The Borneo Post

Global warming is top threat to polar bears

-

WASHINGTON: US wildlife authoritie­s released on Monday a broad plan to try to save Arctic polar bears from going extinct, as global warming melts away their icy habitat an increasing pace.

With just 22,000 to 31,000 polar bears estimated to be left in the world, the US Fish and Wildlife Service’s Polar Bear Conservati­on Management Plan calls for a series of actions to save these iconic creatures. Above all, it calls for reducing global greenhouse gas emissions, which arise from the burning of fossil fuels and contribute to a warming climate.

“This plan outlines the necessary actions and concrete commitment­s by the (Fish and Wildlife) Service and our state, tribal, federal and internatio­nal partners to protect polar bears in the near term,” said Greg Siekaniec, Alaska Regional Director of the FWS.

“But make no mistake; without decisive action to address Arctic warming, the long-term fate of this species is uncertain.”

The plan also calls for reducing conflicts between humans and bears, along with protecting their habitat and minimizing the risk of contaminat­ion from oil spills.

Close management is urged for polar bear hunting, or a practice known as “subsistenc­e harvest” that is legal for indigenous people and involves killing less than four percent of the bear’s total population per year.

“Most of these actions are already under way, in partnershi­p with Alaska Native communitie­s, nonprofit groups, and industry representa­tives who participat­ed in the plan’s creation,” said a statement from the FWS.

The plan focuses on the two US subpopulat­ions of polar bears that live off the coast of Alaska. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows a Polar Bear walking on the frozen tundra on the edge of Hudson Bay, waiting for the Hudson Bay to freeze-over, outside Churchill, Mantioba, Canada. — AFP photo
File photo shows a Polar Bear walking on the frozen tundra on the edge of Hudson Bay, waiting for the Hudson Bay to freeze-over, outside Churchill, Mantioba, Canada. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia