The Standard (St. Catharines)

Polar bears invade Russian town; locals delighted but wary

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MOSCOW — Russian wildlife specialist­s are heading for an Arctic Archipelag­o to try to resolve a situation that has both terrified and delighted the locals: the polar bears that moved into a populated area.

It’s not the first time that polar bears have come to Novaya Zemlya, but their numbers this time are striking. More than 50 bears have been spotted in the archipelag­o’s main town of Belushya Guba.

Regional authoritie­s in Russia declared a state of emergency over the weekend after the bears peered into homes, entered buildings and gorged at a garbage dump outside the town.

Polar bears mostly live on sea ice, where they hunt seals as their main food. What brought them to land may be a decline in the seal population or the shrinking amount of sea ice that diminishes as the Arctic warms.

Officials don’t have an immediate solution. Actions under considerat­ion include relocating the dump that gives the bears a banquet and removing the bears. The scientists coming from the national natural resources agency will be equipped to sedate the bears and haul them away.

“That’s just an option; at the moment it is being considered, but there’s no 100 per cent guarantee it will be applied,” said Alexander Gornikh, regional head of the natural resources agency.

The ferocity of polar bears may worry many people, but some are also thrilled by the spectacle.

Cellphone videos taken in the area come with sounds of humans exclaiming over bear sightings.

“Thank you! It’s so cool! We have seen polar bears,” one woman is heard saying after she spotted a female bear and two cubs. “Bye, baby, bye!”

The two islands that make up Novaya Zemlya are farther north than the most northerly city in the United States. That’s Utqiagvik, Alaska, previously called Barrow.

 ?? @MUAH_IRINAELIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this image taken from video, a mother polar bear and two cubs walk across the courtyard of a residentia­l block, Monday, in Belushya Guba, Novaya Zemlya, Russia. Russian wildlife specialist­s are heading to the Arctic Archipelag­o to try to resolve why the polar bears have moved into the area. More than 50 bears have been spotted in the archipelag­o’s main town of Belushya Guba.
@MUAH_IRINAELIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this image taken from video, a mother polar bear and two cubs walk across the courtyard of a residentia­l block, Monday, in Belushya Guba, Novaya Zemlya, Russia. Russian wildlife specialist­s are heading to the Arctic Archipelag­o to try to resolve why the polar bears have moved into the area. More than 50 bears have been spotted in the archipelag­o’s main town of Belushya Guba.

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