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"Even given the pledges on the table, we don't come close to what these guys use in their hopeful scenario," he said. Study co-author Eric DeWeaver of the National Science Foundation called the scenarios he used "plausible." But DeWeaver and Amstrup agree the polar bear is in deep trouble if emissions continue to rise as they are now. A second study was to be presented Thursday at the American Geophysical Union conference in San Francisco. That research considers a future in which global warming continues at the same pace. And it shows that a belt from the northern archipelago of Canada to the northern tip of Greenland will likely still have ice because of various winds and currents. The sea ice forms off Siberia in an area that's called "the ice factory" and is blown to this belt, which is like an "ice cube tray," said Robert Newton of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University. That "sea ice refuge" will be good for polar bears and should continue for decades to come, maybe even into the next century, he said. Just how many polar bears could live there still has to be figured out, according to the research by Newton and Stephanie Pfirman of Barnard College. Amstrup's study doesn't downplay the nature of global warming and its effect on polar bears, especially if emissions increase. "The changes that are occurring in the Arctic are going on at a much more rapid rate than elsewhere in the world," Amstrup said. "So the changes that are occurring and affecting polar bears really foreshadow much more significant changes that are likely to occur worldwide." ___ Online: Nature: http://www.nature.com/nature/
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