July 15, 2005
Arctic warming threatens
polar bears, scientists warn
Nunavut urged to proceed
with caution on changing quotas
JANE
GEORGE
A
group of scientists says the worlds polar bear population could decline
by 30 per cent over the next 35 to 50 years, because of global warming. (FILE
PHOTO)
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Polar bear populations
are likely to be severely reduced by Arctic warming, warns an international
group of scientists studying the animals.
They say the total population
of polar bears may decline by more than 30 per cent within the next 35 to 50
years.
For this reason, many members
of the Polar Bear Specialist Group are questioning whether now is the best time
for Nunavut to change its polar bear management practices.
The specialist group is
made of scientists from five circumpolar countries who meet every three to five
years to review and exchange information on polar bear management throughout
the Arctic.
Its members are concerned
by a decision earlier this year by Nunavut to increase polar bear harvest quotas
by more than 100 animals and adopt a new management plan based on a combination
of scientific and traditional knowledge.
We have to go slowly
because we are moving to a time that we have not seen before, with the effects
of climate change, said Andrew Derocher of the University of Calgary,
president of the specialist group.
Those at the groupss
recent meeting in Seattle want to see a GN document outlining the traditional
knowledge used to set the new quotas.
Where are the reports?
asked a delegate from Norway.
But the GN, represented
by Mitch Taylor, the Department of Environments polar bear biologist,
did not present any report on traditional knowledge about polar bears.
They have not seen
the local and traditional knowledge documentation that would allow them to view
it and integrate it with the more scientific approach, said Derocher.
This report would
say: Where exactly are hunters seeing more bears? In which areas are they
seeing more? Can we see a map? How many hunters said it was increasing? How
many said it was decreasing in their area?
At the specialists
meeting there were delegates from each of the five nations, Canada, Denmark-Greenland,
Norway, Russia and the United States, which signed the 1973 Agreement on the
Conservation of Polar Bears.
Also attending as invited
specialists were representatives from the Greenland Home Rule Government, Alaska
Nanuuq Commission, Nunavut Tunngavik Inc., the Inuvialuit Game Council and Inuvialuit
Wildlife Management Advisory Council, along with other groups.
The groups recommendations
are meant to encourage best practices in polar bear management,
said Derocher, because the 1973 agreement is only a goodwill document
that has no force in law.
Rather than to try
and rap somebodys knuckles, the resolutions are more of an encouragement
to respond, Derocher said.
The specialist group approved
several resolutions when it met in June:
- Polar bear harvests
should be increased on the basis of scientific and traditional knowledge only
if supported by scientifically-collected information;
- Hunting of polar bears
in Western Hudson Bay needs to be reduced because a survey shows numbers have
fallen from 1,100 in 1995 to 950 in 2004;
- Denmark should coordinate
a circumpolar study of the health effects from pollution on the vital organs
of polar bears.
The group also said the
U.S. and Russia need to cooperate better on management of polar bears in Alaska
and Chukotka, where the hunt is growing due to poor economic conditions and
a thriving black market for animal parts.
The grops wants more controls
on Arctic shipping, as well as the establishment of a nature refuge on Wrangell
Island, between Alaska and Siberia, where 600 female polar bears den every year.
One oil spill when
the bears are coming ashore, and that would be catastrophic for the population,
Derocher said.
Bilge dumping and ice breaking
by vessels traveling through the Arctic waters also dont bode well for
polar bears, particularly when their survival is also impacted by climate change,
Derocher said.
The worlds polar
bears are distributed in 19 sub-populations over the Arctic. The total number
of polar bears around the world is thought to be less than 25,000.
The specialist group concluded
that the International Union of Conservations red list classification
of polar bear should be upgraded from least concern to vulnerable.
It didnt matter
if you were talking to a scientist from Russia or Greenland, it was very clear
that in every jurisdiction that they are seeing changes in the distribution
of the bears that the condition in the sea has changed, and they are
seeing changes in the distribution of bears, Derocher said.
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