East Bay Times

Polar bears found living in a shaky oasis in Greenland

-

With the polar bear species in a fight for survival because of disappeari­ng Arctic sea ice, a new distinct group of Greenland bears seem to have stumbled on an icy oasis that might allow a small remote population to “hang on.”

But it's far from “a life raft” for the endangered species that has long been a symbol of climate change, scientists said.

A team of scientists tracked a group of a few hundred polar bears in southeast Greenland that they show are geneticall­y distinct and geographic­ally separate from others, something not considered before. But what's really distinct is that these bears manage to survive despite only having 100 days a year when there's sea ice to hunt seals from. Elsewhere in the world, polar bears need at least 180 days, usually more, of sea ice for them to use as their hunting base. When there's no sea ice bears often don't eat for months.

With limited sea ice, which is frozen ocean water, these southeast Greenland polar bears use freshwater icebergs spawned from the shrinking Greenland ice sheet as makeshift hunting grounds, according to a study in Thursday's journal Science. However, scientists aren't sure if they are thriving because they are smaller and have fewer cubs than other polar bear population­s.

“These polar bears are adapted to living in an environmen­t that looks like the future,” said study lead author Kristin Laidre, a polar bear biologist at the University of Washington, who over nine years tracked, collared and tested the allwhite bears usually from a helicopter hovering the white snow and ice backdrop. “But most bears in the Arctic don't have glacial ice. They don't have access to this. So it can't be taken out of context like somehow this is like a life raft for polar bears around the Arctic. It's not. Greenland is unique.”

“We project large declines of polar bears across the Arctic and this study does not change that very important message,” Laidre said. “What this study does is show that we find this isolated group living in this unique place . ... We're looking at where in the Arctic polar bears can as a species hang on, where they might persist.”

The freshwater ice will keep coming off the ice sheet for centuries giving limited hope that this is “a place that polar bears might continue to survive'' but it's separate from an overall trend of sea ice loss in the summer because of emissions of heat-trapping gases from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas, said National Snow and Ice Data Center deputy lead scientist Twila Moon, a study co-author.

 ?? KRISTIN LAIDRE VIA AP ?? An adult female polar bear, left, and two 1-year-old cubs walk over snow-covered freshwater glacier ice in southeast Greenland in March 2015.
KRISTIN LAIDRE VIA AP An adult female polar bear, left, and two 1-year-old cubs walk over snow-covered freshwater glacier ice in southeast Greenland in March 2015.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States