The Province

CALL TO PROTECT

The genetic quirk that causes the spirit bear is rarer than thought, study finds

- DENISE RYAN —JACK PLANT dryan@postmedia.com

Christina Service was two years into her research with a bear research team when she saw her first spirit bear.

Bears, including the rare white-coated Kermode bear known as the spirit bear, are not stealthy creatures. Service calls them the “all-terrain vehicles of the forest — you hear them coming, crashing through the bush.”

Service and her team followed the commotion, and found the bear grazing on grasses along the riverbanks in the Great Bear Rainforest.

To see the elusive spirit bear, stark white with a ginger tinge, against the deep green of the rainforest, was, said Service, “spectacula­r.”

But the spirit bear is far rarer and far more ecological­ly vulnerable than previously believed, according to Service’s research.

A peer-reviewed study shows that the genetic change that produces the spirit bear is up to 50 per cent rarer than previous estimates.

The study was published in Ecological Solutions and Evidence by Service, a group of scientists and First Nations stewards from the Kitasoo/ Xai’xais and Gitga’at First Nations, the University of Victoria, the Spirit Bear Research Foundation and the Raincoast Conservati­on Foundation.

Service, the wildlife biologist for the Kitasoo/Xai’xais Stewardshi­p Authority, led the research along B.C.’s Central Coast. She said the study provides valuable data for land use planning and shows that further conservati­on efforts are needed.

The scientific team worked closely with First Nations partners to systematic­ally collect hair samples from 385 black bears to determine the frequency of the rare gene across 18,000 square kilometres of the Great Bear Rainforest. The collection was non-invasive. Hundreds of barbed wire corrals were set up across the region, and bears were attracted by scents they love: fish oil and beaver anal gland secretions.

Without harming the bear, the barbed wire snagged hair the bears would normally shed.

Individual hairs were collected and labelled and tested for the gene variant behind the spirit bear.

“CSI-style, from each hair, we determined the individual bear’s genetic fingerprin­t, sex, species and, for black bears, the specific carriers of the spirit bear gene,” Service said.

The data also provided a “heat map” of spirit bear habitats. “We were able to overlay these hot spots or concentrat­ions with parks and protected areas and see which areas are not protected from industrial activity.”

Only about half of the areas with high concentrat­ions of spirit bears are safeguarde­d by parks and other protected areas. Because the spirit bear is simply a black bear with a genetic variant, it is not classified as an endangered species. But the spirit bear, due to its rarity, could be vulnerable even if the wider species it belongs to is doing well.

“When you have really low numbers of anything, each individual has a disproport­ionately valuable role in ensuring the next generation,” Service said. “You want to give every bear carrying that version of the gene the best shot at survival.”

Chris Picard, science director for the Gitga’at First Nation, also worked on the study. He said the region is under pressure from industry that could threaten the bear.

“We’ve made some progress in establishi­ng conservanc­ies, but this research shows there are gaps and there is more work to do to ensure the species is protected.”

 ?? — DOUG NEASLOSS ?? A spirit bear cub with its black bear mother. Spirit bear colouratio­n requires a genetic variation to be carried by both parents.
— DOUG NEASLOSS A spirit bear cub with its black bear mother. Spirit bear colouratio­n requires a genetic variation to be carried by both parents.
 ??  ?? Spirit bears, typically stark white with a ginger tinge, were the subject of a new study focusing on the Great Bear Rainforest.
Spirit bears, typically stark white with a ginger tinge, were the subject of a new study focusing on the Great Bear Rainforest.

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