Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Polar bear run-ins rise as ice floes ebb

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Alaska scientists say the chances of a polar bear encounter have increased after research reveals the bears are arriving on shore earlier and staying on land longer, a report said.

Scientists at the U.S. Geological Survey found changes in sea ice habitat have coincided with evidence that polar bears’ use of land is increasing, the Anchorage Daily News reported Saturday.

The polar bears come to land from the Beaufort Sea during the ice-melt season, when the sea ice breaks up in the summer and refreezes in the fall, scientists said.

The average duration of the ice-melt season has increased by 36 days since the late 1990s, researcher­s said.

The bears are arriving “a little bit ahead of schedule,” said Todd Atwood, a research wildlife biologist leading the U.S. Geological Survey’s polar bear research program.

Polar bears usually come to shore in mid-August, but residents have reported sightings as early as May in Kaktovik, a town about 640 miles north of Anchorage, biologists said.

Resident Annie Tikluk encountere­d a bear last week before neighbors scared it off.

Her daughter and two nieces were playing outside when “I saw the bear and ran out,” Tikluk said.

“The main issue is that bears in the southern Beaufort are now using land to an extent they haven’t used it historical­ly,” Atwood said. “And increasing activities in the Arctic, particular­ly those related to developmen­t, the main considerat­ion going forward is probably going to be how bears and humans are sharing those spaces.”

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