar bears when the ice begins to melt and break up, and they fast or eat little during the summer until the sea freezes again.[174]

Due to warming air temperatures, ice-floe breakup in western Hudson Bay is currently occurring three weeks earlier than it did 30 years ago, reducing the duration of the polar bear feeding season. The body condition of polar bears has declined during this period; the average weight of lone (and likely pregnant) female polar bears was approximately 290 kg (640 lb) in 1980 and 230 kg (510 lb) in 2004.[174] Between 1987 and 2004, the Western Hudson Bay population declined by 22%,[193] although the population was listed as "stable" as of 2017.[51] As the climate change melts sea ice, the U.S. Geological Survey projects that two-thirds of polar bears will disappear by 2050.[194]

In Alaska, the effects of sea ice shrinkage have contributed to higher mortality rates in polar bear cubs, and have led to changes in the denning locations of pregnant females.[134] The proportion of maternity dens on sea ice has changed from 62% between the years 1985 through 1994, to 37% over the years 1998 through 2004. Thus, now the Alaskan population more resembles the world population in that it is more likely to den on land.[195] In recent years, polar bears in the Arctic have undertaken longer than usual swims to find prey, possibly resulting in four recorded drownings in the unusually large ice pack regression of 2005.[189]

A new development is that polar bears have begun ranging to new territory. While not unheard of but still uncommon, polar bears have been sighted increasingly in larger numbers ashore, staying on the mainland for longer periods of time during the summer months, particularly in North Canada, traveling farther inland.[196] This may cause an increased reliance on terrestrial diets, such as goose eggs, waterfowl and caribou,[197] as well as increased human–bear conflict.[196]

Pollution

Polar bears accumulate high levels of persistent organic pollutants such as polychlorinated biphenyl (PCBs) and chlorinated pesticides. Due to their position at the top of the ecological pyramid, with a diet heavy in blubber in which halocarbons concentrate, their bodies are among the most contaminated of Arctic mammals.[198] Halocarbons (also known as organohalogens) are known to be toxic to other animals, because they mimic hormone chemistry, and biomarkers such as immunoglobulin G and retinol suggest similar effects on polar bears. PCBs have received the most study, and they have been associated with birth defects and immune system deficiency.[199]

Many chemicals, such as PCBs and DDT, have been internationally banned due to the recognition of their harm on the environment. Their concentrations in polar bear tissues continued to rise for decades after being banned, as these chemicals spread through the food chain. Since then, the trend seems to have abated, with tissue concentrations of PCBs declining between studies performed from 1989 to 1993 and studies performed from 1996 to 2002. During the same time periods, DDT was found to be notably lower in the Western Hudson Bay population only.[200]

Oil and gas development

Oil and gas development in polar bear habitat can affect the bears in a variety of ways. An oil spill in the Arctic would most likely concentrate in the areas where polar bears and their prey are also concentrated, such as sea ice leads.[2] Because polar bears rely partly on their fur for insulation and soiling of the fur by oil reduces its insulative value, oil spills put bears at risk of dying from hypothermia. Polar bears exposed to oil spill conditions have been observed to lick the oil from their fur, leading to fatal kidney failure.[109] Maternity dens, used by pregnant females and by females with infants, can also be disturbed by nearby oil exploration and development. Disturbance of these sensitive sites may trigger the mother to abandon her den prematurely, or abandon her litter altogether.[2]

Predictions

Steven Amstrup and other U.S. Geological Survey scientists have predicted two-thirds of the world's polar bears may disappear by 2050, based on moderate projections for the shrinking of summer sea ice caused by climate change,[96][194] though the validity of this study has been debated.[201][202] The bears could disappear from Europe, Asia, and Alaska, and be depleted from the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and areas off the northern Greenland coast. By 2080, they could disappear from Greenland entirely and from the northern Canadian coast, leaving only dwindling numbers in the interior Arctic Archipelago.[96] However, in the short term, some polar bear populations in historically colder regions of the Arctic may temporarily benefit from a milder climate, as multiyear ice that is too thick for seals to create breathing holes is replaced by thinner annual ice.[203]

Polar bears diverged from brown bears 400,000–600,000 years ago and have survived past periods of climate fluctuation. It has been claimed that polar bears will be able to adapt to terrestrial food sources as the sea ice they use to hunt seals disappears.[204] However, most polar bear biologists think that polar bears will be unable to completely offset the loss of calorie-rich seal blubber with terrestrial foods, and that they will be outcompeted by brown bears in this terrestrial niche, ultimately leading to a population decline.[205]

Controversy over species protection

 
Swimming

Warnings about the future of the polar bear are often contrasted with the fact that worldwide population estimates have increased over the past 50 years and are relatively stable today.[206][207] Some estimates of the global population are around 5,000 to 10,000 in the early 1970s;[208] other estimates were 20,000 to 40,000 during the 1980s.[54][110] Current estimates put the global population at between 20,000 and 25,000[45] or 22,000 and 31,000.[2] Despite the encouraging rebound of some populations, there is little evidence to suggest polar bears are thriving overall.[209]

There are several reasons for the apparent discordance between past and projected population trends: estimates from the 1950s and 1960s were based on stories from explorers and hunters rather than on scientific surveys.[210][211][212][213] Second, controls of harvesting were introduced that allowed this previously overhunted species to recover. Third, the recent effects of climate change have affected sea ice abundance in different areas to varying degrees.[210]

Debate over the listing of the polar bear under endangered species legislation has put conservation groups and Canada's Inuit at opposing positions;[49] the Nunavut government and many northern residents have condemned the U.S. initiative to list the polar bear under the Endangered Species Act.[214][215] Many Inuit believe the polar bear population is increasing, and restrictions on commercial sport-hunting are likely to lead to a loss of income to their communities.[49][216]

In culture

 
Engraving, made by Chukchi carvers in the 1940s on a walrus tusk, depicts polar bears hunting walrus

Indigenous folklore

For the indigenous peoples of the Arctic, polar bears have long played an important cultural and material role.[154][155] Polar bear remains have been found at hunting sites dating to 2,500 to 3,000 years ago[157] and 1,500-year-old cave paintings of polar bears have been found in the Chukchi Peninsula. Indeed, it has been suggested that Arctic peoples' skills in seal hunting and igloo construction has been in part acquired from the polar bears themselves.[155]

The Inuit and Alaska Natives have many folk tales featuring the bears including legends in which bears are humans when inside their own houses and put on bear hides when going outside, and stories of how the constellation that is said to resemble a great bear surrounded by dogs came into being. These legends reveal a deep respect for the polar bear, which is portrayed as both spiritually powerful and closely akin to humans. The human-like posture of bears when standing and sitting, and the resemblance of a skinned bear carcass to the human body, have probably contributed to the belief that the spirits of humans and bears were interchangeable.[153]

Among the Chukchi and Yupik of eastern Siberia, there was a longstanding shamanistic ritual of "thanksgiving" to the hunted polar bear. After killing the animal, its head and skin were removed and cleaned and brought into the home, and a feast was held in the hunting camp in its honor. To appease the spirit of the bear, traditional song and drum music was played, and the skull was ceremonially fed and offered a pipe.[217] Only once the spirit was appeased was the skull be separated from the skin, taken beyond the bounds of the homestead, and placed in the ground, facing north.[155]

The Nenets of north-central Siberia placed particular value on the talismanic power of the prominent canine teeth. These were traded in the villages of the lower Yenisei and Khatanga rivers to the forest-dwelling peoples further south, who would sew them into their hats as protection against brown bears. It was believed that the "little nephew" (the brown bear) would not dare to attack a man wearing the tooth of its powerful "big uncle", the polar bear. The skulls of killed polar bears were buried at sacred sites, and altars, called sedyangi, were constructed out of the skulls. Several such sites have been preserved on the Yamal Peninsula.[155]

Symbols and mascots

 
Greenland's 1911 five kroner note depicting a polar bear
 
Coat of arms of the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug in the Russian Federation
 
Coat of arms of the Greenlandic Self-Rule government (Kalaallit Nunaat)

Their distinctive appearance and their association with the Arctic have made polar bears popular icons, especially in those areas where they are native. The Canadian two-dollar coin carries an image of a lone polar bear on its reverse side, while a special millennium edition featured three.[218] Vehicle licence plates in the Northwest Territories in Canada are in the shape of a polar bear, as was the case in Nunavut until 2012; these now display polar bear artwork instead.[219] The polar bear is the mascot of Bowdoin College, Maine; the University of Alaska Fairbanks; and the 1988 Winter Olympics held in Calgary.[220][221][222] The Eisbären Berlin hockey team uses a roaring polar bear as their logo, and the Charlotte, North Carolina hockey team the Charlotte Checkers uses a polar bear named Chubby Checker as their mascot.[223]

Coca-Cola has used images of the polar bear in its advertising,[224] and Polar Beverages, Nelvana, Bundaberg Rum, Klondike bars, and Fox's Glacier Mints all feature polar bears in their logos.[citation needed]

Fiction

Polar bears are popular in fiction, particularly in books for children or teenagers.

See also

References

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  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Wiig, Ø.; Amstrup, S.; Atwood, T.; Laidre, K.; Lunn, N.; Obbard, M.; Regehr, E.; Thiemann, G. (2015). "Ursus maritimus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2015: e.T22823A14871490. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2015-4.RLTS.T22823A14871490.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
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  8. ^ Kindersley, Dorling (2001). Animal. New York City: DK Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7894-7764-4.
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Bibliography

  • Aars, Jon, ed. (June 2005). (PDF). Vol. 32. Nicholas J. Lunn and Andrew E. Derocher. Seattle, Washington, United States: IUCN. ISBN 978-2-8317-0959-8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 April 2008. Retrieved 19 April 2008.
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  • Hemstock, Annie (1999). The Polar Bear. Manakato, MN: Capstone Press. ISBN 978-0-7368-0031-0.
  • Lockwood, Sophie (2006). Polar Bears. Chanhassen, MN: The Child's World. ISBN 978-1-59296-501-4.
  • Matthews, Downs (1993). Polar Bear. San Francisco, CA: Chronicle Books. ISBN 978-0-8118-0204-8.
  • Rosing, Norbert (1996). The World of the Polar Bear. Willowdale, ON: Firefly Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1-55209-068-8.

Further reading

External links

  • National Wildlife Federation's Polar Bear Page
  • ARKive —
  • BBC Nature: Polar bear news, and video clips from BBC programmes past and present. 14 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  • Photos, facts, videos from Polar Bears International that funds population, preservation, and DNA studies of the polar bear
  • Map: Here's where the polar bears are vanishing
  • Photos of Polar bear on Sealife Collection

polar, bear, this, article, about, animal, other, uses, disambiguation, bear, redirects, here, thewe, bare, bearscharacter, list, bare, bears, characters, bear, other, uses, bears, disambiguation, polar, bear, ursus, maritimus, hypercarnivorous, bear, whose, n. This article is about the animal For other uses see Polar bear disambiguation Ice Bear redirects here For theWe Bare Bearscharacter see List of We Bare Bears characters Ice Bear For other uses see Ice Bears disambiguation The polar bear Ursus maritimus is a hypercarnivorous bear whose native range lies largely within the Arctic Circle encompassing the Arctic Ocean its surrounding seas and surrounding land masses It is the largest extant bear species as well as the largest extant land carnivore 6 7 A boar adult male weighs around 350 700 kg 770 1 540 lb 8 while a sow adult female is about half that size Although it is the sister species of the brown bear 9 it has evolved to occupy a narrower ecological niche with many body characteristics adapted for cold temperatures for moving across snow ice and open water and for hunting seals which make up most of its diet 10 Although most polar bears are born on land they spend most of their time on the sea ice Their scientific name means maritime bear and derives from this fact Polar bears hunt their preferred food of seals from the edge of sea ice often living off fat reserves when no sea ice is present Because of their dependence on the sea ice polar bears are classified as marine mammals 11 Polar bearTemporal range Pleistocene recent 1 Sow near Kaktovik Barter Island Alaska United StatesConservation statusVulnerable IUCN 3 1 2 CITES Appendix II CITES 3 Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder CarnivoraFamily UrsidaeGenus UrsusSpecies U maritimusBinomial nameUrsus maritimusPhipps 1774 4 Subspecies 5 Ursus maritimus tyrannus Polar bear rangeSynonymsUrsus eogroenlandicusUrsus groenlandicusUrsus jenaensisUrsus labradorensisUrsus marinusUrsus polarisUrsus spitzbergensisUrsus ungavensisThalarctos maritimusBecause of expected habitat loss caused by climate change the polar bear is classified as a vulnerable species For decades large scale hunting raised international concern for the future of the species but populations rebounded after controls and quotas began to take effect 12 For thousands of years the polar bear has been a key figure in the material spiritual and cultural life of circumpolar peoples and polar bears remain important in their cultures Historically the polar bear has also been known as the white bear 13 It is sometimes referred to as the nanook based on the Inuit term nanuq 14 Contents 1 Naming and etymology 2 Taxonomy and evolution 3 Population and distribution 4 Habitat 5 Physical characteristics 6 Life history and behaviour 6 1 Hunting and diet 6 1 1 Dietary flexibility 6 2 Reproduction and lifecycle 6 2 1 Maternity denning and early life 6 2 2 Later life 6 2 3 Life expectancy 6 3 Ecological role 6 4 Long distance swimming and diving 7 Hunting 7 1 Indigenous people 7 2 History of commercial harvest 7 3 Contemporary regulations 7 3 1 Canada 7 3 2 Greenland 7 3 3 Norway 7 3 4 Russia 7 3 5 United States 8 Conservation status threats and controversies 8 1 Climate change 8 2 Pollution 8 3 Oil and gas development 8 4 Predictions 8 5 Controversy over species protection 9 In culture 9 1 Indigenous folklore 9 2 Symbols and mascots 9 3 Fiction 10 See also 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 Further reading 14 External linksNaming and etymologyConstantine John Phipps was the first to describe the polar bear as a distinct species in 1774 in his report about his 1773 expedition towards the North Pole 4 2 He chose the scientific name Ursus maritimus the Latin for maritime bear 15 due to the animal s native habitat The Inuit refer to the animal as nanook transliterated as nanuq in the Inupiat language 16 14 The Yupik also refer to the bear as nanuuk in Siberian Yupik 17 In the Chukotko Kamchatkan languages of Alyutor and Koryak the name of the polar bear is umqa while in the related Chukchi it is umqe 18 In Russian it is usually called be lyj medve d belyj medvedj white bear though an older word still in use is oshku j Oshkuj which comes from the Komi oski bear 19 In Quebec the polar bear is referred to by the french terms ours blanc white bear or ours polaire polar bear 20 In Norwegian one of the primary languages of the Svalbard archipelago 21 the polar bear is referred to as isbjorn ice bear or kvitbjorn white bear 22 The polar bear was previously considered to be in its own genus Thalarctos 23 However evidence of hybrids between polar bears and brown bears and of the recent evolutionary divergence of the two species does not support the establishment of this separate genus and the accepted scientific name is now therefore Ursus maritimus as Phipps originally proposed 2 Taxonomy and evolution Polar bears have evolved adaptations for Arctic life For example large furry feet and short sharp stocky claws give them good traction on ice The bear family Ursidae is thought to have split from other carnivorans about 38 million years ago 24 The subfamily Ursinae originated approximately 4 2 million years ago 25 The oldest known polar bear fossil is a 130 000 to 110 000 year old jaw bone found on Prince Charles Foreland in 2004 26 Fossils show that between 10 000 and 20 000 years ago the polar bear s molar teeth changed significantly from those of the brown bear 27 Polar bears are thought to have diverged from a population of brown bears that became isolated during a period of glaciation in the Pleistocene 5 from the eastern part of Siberia from Kamchatka and the Kolym Peninsula 27 The evidence from DNA analysis is more complex The mitochondrial DNA mtDNA of the polar bear diverged from the brown bear Ursus arctos roughly 150 000 years ago 26 Further some clades of brown bear as assessed by their mtDNA were thought to be more closely related to polar bears than to other brown bears 28 meaning that the brown bear might not be considered a species under some species concepts but paraphyletic 29 The mtDNA of extinct Irish brown bears is particularly close to polar bears 30 A comparison of the nuclear genome of polar bears with that of brown bears revealed a different pattern the two forming genetically distinct clades that diverged approximately 603 000 years ago 31 although the latest research is based on analysis of the complete genomes rather than just the mitochondria or partial nuclear genomes of polar and brown bears and establishes the divergence of polar and brown bears at 400 000 years ago 32 However the two species have mated intermittently for all that time most likely coming into contact with each other during warming periods when polar bears were driven onto land and brown bears migrated northward Most brown bears have about 2 percent genetic material from polar bears but one population the ABC Islands bears has between 5 percent and 10 percent polar bear genes indicating more frequent and recent mating 33 Polar bears can breed with brown bears to produce fertile grizzly polar bear hybrids 5 34 rather than indicating that they have only recently diverged the new evidence suggests more frequent mating has continued over a longer period of time and thus the two bears remain genetically similar 33 However because neither species can survive long in the other s ecological niche and because they have different morphology metabolism social and feeding behaviours and other phenotypic characteristics the two bears are generally classified as separate species 35 When the polar bear was originally documented two subspecies were identified the American polar bear Ursus maritimus maritimus by Constantine J Phipps in 1774 and the Siberian polar bear Ursus maritimus marinus by Peter Simon Pallas in 1776 36 This distinction has since been invalidated 37 38 39 One alleged fossil subspecies has been identified Ursus maritimus tyrannus which became extinct during the Pleistocene U m tyrannus was significantly larger than the living subspecies 5 However recent reanalysis of the fossil suggests that it was actually a brown bear 1 Population and distribution Bears investigate the submarine USS Honolulu 450 kilometres 280 mi from the North Pole The polar bear is found in the Arctic Circle and adjacent land masses as far south as Newfoundland Due to the absence of human development in its remote habitat it retains more of its original range than any other extant carnivore 40 While they are rare north of 88 there is evidence that they range all the way across the Arctic and as far south as James Bay in Canada Their southernmost range is near the boundary between the subarctic and humid continental climate zones They can occasionally drift widely with the sea ice and there have been anecdotal sightings as far south as Berlevag on the Norwegian mainland and the Kuril Islands in the Sea of Okhotsk It is difficult to estimate a global population of polar bears as much of the range has been poorly studied however biologists use a working estimate of about 20 25 000 or 22 31 000 polar bears worldwide 2 41 42 With the discovery of a southeast Greenland population in 2022 43 44 there are 20 generally recognized discrete subpopulations of polar bears 41 45 The subpopulations display seasonal fidelity to particular areas but DNA studies show that they are not reproductively isolated 39 The 14 North American subpopulations range from the Beaufort Sea south to Hudson Bay and east to eastern Greenland and account for about 54 of the global population 46 source source source source source source Bears play fighting The usual range includes the territory of five nations Denmark Greenland Norway Svalbard Russia the United States Alaska and Canada These five nations are the signatories of the International Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears which mandates cooperation on research and conservation efforts throughout the polar bear s range 47 Bears sometimes swim to Iceland from Greenland about 600 sightings since the country s settlement in the 9th century and five in the 21st century as of 2016 update and are always killed because of their danger as well as the cost and difficulty of repatriation 48 Modern methods of tracking polar bear populations have been implemented only since the mid 1980s and are expensive to perform consistently over a large area The most accurate counts require flying a helicopter in the Arctic climate to find polar bears shooting a tranquilizer dart at the bear to sedate it and then tagging the bear In Nunavut some Inuit have reported increases in bear sightings around human settlements in recent years leading to a belief that populations are increasing Scientists have responded by noting that hungry bears may be congregating around human settlements leading to the illusion that populations are higher than they actually are 49 The Polar Bear Specialist Group of the IUCN Species Survival Commission takes the position that estimates of subpopulation size or sustainable harvest levels should not be made solely on the basis of traditional ecological knowledge without supporting scientific studies 50 Of the 19 polar bear subpopulations recognized in 2017 one was in decline two were increasing seven were stable and nine had insufficient data 51 Habitat Polar bear jumping on fast ice in Spitsbergen Island Svalbard Archipelago Norway The polar bear is a marine mammal because it spends many months of the year at sea 52 However it is the only living marine mammal with powerful large limbs and feet that allow them to cover kilometres on foot and run on land 53 Its preferred habitat is the annual sea ice covering the waters over the continental shelf and the Arctic inter island archipelagos These areas known as the Arctic ring of life have high biological productivity in comparison to the deep waters of the high Arctic 40 54 The polar bear tends to frequent areas where sea ice meets water such as polynyas and leads temporary stretches of open water in Arctic ice to hunt the seals that make up most of its diet 55 Freshwater is limited in these environments because it is either locked up in snow or saline Polar bears are able to produce water through the metabolism of fats found in seal blubber 56 and are therefore found primarily along the perimeter of the polar ice pack rather than in the Polar Basin close to the North Pole where the density of seals is low 57 Annual ice contains areas of water that appear and disappear throughout the year as the weather changes Seals migrate in response to these changes and polar bears must follow their prey In Hudson Bay James Bay and some other areas the ice melts completely each summer an event often referred to as ice floe breakup forcing polar bears to go onto land and wait through the months until the next freeze up 54 In the Chukchi and Beaufort seas most polar bears retreat each summer to the ice further north that remains frozen year round though a large portion of the population 15 40 has been observed spending all summer on land every year in these areas since the 1980s 58 Physical characteristics Skull Polar bear skeleton source source source source source source source source Captive bear swimming A female bear at the Ranua Zoo The only other bear of comparable size to the polar bear is the Kodiak bear which is a subspecies of brown bear 59 Adult male polar bears weigh 350 700 kg 770 1 500 lb and measure 2 4 3 metres 7 ft 10 in 9 ft 10 in in total length 60 Around the Beaufort Sea however mature males reportedly average 450 kg 1 000 lb 61 Adult females are roughly half the size of males and normally weigh 150 250 kg 330 550 lb measuring 1 8 2 4 metres 5 ft 11 in 7 ft 10 in in length Elsewhere a slightly larger estimated average weight of 260 kg 570 lb was claimed for adult females 62 When pregnant however females can weigh as much as 500 kg 1 100 lb 60 The polar bear is among the most sexually dimorphic of mammals surpassed only by the pinnipeds such as elephant seals 63 The largest polar bear on record reportedly weighing 1 002 kg 2 209 lb was a male shot at Kotzebue Sound in northwestern Alaska in 1960 This specimen when mounted stood 3 39 m 11 ft 1 in tall on its hindlegs The shoulder height of an adult polar bear is 122 to 160 cm 4 ft 0 in to 5 ft 3 in 64 65 While all bears are short tailed the polar bear s tail is relatively the shortest amongst living bears ranging from 7 to 13 cm 2 8 to 5 1 in in length 66 Compared with its closest relative the brown bear the polar bear has a more elongated body build and a longer skull and nose 35 As predicted by Allen s rule for a northerly animal the legs are stocky and the ears and tail are small 35 However the feet are very large to distribute load when walking on snow or thin ice and to provide propulsion when swimming they may measure 30 cm 12 in across in an adult 67 The pads of the paws are covered with small soft papillae dermal bumps which provide traction on the ice The polar bear s claws are short and stocky compared to those of the brown bear perhaps to serve the former s need to grip heavy prey and ice 35 The claws are deeply scooped on the underside which assists in digging in the ice of the natural habitat Research of injury patterns in polar bear forelimbs found injuries to the right forelimb to be more frequent than those to the left suggesting perhaps right handedness 68 Unlike the brown bear polar bears in captivity are rarely overweight or particularly large possibly as a reaction to the warm conditions of most zoos citation needed The 42 teeth of a polar bear reflect its highly carnivorous diet The cheek teeth are smaller and more jagged than in the brown bear and the canines are larger and sharper The dental formula is 3 1 4 2 3 1 4 3 35 Polar bears are superbly insulated by up to 10 cm 4 in of adipose tissue 67 their hide and their fur Polar bear fur consists of a layer of dense underfur and an outer layer of guard hairs which appear white to tan but are actually transparent 67 Two genes that are known to influence melanin production LYST and AIM1 are both mutated in polar bears possibly leading to the absence on this pigment in their fur 69 The guard hair is 5 15 cm 2 6 in over most of the body 70 Polar bears gradually moult from May to August 71 but unlike other Arctic mammals they do not shed their coat for a darker shade to provide camouflage in summer conditions 72 The hollow guard hairs of a polar bear coat were once thought to act as fiber optic tubes to conduct light to its black skin where it could be absorbed however this hypothesis was disproved by a study in 1998 73 The white coat usually yellows with age When kept in captivity in warm humid conditions the fur may turn a pale shade of green due to algae growing inside the guard hairs 74 Males have significantly longer hairs on their forelegs which increase in length until the bear reaches 14 years of age The male s ornamental foreleg hair is thought to attract females serving a similar function to the lion s mane 75 The polar bear has an extremely well developed sense of smell being able to detect seals nearly 1 6 km 1 mi away and buried under 1 m 3 ft of snow Its hearing is about as acute as that of a human and its vision is also good at long distances 76 The polar bear is an excellent swimmer and often will swim for days 77 One bear swam continuously for 9 days in the frigid Bering Sea for 700 km 400 mi to reach ice far from land She then travelled another 1 800 km 1 100 mi During the swim the bear lost 22 of her body mass and her yearling cub died 78 With its body fat providing buoyancy the bear swims in a dog paddle fashion using its large forepaws for propulsion Polar bears can swim at 10 km h 6 mph When walking the polar bear tends to have a lumbering gait and maintains an average speed of around 5 6 km h 3 5 mph 79 When sprinting they can reach up to 40 km h 25 mph 80 Life history and behaviour Subadult males frequently play fight During the mating season actual fighting is intense and often leaves scars or broken teeth Unlike brown bears polar bears are not territorial Although stereotyped as being voraciously aggressive they are normally cautious in confrontations and often choose to escape rather than fight 81 Satiated polar bears rarely attack humans unless severely provoked 82 83 However due to their lack of prior human interaction hungry polar bears are extremely unpredictable fearless towards people and are known to kill and sometimes eat humans 84 Many attacks by brown bears are the result of surprising the animal which is not the case with the polar bear Polar bears are stealth hunters and the victim is often unaware of the bear s presence until the attack is underway Whereas brown bears often maul a person and then leave polar bear attacks are more likely to be predatory and are almost always fatal 85 However due to the very small human population around the Arctic such attacks are rare Michio Hoshino a Japanese wildlife photographer was once pursued briefly by a hungry male polar bear in northern Alaska According to Hoshino the bear started running but Hoshino made it to his truck The bear was able to reach the truck and tore one of the doors off the truck before Hoshino was able to drive off 86 In general adult polar bears live solitary lives Yet they have often been seen playing together for hours at a time and even sleeping in an embrace 84 and polar bear zoologist Nikita Ovsianikov has described adult males as having well developed friendships 81 Cubs are especially playful as well Among young males in particular play fighting may be a means of practicing for serious competition during mating seasons later in life 87 Polar bears are usually quiet but do communicate with various sounds and vocalizations Females communicate with their young with moans and chuffs and the distress calls of both cubs and subadults consists of bleats 88 Cubs may hum while nursing 89 When nervous bears produce huffs chuffs and snorts while hisses growls and roars are signs of aggression 88 Chemical communication can also be important bears leave behind their scent in their tracks which allow individuals to keep track of one another in the vast Arctic wilderness 90 In 1992 a photographer near Churchill took a now widely circulated set of photographs of a polar bear playing with a Canadian Eskimo Dog Canis familiaris a tenth of its size 91 92 The pair wrestled harmlessly together each afternoon for 10 days in a row for no apparent reason although the bear may have been trying to demonstrate its friendliness in the hope of sharing the kennel s food This kind of social interaction is uncommon it is far more typical for polar bears to behave aggressively towards dogs 91 Hunting and diet The polar bear s long muzzle and neck help it to search in deep holes for seals while its powerful hindquarters enable it to drag massive prey 93 The polar bear is the most carnivorous member of the bear family and throughout most of its range its diet primarily consists of ringed Pusa hispida and bearded seals Erignathus barbatus 94 The Arctic is home to millions of seals which become prey when they surface in holes in the ice in order to breathe or when they haul out on the ice to rest 93 95 Polar bears hunt primarily at the interface between ice water and air they only rarely catch seals on land or in open water 96 The polar bear s most common hunting method is called still hunting 97 the bear uses its excellent sense of smell to locate a seal breathing hole and crouches nearby in silence for a seal to appear The bear may lie in wait for several hours When the seal exhales the bear smells its breath reaches into the hole with a forepaw and drags it out onto the ice The polar bear kills the seal by biting its head to crush its skull The polar bear also hunts by stalking seals resting on the ice upon spotting a seal it walks to within 90 m 100 yd and then crouches If the seal does not notice the bear creeps to within 9 to 12 m 30 to 40 ft of the seal and then suddenly rushes forth to attack 93 A third hunting method is to raid the birth lairs that female seals create in the snow 97 A widespread legend tells that polar bears cover their black noses with their paws when hunting This behaviour if it happens is rare although the story exists in the oral history of northern peoples and in accounts by early Arctic explorers there is no record of an eyewitness account of the behaviour in recent decades 79 Bear feeding on a bearded seal Mature bears tend to eat only the calorie rich skin and blubber of the seal which are highly digestible 98 whereas younger bears consume the protein rich red meat 93 Studies have also photographed polar bears scaling near vertical cliffs to eat birds chicks and eggs 99 For subadult bears which are independent of their mother but have not yet gained enough experience and body size to successfully hunt seals scavenging the carcasses from other bears kills is an important source of nutrition Subadults may also be forced to accept a half eaten carcass if they kill a seal but cannot defend it from larger polar bears After feeding polar bears wash themselves with water or snow 79 Although polar bears are extraordinarily powerful its primary prey species the ringed seal is much smaller than itself and many of the seals hunted are pups rather than adults Ringed seals are born weighing 5 4 kg 12 lb and grown to an estimated average weight of only 60 kg 130 lb 100 101 They also in places prey heavily upon the harp seal Pagophilus groenlandicus the harbour seal Phoca vitulina or the hooded seal Cystophora cristata 102 The bearded seal on the other hand can be nearly the same size as the bear itself averaging 270 kg 600 lb 101 Adult male bearded seals at 350 to 500 kg 770 to 1 100 lb are too large for a female bear to overtake and so are potential prey only for mature male bears 103 Large males also occasionally attempt to hunt and kill even larger prey items 104 It can kill an adult walrus Odobenus rosmarus 101 105 although this is rarely attempted At up to 2 000 kg 4 400 lb and a typical adult mass range of 600 to 1 500 kg 1 300 to 3 300 lb a walrus can be more than twice the bear s weight 106 has extremely thick skin and has up to 1 metre 3 ft long ivory tusks that can be used as formidable weapons A polar bear may charge a group of walruses with the goal of separating a young infirm or injured walrus from the pod They will even attack adult walruses when their diving holes have frozen over or intercept them before they can get back to the diving hole in the ice Yet polar bears will very seldom attack full grown adult walruses with the largest male walrus probably invulnerable unless otherwise injured or incapacitated Since an attack on a walrus tends to be an extremely protracted and exhausting venture bears have been known to back down from the attack after making the initial injury to the walrus 105 Polar bears have also been seen to prey on beluga whales Delphinapterus leucas 101 and narwhals Monodon monoceros 101 by swiping at them at breathing holes The whales are of similar size to the walrus and nearly as difficult for the bear to subdue 107 108 Most terrestrial animals in the Arctic can outrun the polar bear on land as polar bears overheat quickly and most marine animals the bear encounters can outswim it In some areas the polar bear s diet is supplemented by walrus calves and by the carcasses of dead adult walruses or whales whose blubber is readily devoured even when rotten 84 Polar bears sometimes swim underwater to catch fish like the Arctic charr or the fourhorn sculpin 95 Some characteristic postures at rest assessing a situation when feeding With the exception of pregnant females polar bears are active year round although they have a vestigial hibernation induction trigger in their blood Unlike brown and black bears polar bears are capable of fasting for up to several months during late summer and early fall when they cannot hunt for seals because the sea is unfrozen 109 When sea ice is unavailable during summer and early autumn some populations live off fat reserves for months at a time 110 as polar bears do not hibernate any time of the year 111 Being both curious animals and scavengers 106 112 polar bears investigate and consume garbage where they come into contact with humans 101 106 Polar bears may attempt to consume almost anything they can find including hazardous substances such as styrofoam plastic car batteries ethylene glycol hydraulic fluid and motor oil 106 112 The dump in Churchill Manitoba was closed in 2006 to protect bears and waste is now recycled or transported to Thompson Manitoba 113 114 Dietary flexibility Although seal predation is the primary and an indispensable way of life for most polar bears when alternatives are present they are quite flexible Polar bears consume a wide variety of other wild foods including muskox Ovibos moschatus reindeer Rangifer tarandus birds eggs rodents crabs other crustaceans fish 102 and other polar bears They may also eat plants including berries roots and kelp 115 however none of these have been a significant part of their diet 106 except for beachcast marine mammal carcasses Given the change in climate with ice breaking up in areas such as the Hudson Bay earlier than it used to polar bears are exploiting food resources such as snow geese and eggs and plants such as lyme grass in increased quantities 116 When stalking land animals such as muskox reindeer 115 and even willow ptarmigan Lagopus lagopus polar bears appear to make use of vegetative cover and wind direction to bring them as close to their prey as possible before attacking Polar bears have been observed to hunt the small Svalbard reindeer R t platyrhynchus which weigh only 40 to 60 kg 90 to 130 lb as adults as well as the barren ground caribou R t groenlandicus which is about twice as heavy as the former 117 118 Adult muskox which can weigh 450 kg 1 000 lb or more are a more formidable quarry 119 Although ungulates are not typical prey the killing of one during the summer months can greatly increase the odds of survival during that lean period Like the brown bear most ungulate prey of polar bears is likely to be young sickly or injured specimens rather than healthy adults 118 The polar bear s metabolism is specialized to require large amounts of fat from marine mammals and it cannot derive sufficient caloric intake from terrestrial food 120 121 In their southern range especially near Hudson Bay and James Bay Canadian polar bears endure all summer without sea ice to hunt from 115 Here their food ecology shows their dietary flexibility They still manage to consume some seals but they are food deprived in summer as only marine mammal carcasses are an important alternative without sea ice especially carcasses of the beluga whale These alternatives may reduce the rate of weight loss of bears when on land 122 One scientist found that 71 of the Hudson Bay bears had fed on seaweed marine algae and that about half were feeding on birds 101 such as the dovekie and sea ducks especially the long tailed duck 53 and common eider by swimming underwater to catch them They were also diving to feed on blue mussels and other underwater food sources like the green sea urchin 24 had eaten moss recently 19 had consumed grass 34 had eaten black crowberry and about half had consumed willows 115 This study illustrates the polar bear s dietary flexibility but it does not represent its life history elsewhere Most polar bears elsewhere will never have access to these alternatives except for the marine mammal carcasses that are important wherever they occur In Svalbard polar bears were observed to kill white beaked dolphins during spring when the dolphins were trapped in the sea ice The bears then proceeded to cache the carcasses which remained and were eaten during the ice free summer and autumn 123 Reproduction and lifecycle Cubs are born helpless and typically nurse for two and a half years Courtship and mating take place on the sea ice in April and May when polar bears congregate in the best seal hunting areas 124 A male may follow the tracks of a breeding female for 100 km 60 mi or more and after finding her engage in intense fighting with other males over mating rights fights that often result in scars and broken teeth 124 Polar bears have a generally polygynous mating system recent genetic testing of mothers and cubs however has uncovered cases of litters in which cubs have different fathers 125 Partners stay together and mate repeatedly for an entire week the mating ritual induces ovulation in the female 126 After mating the fertilized egg remains in a suspended state until August or September During these four months the pregnant female eats prodigious amounts of food gaining at least 200 kg 440 lb and often more than doubling her body weight 124 Maternity denning and early life Mother and cub on Svalbard Norway When the ice floes are at their minimum in the fall ending the possibility of hunting each pregnant female digs a maternity den consisting of a narrow entrance tunnel leading to one to three chambers Most maternity dens are in snowdrifts but may also be made underground in permafrost if it is not sufficiently cold yet for snow 124 In most subpopulations maternity dens are situated on land a few kilometres from the coast and the individuals in a subpopulation tend to reuse the same denning areas each year 40 The polar bears that do not den on land make their dens on the sea ice In the den she enters a dormant state similar to hibernation This hibernation like state does not consist of continuous sleeping however the bear s heart rate slows from 46 to 27 beats per minute 127 Her body temperature does not decrease during this period as it would for a typical mammal in hibernation 110 128 Between November and February cubs are born blind covered with a light down fur and weighing less than 0 9 kg 2 0 lb 126 but in captivity they might be delivered in the earlier months The earliest recorded birth of polar bears in captivity was on 11 October 2011 in the Toronto Zoo 129 On average each litter has two cubs The family remains in the den until mid February to mid April with the mother maintaining her fast while nursing her cubs on a fat rich milk By the time the mother breaks open the entrance to the den her cubs weigh about 10 to 15 kilograms 22 to 33 lb For about 12 to 15 days the family spends time outside the den while remaining in its vicinity the mother grazing on vegetation while the cubs become used to walking and playing Then they begin the long walk from the denning area to the sea ice where the mother can once again catch seals Depending on the timing of ice floe breakup in the fall she may have fasted for up to eight months 124 During this time cubs playfully imitate the mother s hunting methods in preparation for later life 130 source source source source source source Cub nursingFemale polar bears have been known to adopt other cubs Multiple cases of adoption of wild cubs have been confirmed by genetic testing 131 Adult bears of either sex occasionally kill and eat polar bear cubs 132 133 As of 2006 in Alaska 42 of cubs were reaching 12 months of age down from 65 in 1991 134 In most areas cubs are weaned at two and a half years of age when the mother chases them away or abandons them The Western Hudson Bay subpopulation is unusual in that its female polar bears sometimes wean their cubs at only one and a half years 124 This was the case for 40 of cubs there in the early 1980s however by the 1990s fewer than 20 of cubs were weaned this young 135 After the mother leaves sibling cubs sometimes travel and share food together for weeks or months 84 Later life Females begin to breed at the age of four years in most areas and five years in the area of the Beaufort Sea Males usually reach sexual maturity at six years however as competition for females is fierce many do not breed until the age of eight or ten 124 A study in Hudson Bay indicated that both the reproductive success and the maternal weight of females peaked in their mid teens Maternal success appeared to decline after this point possibly because of an age related impairment in the ability to store the fat necessary to rear cubs 136 Polar bears appear to be less affected by infectious diseases and parasites than most terrestrial mammals 137 Polar bears are especially susceptible to Trichinella a parasitic roundworm they contract through cannibalism 138 although infections are usually not fatal Only one case of a polar bear with rabies has been documented even though polar bears frequently interact with Arctic foxes which often carry rabies 137 Bacterial leptospirosis and Morbillivirus have been recorded Polar bears sometimes have problems with various skin diseases that may be caused by mites or other parasites citation needed Life expectancy Polar bears rarely live beyond 25 years 139 The oldest wild bears on record died at age 32 whereas the oldest captive was a female who died in 1991 age 43 140 The causes of death in wild adult polar bears are poorly understood as carcasses are rarely found in the species s frigid habitat In the wild old polar bears eventually become too weak to catch food and gradually starve to death Polar bears injured in fights or accidents may either die from their injuries or become unable to hunt effectively leading to starvation 137 Ecological role The polar bear is the apex predator within its range and is a keystone species for the Arctic 141 Several animal species particularly Arctic foxes Vulpes lagopus and glaucous gulls Larus hyperboreus routinely scavenge polar bear kills 79 The relationship between ringed seals and polar bears is so close that the abundance of ringed seals in some areas appears to regulate the density of polar bears while polar bear predation in turn regulates density and reproductive success of ringed seals 96 The evolutionary pressure of polar bear predation on seals probably accounts for some significant differences between Arctic and Antarctic seals Compared to the Antarctic where there is no major surface predator Arctic seals use more breathing holes per individual appear more restless when hauled out on the ice and rarely defecate on the ice The baby fur of most Arctic seal species is white presumably to provide camouflage from predators whereas Antarctic seals all have dark fur at birth 79 Brown bears tend to dominate polar bears in disputes over carcasses 142 and dead polar bear cubs have been found in brown bear dens 143 Wolves are rarely encountered by polar bears though there are two records of Arctic wolf Canis lupus arctos packs killing polar bear cubs 144 Adult polar bears are occasionally vulnerable to predation by orcas Orcinus orca while swimming but they are rarely reported as taken and bears are likely to avoid entering the water if possible if they detect an orca pod in the area The melting sea ice in the Arctic may be causing an increase of orcas in the Arctic sea which may increase the risk of predation on polar bears but also may benefit the bears by providing more whale carcasses that they can scavenge 145 146 The remains of polar bears have been found in the stomachs of large Greenland sharks Somniosus microcephalus although it certainly cannot be ruled out that the bears were merely scavenged by this slow moving unusual shark 147 148 A rather unlikely killer of a grown polar bear has reportedly included a wolverine Gulo gulo anecdotally reported to have suffocated a bear in a zoo with a bite to the throat during a conflict This report may well be dubious however 149 Polar bears are sometimes the host of arctic mites such as Alaskozetes antarcticus 79 Long distance swimming and diving Researchers tracked 52 sows in the southern Beaufort Sea off Alaska with GPS system collars no boars were involved in the study due to males necks being too thick for the GPS equipped collars Fifty long distance swims were recorded the longest at 354 kilometres 220 mi with an average of 155 kilometres 96 mi The length of these swims ranged from most of a day to ten days Ten of the sows had a cub swim with them and after a year six cubs survived The study did not determine if the others lost their cubs before during or some time after their long swims Researchers do not know whether or not this is a new behaviour before polar ice shrinkage they opined that there was probably neither the need nor opportunity to swim such long distances 150 As noted above there have been 600 recorded instances of polar bears in Iceland since the 9th century These presumably swam from Greenland about 300 kilometres 190 mi The polar bear may swim underwater for up to three minutes to approach seals on shore or on ice floes 151 152 HuntingIndigenous people Skins of hunted bears Polar bears have long provided important raw materials for Arctic peoples including the Inuit Yupik Chukchi Nenets Russian Pomors and others Hunters commonly used teams of dogs to distract the bear allowing the hunter to spear the bear or shoot it with arrows at closer range 153 Almost all parts of captured animals had a use 154 The fur was used in particular to make trousers and by the Nenets to make galoshes like outer footwear called tobok the meat is edible despite some risk of trichinosis the fat was used in food and as a fuel for lighting homes alongside seal and whale blubber sinews were used as thread for sewing clothes the gallbladder and sometimes heart were dried and powdered for medicinal purposes the large canine teeth were highly valued as talismans 155 Only the liver was not used as its high concentration of vitamin A is poisonous As a carnivore which feeds largely upon fish eating carnivores the polar bear ingests large amounts of vitamin A that is stored in their livers The resulting high concentrations cause hypervitaminosis A 156 Hunters make sure to either toss the liver into the sea or bury it in order to spare their dogs from potential poisoning 155 Traditional subsistence hunting was on a small enough scale to not significantly affect polar bear populations mostly because of the sparseness of the human population in polar bear habitat 157 History of commercial harvest In Russia polar bear furs were already being commercially traded in the 14th century though it was of low value compared to Arctic fox or even reindeer fur 155 The growth of the human population in the Eurasian Arctic in the 16th and 17th century together with the advent of firearms and increasing trade dramatically increased the harvest of polar bears 110 158 However since polar bear fur has always played a marginal commercial role data on the historical harvest is fragmentary It is known for example that already in the winter of 1784 1785 Russian Pomors on Spitsbergen harvested 150 polar bears in Magdalenefjorden In the early 20th century Norwegian hunters were harvesting 300 bears per year at the same location Estimates of total historical harvest suggest that from the beginning of the 18th century roughly 400 to 500 animals were being harvested annually in northern Eurasia reaching a peak of 1 300 to 1 500 animals in the early 20th century and falling off as the numbers began dwindling 155 In the first half of the 20th century mechanized and overpoweringly efficient methods of hunting and trapping came into use in North America as well Polar bears were chased from snowmobiles icebreakers and airplanes the latter practice described in a 1965 New York Times editorial as being about as sporting as machine gunning a cow 159 Norwegians used self killing guns comprising a loaded rifle in a baited box that was placed at the level of a bear s head and which fired when the string attached to the bait was pulled 160 The numbers taken grew rapidly in the 1960s peaking around 1968 with a global total of 1 250 bears that year 161 Contemporary regulations Road sign warning about the presence of bears The Norwegian text translates into Applies to all of Svalbard Concerns over the future survival of the species led to the development of national regulations on polar bear hunting beginning in the mid 1950s The Soviet Union banned all hunting in 1956 Canada began imposing hunting quotas in 1968 Norway passed a series of increasingly strict regulations from 1965 to 1973 and has completely banned hunting since then The United States began regulating hunting in 1971 and adopted the Marine Mammal Protection Act in 1972 In 1973 the International Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears was signed by all five nations whose territory is inhabited by polar bears Canada Denmark Norway the Soviet Union and the United States Member countries agreed to place restrictions on recreational and commercial hunting ban hunting from aircraft and icebreakers and conduct further research 162 The treaty allows hunting by local people using traditional methods Norway is the only country of the five in which all harvest of polar bears is banned The agreement was a rare case of international cooperation during the Cold War Biologist Ian Stirling commented For many years the conservation of polar bears was the only subject in the entire Arctic that nations from both sides of the Iron Curtain could agree upon sufficiently to sign an agreement Such was the intensity of human fascination with this magnificent predator the only marine bear 163 Agreements have been made between countries to co manage their shared polar bear subpopulations After several years of negotiations Russia and the United States signed an agreement in October 2000 to jointly set quotas for indigenous subsistence hunting in Alaska and Chukotka 164 The treaty was ratified in October 2007 165 In September 2015 the polar bear range states agreed upon a circumpolar action plan describing their conservation strategy for polar bears 166 The species is listed in Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species CITES meaning international trade including in parts or derivatives is controlled by the CITES system of permits and certificates 3 The United States government has proposed that polar bears be transferred to Appendix I of CITES which would ban all commercial international trade in polar bear parts 167 The decision to leave the species listed under Appendix II was endorsed by the IUCN and TRAFFIC who determined that such an uplisting was unlikely to confer a conservation benefit 168 Canada Dogsleds are used for recreational hunting of polar bears in Canada Polar bears were designated Not at Risk in April 1986 and uplisted to Special Concern in April 1991 This status was re evaluated and confirmed in April 1999 November 2002 and April 2008 Polar bears continue to be listed as a species of special concern in Canada because of their sensitivity to overharvest and because of an expected range contraction caused by loss of Arctic sea ice 169 More than 600 bears are killed per year by humans across Canada 51 a rate calculated by scientists to be unsustainable for some areas notably Baffin Bay 41 Canada has allowed sport hunters accompanied by local guides and dog sled teams since 1970 170 but the practice was not common until the 1980s 171 The guiding of sport hunters provides meaningful employment and an important source of income for northern communities in which economic opportunities are few 49 Sport hunting can bring CDN 20 000 to 35 000 per bear into northern communities which until recently has been mostly from American hunters 172 The territory of Nunavut accounts for the location 80 of annual kills in Canada In 2005 the government of Nunavut increased the quota from 400 to 518 bears 172 despite protests from the IUCN Polar Bear Specialist Group 173 In two areas where harvest levels have been increased based on increased sightings science based studies have indicated declining populations and a third area is considered data deficient 174 While most of that quota is hunted by the indigenous Inuit a growing share is sold to recreational hunters 0 8 in the 1970s 7 1 in the 1980s and 14 6 in the 1990s 171 Nunavut polar bear biologist Mitchell Taylor who was formerly responsible for polar bear conservation in the territory has insisted that bear numbers are being sustained under current hunting limits 175 In 2010 the 2005 increase was partially reversed Government of Nunavut officials announced that the polar bear quota for the Baffin Bay region would be gradually reduced from 105 per year to 65 by 2013 176 The Government of the Northwest Territories maintain their own quota of 72 to 103 bears within the Inuvialuit communities of which some are set aside for sports hunters citation needed Environment Canada also banned the export from Canada of fur claws skulls and other products from polar bears harvested in Baffin Bay as of 1 January 2010 176 Because of the way polar bear hunting quotas are managed in Canada attempts to discourage sport hunting would actually increase the number of bears killed in the short term Canada allocates a certain number of permits each year to sport and subsistence hunting and those that are not used for sport hunting are re allocated to indigenous subsistence hunting Whereas northern communities kill all the polar bears they are permitted to take each year only half of sport hunters with permits actually manage to kill a polar bear If a sport hunter does not kill a polar bear before his or her permit expires the permit cannot be transferred to another hunter 49 In August 2011 Environment Canada published a national polar bear conservation strategy 177 Greenland In Greenland hunting restrictions were first introduced in 1994 and expanded by executive order in 2005 45 Until 2005 Greenland placed no limit on hunting by indigenous people However in 2006 it imposed a limit of 150 while also allowed recreational hunting for the first time 178 Other provisions included year round protection of cubs and mothers restrictions on weapons used and various administrative requirements to catalogue kills 45 Norway Polar bears were hunted heavily in Svalbard Norway throughout the 19th century and to as recently as 1973 when the conservation treaty was signed 900 bears a year were harvested in the 1920s and after World War II there were as many as 400 500 harvested annually Some regulations of hunting did exist In 1927 poisoning was outlawed while in 1939 certain denning sights were declared off limits The killing of females and cubs was made illegal in 1965 Killing of polar bears decreased somewhat 25 30 years before the treaty Despite this the polar bear population continued to decline and by 1973 only around 1000 bears were left in Svalbard Only with the passage of the treaty did they begin to recover 179 Russia The Soviet Union banned the harvest of polar bears in 1956 however poaching continued and is estimated to pose a serious threat to the polar bear population 45 In recent years polar bears have approached coastal villages in Chukotka more frequently due to the shrinking of the sea ice endangering humans and raising concerns that illegal hunting would become even more prevalent In 2007 the Russian government made subsistence hunting legal for indigenous Chukotkan peoples only a move supported by Russia s most prominent bear researchers and the World Wide Fund for Nature as a means to curb poaching 180 Polar bears are currently listed as Rare of Uncertain Status or Rehabilitated and rehabilitating in the Red Data Book of Russia depending on population 181 In 2010 the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment published a strategy for polar bear conservation in Russia 182 United States The Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 afforded polar bears some protection in the United States It banned hunting except by indigenous subsistence hunters banned importing of polar bear parts except polar bear pelts taken legally in Canada and banned the harassment of polar bears On 15 May 2008 the United States Department of the Interior listed the polar bear as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act citing the melting of Arctic sea ice as the primary threat to the polar bear 183 It banned all importing of polar bear trophies Importing products made from polar bears had been prohibited from 1972 to 1994 under the Marine Mammal Protection Act and restricted between 1994 and 2008 Under those restrictions permits from the United States Fish and Wildlife Service were required to import sport hunted polar bear trophies taken in hunting expeditions in Canada The permit process required that the bear be taken from an area with quotas based on sound management principles 184 Since 1994 hundreds of sport hunted polar bear trophies have been imported into the U S 185 In 2015 the U S Fish and Wildlife Service published a draft conservation management plan for polar bears to improve their status under the Endangered Species Act and the Marine Mammal Protection Act 186 Polar bear in Denver Zoo Conservation status threats and controversies Map from the U S Geological Survey shows projected changes in polar bear habitat from 2001 to 2010 and 2041 to 2050 Red areas indicate loss of optimal polar bear habitat blue areas indicate gain Polar bear population sizes and trends are difficult to estimate accurately because they occupy remote home ranges and exist at low population densities Polar bear fieldwork can also be hazardous to researchers 187 As of 2015 the International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN reports that the global population of polar bears is 22 000 to 31 000 and the current population trend is unknown Nevertheless polar bears are listed as Vulnerable under criterion A3c which indicates an expected population decrease of 30 over the next three generations 34 5 years due to decline in area of occupancy extent of occurrence and or quality of habitat Risks to the polar bear include climate change pollution in the form of toxic contaminants conflicts with shipping oil and gas exploration and development and human bear interactions including harvesting and possible stresses from recreational polar bear watching 2 According to the World Wildlife Fund the polar bear is important as an indicator of Arctic ecosystem health Polar bears are studied to gain understanding of what is happening throughout the Arctic because at risk polar bears are often a sign of something wrong with the Arctic marine ecosystem 188 Climate change Further information Climate change in the Arctic The key danger for polar bears posed by the effects of climate change is malnutrition or starvation due to habitat loss Polar bears hunt seals from a platform of sea ice Rising temperatures cause the sea ice to melt earlier in the year driving the bears to shore before they have built sufficient fat reserves to survive the period of scarce food in the late summer and early fall 135 Reduction in sea ice cover also forces bears to swim longer distances which further depletes their energy stores and occasionally leads to drowning 189 Thinner sea ice tends to deform more easily which appears to make it more difficult for polar bears to access seals 96 Insufficient nourishment leads to lower reproductive rates in adult females and lower survival rates in cubs and juvenile bears in addition to poorer body condition in bears of all ages 40 The International Union for Conservation of Nature Arctic Climate Impact Assessment United States Geological Survey and many leading polar bear biologists have expressed grave concerns about the impact of climate change with some predicting extinction by 2100 190 Mothers and cubs have high nutritional requirements which are not met if the seal hunting season is too short In addition to creating nutritional stress a warming climate is expected to affect various other aspects of polar bear life changes in sea ice affect the ability of pregnant females to build suitable maternity dens 34 As the distance increases between the pack ice and the coast females must swim longer distances to reach favoured denning areas on land Thawing of permafrost would affect the bears who traditionally den underground and warm winters could result in den roofs collapsing or having reduced insulative value For the polar bears that currently den on multi year ice increased ice mobility may result in longer distances for mothers and young cubs to walk when they return to seal hunting areas in the spring 40 Disease causing bacteria and parasites would flourish more readily in a warmer climate 96 Problematic interactions between polar bears and humans such as foraging by bears in garbage dumps have historically been more prevalent in years when ice floe breakup occurred early and local polar bears were relatively thin Increased human bear interactions including fatal attacks on humans are likely to increase as the sea ice shrinks and hungry bears try to find food on land 191 Starving bear near Svalbard The effects of climate change are most profound in the southern part of the polar bear s range and this is indeed where significant degradation of local populations has been observed 192 The Western Hudson Bay subpopulation in a southern part of the range also happens to be one of the best studied polar bear subpopulations This subpopulation feeds heavily on ringed seals in late spring when newly weaned and easily hunted seal pups are abundant The late spring hunting season ends for polar bears when the ice begins to melt and break up and they fast or eat little during the summer until the sea freezes again 174 Due to warming air temperatures ice floe breakup in western Hudson Bay is currently occurring three weeks earlier than it did 30 years ago reducing the duration of the polar bear feeding season The body condition of polar bears has declined during this period the average weight of lone and likely pregnant female polar bears was approximately 290 kg 640 lb in 1980 and 230 kg 510 lb in 2004 174 Between 1987 and 2004 the Western Hudson Bay population declined by 22 193 although the population was listed as stable as of 2017 51 As the climate change melts sea ice the U S Geological Survey projects that two thirds of polar bears will disappear by 2050 194 In Alaska the effects of sea ice shrinkage have contributed to higher mortality rates in polar bear cubs and have led to changes in the denning locations of pregnant females 134 The proportion of maternity dens on sea ice has changed from 62 between the years 1985 through 1994 to 37 over the years 1998 through 2004 Thus now the Alaskan population more resembles the world population in that it is more likely to den on land 195 In recent years polar bears in the Arctic have undertaken longer than usual swims to find prey possibly resulting in four recorded drownings in the unusually large ice pack regression of 2005 189 A new development is that polar bears have begun ranging to new territory While not unheard of but still uncommon polar bears have been sighted increasingly in larger numbers ashore staying on the mainland for longer periods of time during the summer months particularly in North Canada traveling farther inland 196 This may cause an increased reliance on terrestrial diets such as goose eggs waterfowl and caribou 197 as well as increased human bear conflict 196 Pollution Polar bears accumulate high levels of persistent organic pollutants such as polychlorinated biphenyl PCBs and chlorinated pesticides Due to their position at the top of the ecological pyramid with a diet heavy in blubber in which halocarbons concentrate their bodies are among the most contaminated of Arctic mammals 198 Halocarbons also known as organohalogens are known to be toxic to other animals because they mimic hormone chemistry and biomarkers such as immunoglobulin G and retinol suggest similar effects on polar bears PCBs have received the most study and they have been associated with birth defects and immune system deficiency 199 Many chemicals such as PCBs and DDT have been internationally banned due to the recognition of their harm on the environment Their concentrations in polar bear tissues continued to rise for decades after being banned as these chemicals spread through the food chain Since then the trend seems to have abated with tissue concentrations of PCBs declining between studies performed from 1989 to 1993 and studies performed from 1996 to 2002 During the same time periods DDT was found to be notably lower in the Western Hudson Bay population only 200 Oil and gas development Oil and gas development in polar bear habitat can affect the bears in a variety of ways An oil spill in the Arctic would most likely concentrate in the areas where polar bears and their prey are also concentrated such as sea ice leads 2 Because polar bears rely partly on their fur for insulation and soiling of the fur by oil reduces its insulative value oil spills put bears at risk of dying from hypothermia Polar bears exposed to oil spill conditions have been observed to lick the oil from their fur leading to fatal kidney failure 109 Maternity dens used by pregnant females and by females with infants can also be disturbed by nearby oil exploration and development Disturbance of these sensitive sites may trigger the mother to abandon her den prematurely or abandon her litter altogether 2 Predictions Steven Amstrup and other U S Geological Survey scientists have predicted two thirds of the world s polar bears may disappear by 2050 based on moderate projections for the shrinking of summer sea ice caused by climate change 96 194 though the validity of this study has been debated 201 202 The bears could disappear from Europe Asia and Alaska and be depleted from the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and areas off the northern Greenland coast By 2080 they could disappear from Greenland entirely and from the northern Canadian coast leaving only dwindling numbers in the interior Arctic Archipelago 96 However in the short term some polar bear populations in historically colder regions of the Arctic may temporarily benefit from a milder climate as multiyear ice that is too thick for seals to create breathing holes is replaced by thinner annual ice 203 Polar bears diverged from brown bears 400 000 600 000 years ago and have survived past periods of climate fluctuation It has been claimed that polar bears will be able to adapt to terrestrial food sources as the sea ice they use to hunt seals disappears 204 However most polar bear biologists think that polar bears will be unable to completely offset the loss of calorie rich seal blubber with terrestrial foods and that they will be outcompeted by brown bears in this terrestrial niche ultimately leading to a population decline 205 Controversy over species protection SwimmingThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information December 2019 Warnings about the future of the polar bear are often contrasted with the fact that worldwide population estimates have increased over the past 50 years and are relatively stable today 206 207 Some estimates of the global population are around 5 000 to 10 000 in the early 1970s 208 other estimates were 20 000 to 40 000 during the 1980s 54 110 Current estimates put the global population at between 20 000 and 25 000 45 or 22 000 and 31 000 2 Despite the encouraging rebound of some populations there is little evidence to suggest polar bears are thriving overall 209 There are several reasons for the apparent discordance between past and projected population trends estimates from the 1950s and 1960s were based on stories from explorers and hunters rather than on scientific surveys 210 211 212 213 Second controls of harvesting were introduced that allowed this previously overhunted species to recover Third the recent effects of climate change have affected sea ice abundance in different areas to varying degrees 210 Debate over the listing of the polar bear under endangered species legislation has put conservation groups and Canada s Inuit at opposing positions 49 the Nunavut government and many northern residents have condemned the U S initiative to list the polar bear under the Endangered Species Act 214 215 Many Inuit believe the polar bear population is increasing and restrictions on commercial sport hunting are likely to lead to a loss of income to their communities 49 216 In culture Engraving made by Chukchi carvers in the 1940s on a walrus tusk depicts polar bears hunting walrus Indigenous folklore For the indigenous peoples of the Arctic polar bears have long played an important cultural and material role 154 155 Polar bear remains have been found at hunting sites dating to 2 500 to 3 000 years ago 157 and 1 500 year old cave paintings of polar bears have been found in the Chukchi Peninsula Indeed it has been suggested that Arctic peoples skills in seal hunting and igloo construction has been in part acquired from the polar bears themselves 155 The Inuit and Alaska Natives have many folk tales featuring the bears including legends in which bears are humans when inside their own houses and put on bear hides when going outside and stories of how the constellation that is said to resemble a great bear surrounded by dogs came into being These legends reveal a deep respect for the polar bear which is portrayed as both spiritually powerful and closely akin to humans The human like posture of bears when standing and sitting and the resemblance of a skinned bear carcass to the human body have probably contributed to the belief that the spirits of humans and bears were interchangeable 153 Among the Chukchi and Yupik of eastern Siberia there was a longstanding shamanistic ritual of thanksgiving to the hunted polar bear After killing the animal its head and skin were removed and cleaned and brought into the home and a feast was held in the hunting camp in its honor To appease the spirit of the bear traditional song and drum music was played and the skull was ceremonially fed and offered a pipe 217 Only once the spirit was appeased was the skull be separated from the skin taken beyond the bounds of the homestead and placed in the ground facing north 155 The Nenets of north central Siberia placed particular value on the talismanic power of the prominent canine teeth These were traded in the villages of the lower Yenisei and Khatanga rivers to the forest dwelling peoples further south who would sew them into their hats as protection against brown bears It was believed that the little nephew the brown bear would not dare to attack a man wearing the tooth of its powerful big uncle the polar bear The skulls of killed polar bears were buried at sacred sites and altars called sedyangi were constructed out of the skulls Several such sites have been preserved on the Yamal Peninsula 155 Symbols and mascots Greenland s 1911 five kroner note depicting a polar bear Coat of arms of the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug in the Russian Federation Coat of arms of the Greenlandic Self Rule government Kalaallit Nunaat Their distinctive appearance and their association with the Arctic have made polar bears popular icons especially in those areas where they are native The Canadian two dollar coin carries an image of a lone polar bear on its reverse side while a special millennium edition featured three 218 Vehicle licence plates in the Northwest Territories in Canada are in the shape of a polar bear as was the case in Nunavut until 2012 these now display polar bear artwork instead 219 The polar bear is the mascot of Bowdoin College Maine the University of Alaska Fairbanks and the 1988 Winter Olympics held in Calgary 220 221 222 The Eisbaren Berlin hockey team uses a roaring polar bear as their logo and the Charlotte North Carolina hockey team the Charlotte Checkers uses a polar bear named Chubby Checker as their mascot 223 Coca Cola has used images of the polar bear in its advertising 224 and Polar Beverages Nelvana Bundaberg Rum Klondike bars and Fox s Glacier Mints all feature polar bears in their logos citation needed Fiction Polar bears are popular in fiction particularly in books for children or teenagers The Polar Bear Son is adapted from a traditional Inuit tale 225 The animated television series Noah s Island features a polar bear named Noah as the protagonist Polar bears feature prominently in East North Child in the UK by Edith Pattou 226 The Bear by Raymond Briggs adapted into an animated short in 1998 is a story of a girl s encounter with a polar bear 227 The panserbjorne of Philip Pullman s fantasy trilogy His Dark Materials are sapient dignified anthropomorphic polar bears They feature prominently in the 2007 film adaptation of The Golden Compass 228 The television series Lost features polar bears living on the tropical island setting 229 The manga and anime series Shirokuma Cafe centers on a polar bear 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Working Meeting of Polar Bear Specialists Polar Bears Morges Switzerland IUCN February 1970 Archived from the original on 4 May 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2007 International Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears 15 November 1973 Oslo Stirling Ian Foreword in Rosing Norbert 1996 The World of the Polar Bear Willowdale ON Firefly Books Ltd ISBN 978 1 55209 068 8 U S and Russia sign pact to protect the polar bear The New York Times 17 October 2000 Retrieved 12 April 2008 US Russia Polar Bear Treaty Ratified ScienceDaily 18 October 2007 Retrieved 12 April 2008 Circumpolar Action Plan Conservation Strategy for Polar Bears PDF Archived from the original PDF on 1 January 2016 Retrieved 30 December 2015 Did Polar Bears Really Lose at CITES National Geographic Blog voices nationalgeographic com PBSG statement on proposed transfer of polar bear to CITES Appendix I pbsg npolar no Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 27 December 2015 COSEWIC Assessment Polar Bear PDF Freeman M 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Assessment 2004 Impact of a Warming Arctic Arctic Impact Climate Assessment Key Finding 4 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 61778 9 OCLC 56942125 Regehr Eric V Lunn Nicholas J Amstrup Steven C Stirling Ian 2007 Effects of earlier sea ice breakup on survival and population size of polar bears in western Hudson Bay Journal of Wildlife Management 71 8 2673 2683 doi 10 2193 2006 180 S2CID 86061349 a b Global Warming and Polar Bears National Wildlife Federation Archived from the original on 17 April 2013 Retrieved 29 November 2016 Fischbach A S Amstrup S C Douglas D C 2007 Landward and eastward shift of Alaskan polar bear denning associated with recent sea ice changes Polar Biology 30 11 1395 1405 doi 10 1007 s00300 007 0300 4 S2CID 36438494 a b Harvey Chelsea 18 November 2015 Next up from climate change More polar bears on land potentially running into humans The Washington Post Retrieved 9 December 2015 Marris Emma 19 July 2014 As Sea Ice Shrinks Can Polar Bears Survive 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Fairbanks Logo History Retrieved 2 July 2020 Calgary 1988 Mascots Retrieved 2 July 2020 Charlotte Checkers Chubby Retrieved 2 July 2020 Our Coca Cola Polar bears Coca Cola Archived from the original on 2 December 2016 Retrieved 31 January 2017 Dabcovich Lydia 1997 The polar bear son An Inuit tale New York Clarion Books ISBN 978 0 395 72766 9 East East book 1 by Edith Pattou www fantasticfiction com Retrieved 1 September 2022 Gentleman Briggs The Bear TVC www toonhound com Retrieved 1 September 2022 The Golden Compass The Bear Facts CG Society Archived from the original on 23 April 2018 Retrieved 17 March 2014 Abrams Natalie 31 January 2010 13 Questions with the Producers of Lost Polar Bears the Smoke Monster and the Man in Black TV Guide Retrieved 17 March 2014 BibliographyAars Jon ed June 2005 Polar Bears Proceedings of the 14th Working Meeting of the IUCN SSC Polar Bear Specialist Group PDF Vol 32 Nicholas J Lunn and Andrew E Derocher Seattle Washington United States IUCN ISBN 978 2 8317 0959 8 Archived from the original PDF on 9 April 2008 Retrieved 19 April 2008 Bruemmer Fred 1989 World of the Polar Bear Toronto Ontario Canada Key Porter Books ISBN 978 1 55013 107 9 Hemstock Annie 1999 The Polar Bear Manakato MN Capstone Press ISBN 978 0 7368 0031 0 Lockwood Sophie 2006 Polar Bears Chanhassen MN The Child s World ISBN 978 1 59296 501 4 Matthews Downs 1993 Polar Bear San Francisco CA Chronicle Books ISBN 978 0 8118 0204 8 Rosing Norbert 1996 The World of the Polar Bear Willowdale ON Firefly Books Ltd ISBN 978 1 55209 068 8 Further readingMichael Engelhard 2016 Ice Bear The Cultural History of an Arctic Icon University of Washington Press External linksNational Wildlife Federation s Polar Bear Page ARKive images and movies of the polar bear Ursus maritimus Map of polar bear ranges and denning areas in Nunavut from Nunavut Planning Commission BBC Nature Polar bear news and video clips from BBC programmes past and present Archived 14 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine Photos facts videos from Polar Bears International that funds population preservation and DNA studies of the polar bear Map Here s where the polar bears are vanishing Photos of Polar bear on Sealife Collection Portals Mammals Animals BiologyPolar bear at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons News from Wikinews Taxa from Wikispecies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Polar bear amp oldid 1136315368, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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