Isolated Greenland polar bear population adapts to climate change
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[June 17, 2022]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - An isolated
population of polar bears in Greenland has made a clever adaptation to
the decline in the sea ice they depend upon as a platform for hunting
seals, offering a ray of hope for this species in at least some locales
in the warming Arctic.
This population of several hundred bears, inhabiting part of Greenland's
southeast coast on the Denmark Strait, has survived with only
abbreviated access to ice formed from frozen seawater by hunting instead
from chunks of freshwater ice breaking off from the huge Greenland Ice
Sheet, researchers said on Thursday.
"They survive in fjords that are sea-ice free more than eight months of
the year because they have access to glacier - freshwater - ice on which
they can hunt. This habitat, meaning glacier ice, is uncommon in most of
the Arctic," said University of Washington polar scientist Kristin
Laidre, lead author of the study published in the journal Science.
They were found to be the world's most genetically isolated polar bears,
distinct from the species' 19 other known populations. They have been
almost entirely cut off from other polar bears for at least several
hundred years, with no evidence of any leaving, though some evidence of
an occasional arrival from elsewhere.
These bears are "living at the edge of what we believe to be
physiologically possible," said evolutionary molecular biologist and
study co-author Beth Shapiro of the University of California, Santa Cruz
and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
"These bears are not thriving. They reproduce more slowly, they're
smaller in size. But, importantly, they are surviving. It's hard to know
yet whether these differences are driven by genetic adaptations or
simply by a different response of polar bears to a very different
climate and habitat," Shapiro added.
Polar bears, numbering roughly 26,000 in all, are particularly imperiled
by climate change as rising temperatures reshape the Arctic landscape
and deprive them of their customary sea-ice platform for hunting their
main prey, ringed seals and bearded seals.
"Loss of Arctic sea ice is still the primary threat
to all polar bears. This study does not change that," Laidre said.
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A southeast Greenland polar bear on glacier, or freshwater, ice is
seen in this handout photograph taken in September 2016. Thomas W.
Johansen/NASA Oceans Melting Greenland/Handout via REUTERS
The southeast Greenland population is geographically hemmed in, with
jagged mountain peaks and the Greenland Ice Sheet on one side and
the open ocean on the other. In springtime, the bears roam sea ice
and glaciers, with icebergs frozen solid into the sea ice. In
summertime, there is open water with floating pieces of glacial ice
at the fronts of glaciers, from which the bears hunt. This type of
habitat is found only in parts of Greenland and Svalbard, an Arctic
Ocean archipelago.
"This use of glacier ice has not been documented before and
represents a unique behavior," said John Whiteman, chief research
scientist for the conservation group Polar Bears International and a
biology professor at Old Dominion University in Virginia, who was
not involved in the study.
"This study should also prompt a search for similar habitats across
the current polar bear range. However, glacial ice is a minor
component of the marine ice cap in the Arctic, in comparison to ice
formed from freezing seawater," Whiteman said.
The researchers gathered genetic, movement and population data
including satellite tracking of some bears and observing them from a
helicopter.
"They simply look like a small yellow dot on the white ice, or you
follow their tracks in the snow to find them," Laidre said.
Shapiro said the findings may provide a glimpse of how polar bears
survived previous warm periods over the roughly 500,000 years since
they split evolutionarily from brown bears.
"Polar bears are in trouble," Shapiro added. "It is clear that if we
can't slow the rate of global warming that polar bears are on a
trajectory to become extinct. The more we can learn about this
remarkable species, the better able we will be to help them to
survive the next 50 to 100 years."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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