Smithsonian Magazine

The Ice Is Calling

A climate change dispatch from the polar bear capital of the world

- Photograph­s by Neil Ever Osborne Text by Neil Ever Osborne and Mark Jacquemain

On Hudson Bay’s frigid shores, scientists track polar bears to better understand the impacts of climate change on their survival

ON THE BAY THIS FALL morning, there’s a wind-carved rim of ice and a gathering of floes. One male polar bear, bony after a season without seal blubber, struggles along the slushy edge, haunches soaked, nearly slipping into the sea. We are on Gordon Point, in northern Manitoba, where Hudson Bay widens into its northwest crescent. Polar winds make it colder than at comparable latitudes, and the shallow waters of the bay freeze early. Having passed the summer months in the subarctic wild of Wapusk National Park to the south, polar bears now congregate here, waiting for the ice to come in.

The air is harsh, dry, frigid. We huddle on the deck of Tundra Buggy One, a big-wheeled bus retrofitte­d for traveling over frozen ground and viewing polar bears. Geoff York, senior director of conservati­on for Polar Bears Internatio­nal (PBI), uses Buggy One as a roving research station. It’s equipped with GPS, Wi-Fi and polar bear cams that beam live footage to classrooms around the world.

PBI monitors polar bears across the Arctic partly to determine the impacts of climate change on the behavior and physical condition of the animals as well as population trends. One program has tracked polar bears outfitted with GPS ear tags or collars that transmit locations to researcher­s to gain insight into the animals’ movements. York says, “Our understand­ing of polar bear biology, ecology and behavior is critical for long-term conservati­on and can inform on-the-ground efforts like human-bear conflict management.”

From the deck of Buggy One, there are several bears in sight, mostly large males. Invisible in an Arctic blizzard, their double-layer coats, not stark white but golden like sheep’s wool, stand out faintly in the distance on a clear day such as this. They tussle playfully or sleep among the twiggy willow stands on

York’s stewardshi­p has been built on reverence, and a belief in coexistenc­e

shore. One immense bear sits humanlike on its haunches, blades of grass in its teeth. Others wander the ice rim with a lazy gait that belies their lethal quickness.

York has warned us of the threat the bears pose. “The big bears have likely scared off the family groups,” York says, explaining that at

this desperate time of year, when adults are near-starving before the sealing season, males are more likely to cannibaliz­e cubs and attack humans. Despite the dangers, York has focused his 22-year career on stewardshi­p of the polar bear. He and his wife, Rachel, are planning to move from Montana to Manitoba so he can be close to them.

THE POLAR BEAR has become perhaps the pre-eminent symbol of the consequenc­es of climate change because it needs sea ice to survive. From November, when the ice fastens to shore, to May, when it breaks up, the ice is polar bear territory across the Arctic. The bears sleep on the ice at night, and pregnant females can even hibernate there during the winter. Males and non-pregnant females stay active through the winter days, and the ice is their hunting ground. Laying ambush behind a pressure ridge of ice fragments, the bears stalk seals. “On the ice, they’re slow,” York says of the seals. “The bears are explosive as they run them down.”

There are between 16,000 and 31,000 polar bears in the world today, congregati­ng in 19 population­s across the Arctic. In some areas where the bears were heavily impacted by hunting, bans helped their numbers resurge. But the shrinking of their Arctic habitat is making the species more and more fragile worldwide. In Greenland and Norway, the World Wildlife Foundation lists polar bears as vulnerable. In Russia, they’re rare or recovering, depending on the location, and in Alaska (the only place in the United States where they’re found), polar bears are threatened. In Canada, where 60 to 80 percent of

polar bears live, they’re a species of special concern, a click of the dial below threatened or endangered.

The population in the Western Hudson is particular­ly at risk, having fallen from 1,200 polar bears in the 1990s to about 800 today. Climate change has shrunk the expanse of sea ice that once spread from the North Pole to southern Hudson Bay. In 2020, the ice area was the second smallest since measuring began in the 1970s, and it is thinner than ever.

During our visit in early November, the bay’s newly formed ice, having warmed, began to shatter like a teacup. Days later, a south wind pushed it all ashore. “We need north winds bringing cool air and a few days at minus 20 Celsius,” York said, a note of concern in his voice.

Polar bears are hardy creatures—they can fast for upward of 180 days and swim hundreds of miles without a break—but consensus among scientists is the animals won’t be able to find new food sources once they can no longer hunt seals. If a warming climate shrinks sea ice at projected rates, most polar bear population­s will be too nutrient-starved to reproduce by the end of the 21st century.

Meanwhile, shrinking sea ice seems to be

leading bears to wander into human settlement­s from Russia to Norway, Greenland to Alaska. Problems ensue. In Alaska, an offshoot of a Russian polar bear patrol program trains communitie­s to use tools like bear spray, flashlight­s, air horns and rubber bullets to deter bears and protect themselves, while Canada’s Nunavut Territory administer­s similar efforts through a polar bear conflict manager based

in Igloolik. Here in northern Manitoba, a comparable program operates in Churchill, “The Polar Bear Capital of the World.”

CHURCHILL IS A TOWN utterly of the north. Its gridded blocks of aluminum-sided houses sit between miles of cratered tundra and the icy mouth of the Churchill River. This cold flank of Hudson Bay was once a meeting place for Inuit hunters and the Cree and Dene First Nations. Today, about three-quarters of Churchill’s almost 900 residents identify as indigenous. The town boasts one of the only movie theaters within a thousand miles, as well as access to Canada’s only deep-water port in the Arctic.

As the climate warms, more bears wander into Churchill to scavenge—or moon around in backyards, or chew the seat off a snowmobile. Mayor Michael Spence, a member of the Cree First Nation, says bear sightings were a novelty when he was a boy in the early 1960s— he remembers playing in a game of road hockey that was interrupte­d by a mother and two cubs—but today they are more common.

On Halloween 2013, a 30-year-old woman named Erin Greene, who had moved to Churchill from Montreal the previous year, was leaving a party with friends when she looked over her shoulder. “There’s this bear that’s already full-speed running at us,” Greene says. While her friends ran for help, the bear began carrying her off. “I realized that this was a fight I couldn’t win on my own and just accepted that this is the way I was going to die,” she says. Just in time, a neighbor appeared, striking the bear’s head with a shovel. The bear dropped her and she was airlifted to the hospital to treat her life-threatenin­g injuries. Despite the terrifying ordeal Greene suffered, and the scars and occasional pains she still bears, she returned to Churchill. The reason, she says, is a quality particular to the north. “The cold burns your face, the sky is beautiful, the animals could be around every corner. It’s so real, it’s so raw,” she says. She feels a different connection to polar bears now—“a different understand­ing.” Her medical bills added up to thousands of dollars, but the local community paid them all.

ABOUT 10,000 PEOPLE arrive in Churchill every fall to see polar bears. Visitors gather at the Lodge, a research and tourism outpost built from conjoined buggies. It’s also home to PBI’s newest technology, the SpotterRF—a compact surveillan­ce device designed to con

tend with threats like drone attacks. Here, it’s used to spot polar bears.

In the most basic sense, the SpotterRF is a motion detector—much like those used to turn porch lights on. As bears move on the tundra, they trigger the sensors. Their locations pulsate on a digital map, which can be analyzed by York and other scientists. The software performs well at night and in snowstorms, and may one day serve as an early warning system for Churchill.

To keep us safe, Buggy One has backed into a fenced platform at the Lodge, like a spaceship docking into port. Inside the Lodge, the SpotterRF radar beeps to signal the approach of a trio of bears. One of them, precocious and curious, toddles near enough that we could poke a finger through the bars and touch its nose. York has told us about “bear jail,” an enclosure that captures bears in town so they can be relocated. But here, he says with an approving smile, “we’re the ones in the cage.”

The next afternoon, back out on the tundra, we watch skinny bears pace the shore. Some hunker down in kelp beds, chewing on the seaweed. A big male stomps the snow with both front paws. Another lies encircled in a snowdrift.

When the tide comes in, sunlight escapes the patchy bank of clouds and brightens the mosaic of ice floes on the bay. From the willows, a mother approaches with a cub, their pace slowing as they take in two large bears skulking where the ice meets the water. The mother looks past them, and from the deck of the vehicle we follow her gaze, out to the bay’s churn. York hopes the ice will be solid soon. “If they go too early, and the ice breaks up, they’d have a long swim back to shore.”

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NEIL EVER OSBORNE
photograph­s by NEIL EVER OSBORNE
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Left, Geoff York stands on the platform of Buggy One, near Churchill, Manitoba. A camera is mounted on the
front of the vehicle, streaming footage to the public through the educationa­l website Explore.org. Above, an inquisitiv­e bear displays a behavior that the researcher­s
jokingly call “buggy love.”
SO CLOSE AND YET SO FAR Left, Geoff York stands on the platform of Buggy One, near Churchill, Manitoba. A camera is mounted on the front of the vehicle, streaming footage to the public through the educationa­l website Explore.org. Above, an inquisitiv­e bear displays a behavior that the researcher­s jokingly call “buggy love.”
 ??  ?? Polar bears are ferocious hunters, but they spend much of their time at rest and play. They can sleep as long as eight hours at a time,
but unlike humans, they sleep more during the day than at night. Frequent wrestling matches help them develop hunting and fighting skills. Compared with omnivorous
brown bears, from which they evolved more than 100,000 years ago, carnivorou­s polar bears have
more jagged cheek teeth and larger, sharper canines. Their feet have papillae: small bumps that
give them traction on ice.
LIFE IS A BEAR
Polar bears are ferocious hunters, but they spend much of their time at rest and play. They can sleep as long as eight hours at a time, but unlike humans, they sleep more during the day than at night. Frequent wrestling matches help them develop hunting and fighting skills. Compared with omnivorous brown bears, from which they evolved more than 100,000 years ago, carnivorou­s polar bears have more jagged cheek teeth and larger, sharper canines. Their feet have papillae: small bumps that give them traction on ice. LIFE IS A BEAR
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 ??  ?? The camera attracts the gaze of a mother and cubs. Adult female polar bears commonly give birth to twins. They nurse for as long as two and a half years—at which point, either the mother herself or an adult male chases her offspring away.
A healthy female delivers about five litters in her lifetime.
FAMILY MATTERS
The camera attracts the gaze of a mother and cubs. Adult female polar bears commonly give birth to twins. They nurse for as long as two and a half years—at which point, either the mother herself or an adult male chases her offspring away. A healthy female delivers about five litters in her lifetime. FAMILY MATTERS
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St. Paul’s Anglican Church in tiny Churchill, which is 250 miles from the nearest town. Ecotourism is a growing business, with thousands of visitors annu
ally seeking out birds, whales—and bears.
NORTHERN LIGHT St. Paul’s Anglican Church in tiny Churchill, which is 250 miles from the nearest town. Ecotourism is a growing business, with thousands of visitors annu ally seeking out birds, whales—and bears.
 ??  ?? Dependent on ice-covered seas, the polar bear is the prime symbol of global warming’s impact on animals. Bears in the Western Hudson are especially vulnerable, because they must go without food for months after the spring melt. If sea ice continues to shrink, scientists say, fewer polar bear cubs will
be born, fewer will survive and the species will suffer.
A FUTURE IN QUESTION
Dependent on ice-covered seas, the polar bear is the prime symbol of global warming’s impact on animals. Bears in the Western Hudson are especially vulnerable, because they must go without food for months after the spring melt. If sea ice continues to shrink, scientists say, fewer polar bear cubs will be born, fewer will survive and the species will suffer. A FUTURE IN QUESTION
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