The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘Not going extinct’

Affidavit claims Canadian polar bear population is thriving

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The polar bear population is increasing according to federal affidavits submitted by Inuit groups, Blacklock’s Reporter reports.

“Inuit have not noticed a significan­t decline in the health of the polar bears,” the director of wildlife management for the Nunavik Marine Region Wildlife Board wrote in a court affidavit.

“In fact, Nunavik Inuit report that it is rare to see a skinny bear and most bears are observed to be healthy,” the affidavit read.

Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna and organizati­ons such as the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) have used the polar bear population as evidence of the effect of climate change.

However, the affidavit claimed Nunavut residents have seen an “increase in the polar bear population and a particular­ly notable increase since the 1980s.” The affidavits were submitted in response to hunting quota cuts made by Environmen­t Canada.

Environmen­t Canada cited “conservati­on concerns” as justificat­ion for the cuts. The Inuit challenge was ultimately dismissed.

One hunter was quoted in a Wildlife Board report saying there’s no “shortage” of polar bears and that “they’re (polar bears) not going extinct.”

The Wildlife Board report also claimed, “Many participan­ts were very concerned about perspectiv­es from outside Nunavik that polar bears are endangered elsewhere.”

“All interviews conducted in the Southern Hudson Bay communitie­s shared the view the population grew somewhat from the 1960s until the 1980s, and that a continued increase has been very noticeable since that time,” the report said.

Polar bears aren’t listed as a threatened or endangered species by a federal panel monitoring Canadian wildlife under the Species At Risk Act, Blacklock’s Reporter reports.

 ?? 123RF STOCK PHOTO ?? A Nunavik Inuit report says that it is rare to see a skinny bear and most bears are observed to be healthy.
123RF STOCK PHOTO A Nunavik Inuit report says that it is rare to see a skinny bear and most bears are observed to be healthy.

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