Canada's Hudson Bay polar bear population plummets as climate change
warms Arctic
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[December 27, 2022]
By Gloria Dickie
TORONTO (Reuters) - Canada's Western Hudson Bay polar bear population
has fallen 27% in just five years, according to a government report
released this week, suggesting climate change is impacting the animals.
Every autumn, the bears living along the western edge of the Bay pass
through the sub-Arctic tourist town of Churchill, Manitoba, as they
return to the sea ice. This has made the population not only the best
studied group in the world, but also the most famous, with the local
bear-viewing economy valued at C$7.2 million ($5.30 million) annually.
However, the Government of Nunavut's assessment finds that just 618
bears remained in 2021 - a roughly 50% drop from the 1980s.
"In some ways, it's totally shocking," said John Whiteman, chief
research scientist at conservation non-profit Polar Bears International.
"What's really sobering is that these kinds of declines are the kind
that unless sea ice loss is halted, are predicted to eventually cause
... extinction."
Polar bears depend on the sea ice to hunt, staking out over seal
breathing holes. But the Arctic is now warming about four times faster
than the rest of the world. Around Hudson Bay, seasonal sea ice is
melting out earlier in the spring, and forming later in the fall,
forcing bears to go for longer without food.
Scientists cautioned a direct link between the population decline and
sea ice loss in Hudson Bay wasn't yet clear, as four of the past five
years have seen moderately good ice conditions. Instead, they said,
climate-caused changes in the local seal population might be driving
bear numbers down.
And while it's possible some bears may have moved, "the number of adult
male bears has remained more or less the same. What's driven the decline
is a reduced number of juvenile bears and adult females," said Stephen
Atkinson, an independent wildlife biologist who led the research on
behalf of the government.
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Polar bears spar near the Hudson Bay
community of Churchill, Manitoba, Canada November 20, 2021. Picture
taken November 20, 2021. REUTERS/Carlos Osorio
This change in demographics doesn't fit with the idea that bears are
moving out of western Hudson Bay, he added.
"There was a very low number of cubs being produced in 2021," said
Andrew Derocher, who leads the Polar Bear Science Lab at the
University of Alberta. "We're looking at a slowly aging population
and when you do get bad (ice) years, older bears are much more
vulnerable to increased mortality."
Also of concern to scientists, the report suggests declines have
sped up. Between 2011 and 2016, the population only dropped 11%.
There are 19 populations of polar bears spread out between Russia,
Alaska, Norway, Greenland and Canada. But Western Hudson Bay is
among the southernmost locales, and scientists project the bears
here are likely to be among the first to disappear.
A 2021 study in the journal Nature Climate Change found most of the
world's polar bear populations are on track to collapse by 2100 if
greenhouse gas emissions aren't heavily curbed.
($1 = 1.3593 Canadian dollars)
(Reporting by Gloria Dickie; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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