Houston Chronicle

Global warming driving polar bears toward extinction, researcher­s say

- By Henry Fountain

Polar bears could become nearly extinct by the end of the century as a result of shrinking sea ice in the Arctic if global warming continues unabated, scientists said Monday.

Nearly all of the 19 subpopulat­ions of polar bears, from the Beaufort Sea off Alaska to the Siberian Arctic, would face being wiped out because the loss of sea ice would force the animals onto land and away from their food supplies for longer periods, the researcher­s said. Prolonged fasting, and reduced nursing of cubs by mothers, would lead to rapid declines in reproducti­on and survival.

“There is very little chance that polar bears would persist anywhere in the world, except perhaps in the very high Arctic in one small subpopulat­ion” if greenhouse-gas emissions continue at so-called business-as-usual levels, said Peter Molnar, a researcher at the University of Toronto Scarboroug­h and lead author of the study, which was published Monday in the journal Nature Climate Change.

Even if emissions were reduced to more moderate levels, “we still are unfortunat­ely going to lose some, especially some of the southernmo­st population­s, to sea-ice loss,” Molnar said.

The fate of polar bears has long been a flash point in the debate over humancause­d climate change, used by scientists and environmen­talists as well as deniers in their arguments.

By estimates there are about 25,000 polar bears in the Arctic. Their main habitat is sea ice, where they hunt seals by waiting for them at holes in the ice. In some areas the bears remain on the ice year round, but in others the melting in spring and summer forces them ashore.

“You need the sea ice to capture your food,” Molnar

said. “There’s not enough food on land to sustain a polar bear population.” But bears can fast for months, surviving on the energy from the fat they’ve built up thanks to their seal diet.

Arctic sea ice grows in the winter and melts and retreats in spring and summer. As the region has warmed rapidly in recent decades, ice extent in summer has declined by about 13 percent per decade compared to the 1981-2010 average. Some parts of the Arctic that had ice yearround now have ice-free periods in summer. Other parts are now free of ice for a longer portion of the year than in the past.

 ?? KT Miller / Polar Bears Internatio­nal / AFP via Getty Images ?? A polar bear stands on melting sea ice in Svalbard, Norway. Research predicts the carnivores, losing their icy hunting grounds, could all but disappear within the span of a human lifetime due to global warming.
KT Miller / Polar Bears Internatio­nal / AFP via Getty Images A polar bear stands on melting sea ice in Svalbard, Norway. Research predicts the carnivores, losing their icy hunting grounds, could all but disappear within the span of a human lifetime due to global warming.

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