Calgary Herald

High Arctic polar bears may be on the increase: survey

Numbers up, but animals in large area being affected by shorter ice season

- BOB WEBER

Polar bears in two High Arctic population­s seem to be doing better than scientists had thought.

The first major study of the Baffin Bay and Kane Basin population­s in about 20 years has found more bears than population models predicted.

But the three-year study, done for the Canada- Greenland Joint Commission on Polar Bear, warned that the body condition of the animals in the larger Baffin Bay group is deteriorat­ing as sea ice shrinks. It also found female bears are spending less time in maternity dens and the survival of newborn cubs is dropping.

“Body condition in the Baffin Bay polar bears declined in close associatio­n with the duration of the ice-free period,” the report says.

The Kane Basin population, however, may actually be increasing.

The study updates the last report into the two population­s done in 1997. Since that time, scientists have used population models to predict the health of the two groups.

Both were considered to be in decline. The Baffin Bay bears were thought to have decreased to about 1,600 from 2,173 two decades ago.

Those models seem to have been too pessimisti­c, partly because the earlier population survey was an underestim­ate. The new report says there are 2,826 bears in the Baffin region.

The report cautions that difference­s in survey methods mean the 1997 numbers aren’t directly comparable with the latest results.

“It is not possible to conclude that the estimate of total abundance in the 2010s represents an increase.”

It also warns about the health of the Baffin Bay bears.

Summer sea ice in those waters has shrunk dramatical­ly. That’s forcing the bears to spend up to a month more on land than they used to, which cuts them off for a longer period from their favourite diet of fat-rich seals.

The overall body condition of the bears has declined as a result, the study says.

As well, pregnant females are spending a month less in their maternity dens. The study found fewer bear cubs are making it past their first year.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A new study finds that polar bears in the High Arctic area of Baffin Bay are holding up in terms of numbers, but their body condition and the survival of cubs has worsened.
JONATHAN HAYWARD/ THE CANADIAN PRESS A new study finds that polar bears in the High Arctic area of Baffin Bay are holding up in terms of numbers, but their body condition and the survival of cubs has worsened.

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