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Scientists find new polar bear population in region free of sea ice

Agence France-Presse
Washington
Sun, June 19, 2022

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Scientists find new polar bear population in region free of sea ice Isolated survival: A polar bear stands on a snow-covered iceberg surrounded by fast ice, or sea ice connected to the shore, in March 2016 in southeast Greenland. (AFP/Kristin Laidre)

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i>A population of polar bears in southeast Greenland has been found living with freshwater ice from the region’s glacier, suggesting that the vulnerable species may have a chance to survive climate change.

Polar bears face an existential threat from the rapid decline of Arctic sea ice, which they rely on as platforms to hunt seals.

But in a new study, scientists have identified an isolated subpopulation of polar bears in southeast Greenland that instead make use of freshwater ice pouring into the ocean from the region's glaciers, suggesting this particular habitat is less susceptible than others to climate change.

Their findings, described in the journal Science on Thursday, open up the tantalizing possibility that at least some pockets of the species might be able to survive further into this century, when Arctic sea ice is expected to disappear completely during the summer months.

"One of the big questions is where in the Arctic will polar bears be able to hang on, what we call 'persist,'" first author Kristin Laidre, a polar scientist at the University of Washington and the Greenland Institute of Natural Resources, told AFP.

"I think that bears in a place like this can teach us a lot about where those places might be."

Laidre and her colleagues first spent two years interviewing Inuit subsistence hunters who provided input and ecological knowledge, including harvest samples for analysis. They then began their own field work, which lasted from 2015 to 2021, in a harsh region that was long understudied because of its unpredictable weather, heavy snowfall and jagged mountains.

Endangered species: A triangular warning sign depicting a polar bear stands at the side of a road outside Svalbard Airport in Longyearbyen on the Svalbard archipelago in northern Norway, as seen on May 2, 2022.
Endangered species: A triangular warning sign depicting a polar bear stands at the side of a road outside Svalbard Airport in Longyearbyen on the Svalbard archipelago in northern Norway, as seen on May 2, 2022. (AFP/Jonathan Nackstrand)

Hemmed in

Each year, the team spent one month in springtime staying in the nearest settlement Kuummiit, a two-hour helicopter ride from where the bears live. Fuel depots had to be staged in advance along the route down the coastline, creating a hopskotch-like commute to work.

The team tagged the bears with satellite tracking devices and collected genetic samples by either capturing bears or firing biopsy darts into their rumps.

Thought to number a few hundred individuals, "they are the most genetically isolated population of polar bears anywhere on the planet”, coauthor Beth Shapiro, a geneticist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, said in a statement.

"We know that this population has been living separately from other polar bear populations for at least several hundred years."

Unlike their cousins, the southeast Greenland polar bears were found to be homebodies, seldom straying far to hunt.

Their isolation arises from the geography: They live in a complex landscape of fjords on the very edge of their range on the southern tip of Greenland, well below the Arctic Circle, with nowhere to go. To the west, there are an enormous set of mountains and the Greenland Ice Sheet, and to the east, the open water of the Denmark Strait all the way to Iceland.

They also have to contend with a rapid current that flows southward along the coast.

"We see that when they get caught in this current, they jump off the ice and they walk back home to their fjords," said Laidre. The team found that some of the tracked bears accidentally caught in this situation had to trek more than 100 miles (160 kilometers) back home.

Vulnerable, but tough: A polar bear is seen on Aug. 22, 2021 in Essen Bay, off the coast of Prince George Land, an island in the Russian archipelago of Franz Josef Land.
Vulnerable, but tough: A polar bear is seen on Aug. 22, 2021 in Essen Bay, off the coast of Prince George Land, an island in the Russian archipelago of Franz Josef Land. (AFP/Ekaterina Anisimova)

Climate refugees?

While sea ice provides hunting platforms for most of the Arctic's roughly 26,000 polar bears, the southeast Greenland bears have access to sea ice for only four months between February and late May. For the remaining eight months, they rely on chunks of freshwater ice breaking off the Greenland Ice Sheet in the form of marine-terminating glaciers.

"These types of glaciers do exist in other places in the Arctic, but the combination of the fjord shapes, the high production of glacier ice and the very big reservoir of ice that is available from the Greenland Ice Sheet is what currently provides a steady supply of glacier ice," another coauthor, Twila Moon of the National Snow and Ice Data Center, said in a statement.

There remains much to study about the southeast Greenland polar bears. Measurements show the adult females are a little smaller than average and they appear to have fewer cubs, but it's hard to infer much about what that means in the absence of long-term data.

Laidre is keen to not oversell the study as one of hope. Polar bears, which, in addition to being iconic in their own right, are also a vital resource for indigenous people, aren't going to be saved without urgent climate action.

But this population might have a better shot and there are similar areas with marine-terminating glaciers on other parts of the Greenland coast, as well as on the island of Svalbard that might become small-scale climate refugia.

"We as a community need to look at places like this and ask ourselves, is this a place where we might be able to have some small numbers of polar bears persisting in an ice-free Arctic?" said Laidre.

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