Defenders' Experts
Survival of the Fattest? Not for These Polar Bears
Global warming has already had a significant effect on the southern-most polar bear populations at western Hudson Bay, Canada. Researchers there have noted that polar bears are 10 percent thinner and have 10 percent fewer cubs than 20 years ago (Stirling et al. 1999). These Canadian researchers have been gathering data on the polar bears of western Hudson Bay for more than 30 years.

Polar bears hunt their prey, predominantly ringed
seals, from the ice. Because the ice in this region melts completely each
summer, the bears have adapted a strategy of coming ashore near Churchill,
Manitoba, at the end of July and fasting until the ice again freezes in
November. To overcome these months of fasting, the bears must have accumulated
an adequate reserve of fat before the ice breaks up. The spring thaw is now occurring nine days earlier than it has in
the past. The tragic result is that the bears arrive onshore
about 40 pounds lighter for each week break-up occurs earlier. This translates
into polar bears that have not stored up enough fat reserves to deal with the
months of fasting and they starve to death, lose their cubs to malnutrition or
even resort to cannibalism.
Ian Stirling, a research scientist for the Canadian
Wildlife Service, and his colleagues have found not only an increase in cub
mortality but also a decrease of 15 percent in birth rates. For these slow
reproducing, long-lived animals this can quickly spell trouble.

The early break-up of the ice could be due to the
fact that in some of the world's prime polar bear habitat, including Alaska and
western Canada, average temperatures have increased 4 to 7 degrees Fahrenheit in
the past 50 years, which is twice the global average. Scientists estimate that this pattern of increasing
temperatures will result in the sea ice breaking up one week earlier for every
degree the temperature rises.
The decline of the population of polar bears at the southern-most limit of their range serves as an indicator of things to come for other polar bears and for arctic wildlife as a whole. As the ice continues to shrink throughout the Arctic regions, we may soon begin to see similar results around the world.
- Navigating the Arctic Meltdown: Polar Bears, the first in our 10 part series about wildlife in the arctic facing the impacts of climate change.
- Learn more about Defenders' work on polar bears.
- Watch Defenders of Wildlife's public service announcements featuring polar bears.
- "Adopt" a polar bear.
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