Windsor Star

POLAR BEARS TERRORIZIN­G RUSSIAN TOWN

Predators move inland in search of food as climate change erodes sea-ice habitat

- ISAAC STANLEY-BECKER Washington Post

Fences have risen around kindergart­ens. Special vehicles transport military personnel to their work sites. Residents of the island settlement are afraid to leave their homes.

Novaya Zemlya is a Russian archipelag­o stretching into the Arctic Ocean. It once played host to Soviet nuclear tests, including the largest-ever man-made explosion, when the so-called King of Bombs detonated in 1961, releasing 50 megatons of power and deepening an arms race that threatened to turn the Cold War hot. Today, the barren landscape is under siege — from dozens of polar bears locked in their very own sort of hot war. Marine ecologists have long been sounding the alarm about the peril posed by global warming for the vulnerable species. In the far reaches of Russia, the situation has suddenly become traumatic for humans, too. Officials in the Arkhangels­k region, where the archipelag­o lies, on Saturday declared a state of emergency because of the marauding mammals. Polar bears are typically born on land but live mostly on sea ice, where they hunt and feed on seals. But as arctic ice thins, the animals move ashore, ravenous. They scavenge, sometimes coming into contact with human population­s. At least 52 bears were massed near Belushya Guba, the main settlement on the island territory, which is still used as a military garrison. The town had a population of about 2,000 as of the 2010 Census.

Now, the bears could be selectivel­y slaughtere­d if Russian authoritie­s can’t figure out another way to keep them from menacing the residents of the remote island outpost, where they began to collect in December 2018. Warning of the “mass invasion of polar bears in residentia­l areas,” local officials vowed action in response to “numerous oral and written complaints demanding to ensure safety in the settlement.” Officials also said the situation was unpreceden­ted.

“I have been in Novaya Zemlya since 1983, but there has never been so many polar bears in the vicinity,” said Zhigansha Musin, a local administra­tive head, according to TASS, Russia’s state news agency.

TASS reported that the animals had tried to enter office buildings and residentia­l quarters, and that they had chased residents and engaged in other aggressive behaviour. Photos and video footage posted over the weekend showed polar bears parading through drab living spaces, appearing on playground­s, staring down dogs and feasting on garbage.

“The people are scared,” regional officials reported in a statement. “They are frightened to leave homes and their daily routines are broken. Parents are afraid to let the children go to school or kindergart­en.” Meanwhile, vehicle patrols and brigades of dogs appeared to make no difference. The mammals were undeterred, continuing to pose a “threat to the life and health” of residents, officials said. More drastic measures were required. Residents are barred from hunting the animals, which are classified as a vulnerable species because of the “ongoing and potential loss of their sea-ice habitat resulting from climate change,” according to the World Wildlife Fund. The Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature estimates that there are somewhere between 22,000 and 31,000 polar bears worldwide. So far, Russia’s environmen­tal watchdog has withheld licenses for shooting the troublesom­e animals. Instead, a team of experts is being sent to the remote island community to try to protect the residents. “However, provided that those measures do not help solve the situation, a cull will remain the only and forced answer,” TASS reported, suggesting that killing the animals as a means of population control was possible.

The polar bears are battling adverse conditions of their own, driven by changing conditions in the Arctic, which is warming more than twice as fast as the rest of the planet, according to a 2013 study in the journal Nature. Models suggest that arctic sea ice is declining at a rate of nearly 13 per cent per decade. Scientists also pointed to climate change as the reason for the aggressive behaviour of polar bears that surrounded a weather station in the Arctic in 2016, threatenin­g a team of Russian researcher­s. The animals wreaking havoc on Novaya Zemlya ventured inland on the southern end of the archipelag­o, where the ice is rapidly thinning, Ilya Mordvintse­v, a researcher at the Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, told TASS. On their way north, where the ice is thicker, they came across alternativ­e sources of food at Belushya Guba and stopped to feed on the waste.

But a garbage-based diet won’t properly nourish polar bears, whose energy demands require “high-fat prey,” as detailed in a 2014 paper in the journal Science. The marine animals are highly vulnerable to climate change, the authors found, because of their dependence on icy conditions in acquiring their preferred fare, seals, as well as other animals that sustain them, including fish and waterfowl. When a polar bear’s carnivorou­s needs aren’t met, or when it has to travel farther and faster to sate itself, its body condition suffers. A female’s reproducti­ve capacities may falter. The U.S. Geological Survey warned in 2007 that two-thirds of the global population of polar bears could be wiped out by 2050 because of thinning sea ice. That prediction has periodical­ly found stark visual expression. In December 2017, the world’s attention was briefly focused on a video of an emaciated polar bear, struggling to stand in the Canadian Arctic.

“This is what starvation looks like,” Paul Nicklen, the photograph­er who captured the scene, wrote on social media. “The muscles atrophy. No energy. It’s a slow, painful death. When scientists say polar bears will be extinct in the next 100 years, I think of the global population of 25,000 bears dying in this manner.”

The Canadian photograph­er described the scene as “soulcrushi­ng,” but said he was moved to share it in an attempt to “break down the walls of apathy.” The marine invasion in Russia, in testing the nerves of the local population, is also testing how firmly those walls stand.

However, provided that those measures do not help solve the situation, a cull will remain the only and forced answer.

 ?? SCREEN GRAB VIA YOUTUBE ?? Thinning sea ice has driven more than 50 polar bears ashore on an Arctic archipelag­o in northern Russia, causing chaos for the local population.
SCREEN GRAB VIA YOUTUBE Thinning sea ice has driven more than 50 polar bears ashore on an Arctic archipelag­o in northern Russia, causing chaos for the local population.

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