November 14, 2003
Scientist warns of climatic threat to polar bears
Stirling wins 2003 Northern
Science Award
JANE GEORGE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Dr.
Ian Stirling, a polar bear scientist with the Canadian Wildlife Service, won
the Northern Science Award for 2003. (PHOTO COURTESY OF DR. IAN STIRLING)
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Noted polar bear scientist Dr. Ian Stirling has won the Northern Science Award
for 2003.
The award is presented every year to a person or a group of indigenous people
who, through their work, make a significant contribution to the advancement
of knowledge and understanding of the Canadian North.
Stirling, who studies polar bears in the Beaufort Sea and western Hudson Bay,
has been with the Canadian Wildlife Service for more than 30 years. His research
on polar bears has been particularly important in understanding the effects
of climate change in the Arctic.
"What I really want to do is not look just at the bears themselves, but
at the bears as part of the marine ecosystem and as indicators of things that
are changing - even if we don't know quite what's happening," Stirling
said in an interview from his office in Calgary.
Stirling believes if the climate warms sufficiently for Hudson Bay to be ice-free
most of the year, then it's likely polar bears will disappear from that part
of the world.
Stirling has studied polar bear dens that lie along the Hudson Bay coast, a
region that is getting warmer and drier and affected by forest fires. Lightning
often starts these fires, and the dens, which are carved into peat, burn easily
- another blow to the polar bears' Arctic habitat.
"Overharvesting is curable. You just don't harvest as many for a while
and let the population recover, but it's hard for a population to recover from
climatic warming. Climatic warming is the greatest overall threat to polar bears
at the moment," Stirling said.
He said contaminants that affect both reproduction and the immune system are
also damaging polar bear populations in areas such as the northern Svalbard
Islands, Greenland and Russia.
Stirling was drawn to the Western Hudson Bay polar bears because these animals
are unique to the Arctic. They fast for four to eight months, depending heavily
on hunting during the sea ice season.
He found that, as a result of the reduction in sea ice in Hudson Bay over the
past 20 years, the polar bears have less time to hunt and are returning to land
in poorer condition. Bears are leaner, smaller and less able to find food to
survive.
The weight for both male and female polar bears has declined, and female bears
are having fewer cubs.
Their diet has also changed from ring seals, which are ice-dependent, to other
kinds of seals - which may prove to be a life-saving technique for hungry bears.
In Hudson Bay, ice melts completely in the summer, so every bear in the population
has to come ashore and live on its stored fat reserves for four months, and
the pregnant females for eight months. Preying on harbour seals and bearded
seals helps them out in the short term.
"It may make things spin out a little bit more if there are more harbor
seals or bearded seals around to access," Stirling said.
Stirling has been receiving specimens collected by hunters from Arviat that
show the ring seals killed are older than was once the case. This could mean
fewer ring seal pups are being born.
"We don't really know what's that's about. Things in nature don't usually
change in a linear fashion, like push button A and you get reaction A. All sorts
of other things come into play," Stirling said.
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