Weekend Herald

Bad news for bears from Arctic study

Research debunks theory of ‘ walking hibernatio­n’ to minimise food scarcity, writes

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It seems like every time we turn around, polar bears are catching a tough break. As climate change continues to heat up the planet and Arctic sea ice retreats further each year, conservati­onists are increasing­ly concerned that the bears — which use the sea ice as a hunting ground for catching seals — will have less access to the food they need to survive.

It’s been an ongoing worry for years, and last week the United States Fish and Wildlife Service drove it home again with a new conservati­on management plan, which identifies climate change and sea ice loss as the primary threat to polar bears.

Despite all the doom and gloom, some research conducted in the early 1980s has helped conservati­onists maintain a glimmer of hope about the polar bear’s ability to survive long periods of time without food. This research found evidence in polar bear blood samples to suggest that the bears might go into a kind of “walking hibernatio­n” when food i s scarce, staying awake but significan­tly lowering their metabolism to use less energy. This would be a useful adaptation during the summer, when sea ice is at its lowest extent and hunting is most difficult.

It’s been a tempting theory for more than 30 years — but once again, we’re looking at bad news for the polar bear. A new study, published yesterday in Science, debunks the “walking hibernatio­n” idea with data collected from more than two dozen captured polar bears in the Arctic’s Beaufort Sea, which the researcher­s spotted and tranquilli­sed from helicopter­s.

The researcher­s, led by biologist John Whiteman at the University of Wyoming, outfitted bears with devices that collect and transit data remotely to collect data on the bears’ movement and activity and their body temperatur­e. Their sample included both “ice bears” and “shore bears” — that i s, both bears who choose to chase the ice as it retreats north in the summer, looking for seals, and bears who choose to spend their summer on shore.

The researcher­s expected that if bears did indeed exhibit walking hi- bernation, their activity and temperatur­e would drop down to the kinds of levels usually observed in other bears during true hibernatio­n — that is, very low levels.

“If there was hibernatio­n metabolism . . . you would see all of them have a very steep, abrupt decline in body temperatur­e to about 35C and then remain like that the whole period,” says senior author Merav Ben- David, a professor of wildlife ecology at the University of Wyoming. “But we don’t see that.”

Instead, the results showed that both ice bears and shore bears experience much more moderate declines in body temperatur­es during the summer, when food is scarce — just the kinds of declines you would expect to see in any mammal that wasn’t getting enough food.

“If you went into an extended fast, your body temperatur­e would decline, too,” Ben- David says. “It’s a normal mammalian response to fasting and losing metabolica­lly active tissue — losing weight.” If there was hibernatio­n metabolism . . . you would see all of them have a very steep, abrupt decline in body temperatur­e . . . But we don’t see that.

Unfortunat­ely, this means polar bears have no special protection­s against starvation as previously thought. They simply exhibit a typical fasting response to food deprivatio­n, and — given a long enough time without food — will starve.

There are an estimated 20,000- 25,000 polar bears, grouped into 19 sub- population­s. While scientists don’t have adequate data for all the population­s, we know at least some of them are declining, and the polar bear i s currently protected

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Scientists fear the future looks grim for polar bears.
Picture / AP Scientists fear the future looks grim for polar bears.

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