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Research  Polar bears unlikely to adapt to longer summers

#1
C C Offline
RELATED TOPIC (scivillage): Polar Bears Thriving?
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Polar bears unlikely to adapt to longer summers
https://news.wsu.edu/press-release/2024/...r-summers/

PRESS RELEASE: More time stranded on land means greater risk of starvation for polar bears, a new study indicates.

During three summer weeks, 20 polar bears closely observed by scientists tried different strategies to maintain energy reserves, including resting, scavenging and foraging. Yet nearly all of them lost weight rapidly: on average around 1 kilogram, or 2.2 pounds, per day.

Some have speculated that polar bears might adapt to the longer ice-free seasons due to climate warming by acting like their grizzly bear relatives and either rest or eat terrestrial food. The polar bears in this study tried versions of both strategies—with little success.

“Neither strategy will allow polar bears to exist on land beyond a certain amount of time. Even those bears that were foraging lost body weight at the same rate as those that laid down,” said Charles Robbins, director of the Washington State University Bear Center and co-author of the study in the journal Nature Communications. “Polar bears are not grizzly bears wearing white coats. They’re very, very different.”

Usually larger than grizzly bears, adult male polar bears can reach 10 feet in length and weigh 1,500 pounds compared to grizzly bears’ 8 feet and 800 pounds. To maintain that great mass, polar bears rely on the energy-rich fat of seals, which they best catch on the ice.

Little has been known about polar bear energy expenditure and behavior when confined to land, so researchers used collars with video cameras and GPS to track polar bears summering in the western Hudson Bay region of Manitoba, Canada. They wanted to see what the specialized ice-hunters ate and did during the extended time on land when their preferred seal prey was out of reach.

The researchers also weighed the bears before and after the observation period and measured their energy expenditures. “We found a real diversity of bear behaviors, and as a result, we saw a diverse range of energy expenditures,” said lead author Anthony Pagano, research wildlife biologist with the U.S. Geological Survey Polar Bear Research Program and former WSU post-doctoral researcher.

Many of the adult male polar bears simply laid down to conserve energy, burning calories at rates similar to hibernation. Others, actively searched for food, consuming bird and caribou carcasses as well as berries, kelp and grasses.

In all, the researchers found a five-fold range in energy expenditure from an adult male that rested 98% of the time to the most active who clocked 330 kilometers (205 miles). Some adult females spent as much as 40% of their time foraging. Yet all that activity didn’t pay off. 

“The terrestrial foods did give them some energetic benefit, but ultimately, the bears had to spend more energy to access those resources,” said Pagano.

Three polar bears went for long swims – one swimming 175 kilometers (about 110 miles) across the bay. Two found carcasses in the water, a beluga and a seal, but neither bear could feed on their finds while swimming nor bring them back to land. Only one bear out of the 20 gained weight after stumbling across a dead marine mammal on land.

The study focused on the southern-most extent of polar bear range in the western Hudson Bay, where climate warming is likely impacting the bears at a faster rate than other Arctic regions. The polar bear population in the area has already declined by an estimated 30% since 1987. This study indicates that polar bears across the Arctic are at risk of starvation as the ice-free period continues to grow.

“As polar bears are forced on land earlier, it cuts into the period that they normally acquire the majority of the energy they need to survive,” said Pagano. “With increased land use, the expectation is that we'll likely see increases in starvation, particularly with adolescents and females with cubs.”

https://youtu.be/93t40sAPM0Q

https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/93t40sAPM0Q
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#2
confused2 Offline
Not long ago Zithanthopos posted a thread "Polar bears thriving?"
In the linked article the writer seems to be some sort of polar bear expert and claims polar bears are thriving..
https://www.scivillage.com/thread-15210-...l#pid61693
Not only polar bear expert but something of a climate change .. ? denier?
https://polarbearscience.com/2024/02/08/...narrative/

Original point removed after reading the articles again. One side claims polar bears are down by 30% since 1987 in the Hudson Bay area - this being an advance indicator of future problems .. the other claiming ice loss is already well advanced and polar bears are ok. ??
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#3
C C Offline
Is this polar bear slash grizzly bear hybrid the bear of the future?
https://www.sciencenorway.no/bears-clima...re/2330518

EXCERPTS: As the sea ice melts, polar bears are forced to migrate inland, encountering new sources of food and other bear species in the process.

Grolar and pizzly are blends of two English words: Grizzly bear (brown bear) and polar bear. You can tell who the father and mother are from the word. The father-bear comes first and the mother-bear last.

Adapting to this new environment is challenging for polar bears, accustomed to a diet rich in fat from seals, now facing a drastically different diet that includes blueberries.

But what about the beige-coloured hybrid bears that result from these unions? Born from an ice-dwelling mother and a land-roaming father, could they potentially evolve into a superior type of bear?

[...] As the sea ice recedes, polar bears are compelled to venture inland.

“It's a complex transition,” says Aars. “Could the offspring of grolar and pizzly bears offer a solution?”

“While there has been considerable speculation, the likelihood is slim,” Aars says.

These hybrids inherit characteristics that are less advantageous for survival on land and in water.

“Unfortunately, they get the worst of both worlds,” he says.

It is much easier for a seal to see a beige bear sneaking up on it. “And then there will be no food,” he says.

There have been several hybrid bears through the ages, but they have usually not survived. “It probably won’t be the case now either,” the researcher says... ([url=]MORE - missing details[/url])

This New Hybrid Bear is About to Take Over: https://youtu.be/HPa2DOkJdn4

https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/HPa2DOkJdn4
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#4
Zinjanthropos Offline
Out of curiosity. .... where do the seals the bear prey upon go, if there's less ice now than ever? Also, orca has been known to hunt ice seals, so is it affecting the whales in same manner as the Bears?
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#5
C C Offline
(Mar 5, 2024 03:04 PM)Zinjanthropos Wrote: Out of curiosity. .... where do the seals the bear prey upon go, if there's less ice now than ever? Also, orca has been known to hunt ice seals, so is it affecting the whales in same manner as the Bears?

For now, it sounds like ringed seals are hanging around in their same habitat areas, as long as there are still some smaller ice platforms to rest and raise young on.

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https://theplosblog.plos.org/2017/04/pol...te-change/

But after the change in sea ice conditions, which caused the land-fast ice to melt earlier in the year or to fail to form entirely, polar bears spent less time close to tidal glacier fronts. Ringed seals, meanwhile, spent the same amount of time near tidal glacier fronts before and after the sea ice change. Ringed seals can haul out and rest on very small pieces of glacier ice, but bears do not hunt them as readily on these “bergy bits.”

Deprived of their traditionally most important food source, polar bears moved greater distances daily and spent more time close to ground-nesting bird colonies.


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https://phys.org/news/2020-02-climate-th...e_vignette

The researchers saw, for instance, a decline in total mercury concentrations in ringed seals, but saw no change in polar bears' concentrations, suggesting the two species are beginning to eat different things. For the seals, this means that as the sea ice melts, they are adjusting their diet to include more of a phytoplankton-derived diet, which blooms in the open water.

"Ringed seals are eating for longer periods in the open water and you could argue this is better for them," Yurkowski says, quickly noting a caveat: ringed seals require ice to rear pups and less ice can result in fewer being born; and ice melting too quickly can impact survival rates of new pups not ready to be weaned. So, on one hand, ringed seals are being eaten less by polar bears, but on the other, the habitat their pups require is disappearing.

"The seals are responding to the changes in the environment but at this point it's hard to say if it's going to work out in their favour," Yurkowski says.

The findings also suggest that polar bears may be eating other seals, such as bearded and harbor seals. What this means for this dynamic is already the focus of another UM study underway.
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#6
Zinjanthropos Offline
Perhaps, as GW continues, the seal’s ice floes become fewer, smaller and thinner, thus forcing them to a life on the land. Easy pickings for bears?
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