Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Scientists create polar bear survival timeline

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Jul, 2020 08:01 PM
  • Scientists create polar bear survival timeline

The climate-change clock is ticking on the world's polar bears and a group of Canadian and U.S. scientists say they've determined when that time will run out.

The researchers used data on shrinking sea ice and detailed information on what the bears need to stay healthy and rear cubs to project the survival odds for 13 of the world's 19 bear populations through to the end of the century.

"It's very grim work," said Peter Molnar, a University of Toronto biologist who is the lead author on the study, published Monday in Nature Climate Change. "The sad part is that we have known for a very long time what is going to happen."

What hasn't been studied — until now — is when dramatic declines are likely to begin.

To determine those timelines, the researchers weighed what the bears need to live, reproduce and rear cubs against what their environment offers them.

"How long can a bear last on its energy stores?" Molnar asked. "What are some thresholds for a population beyond which reproduction and survival would decline?

"By using these new tools we can put numbers on when to expect these effects."

Polar bears depend on rich, fatty seals to get them through long periods of fasting, and they can only hunt that prey from sea ice — a platform rapidly shrinking due to climate change.

Foods on land, such as bird eggs, just don't have enough calories to keep the bears going over the long term.

"There's simply not enough energy on land in the places where bears live," Molnar said.

The researchers had enough information on projected ice conditions to forecast for eight of the 14 Canadian bear populations. They found cubs will be the first to go.

Even if the world were to manage to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, bears in northern Ontario on the south coast of Hudson Bay will be likely to have trouble raising new bears by the end of this decade.

Their cousins along the west coast of Hudson Bay would likely follow a year later and those in the southern Beaufort Sea a few years after that. By the early 2040s, bears in Davis Strait would join them.

Those four groups represent nearly a third of Canada's total bear population. Cub-rearing problems for almost all the rest of them are considered likely to occur within similar timelines.

And that's the optimistic take.

Under a business-as-usual scenario, reproductive failure would become inevitable for Hudson Bay and Davis Strait bears beginning in the 2060s. By the 2080s, it's likely that adult bears in those regions would be starving to death.

"We all have physiological limits," said Molnar.

A few populations — those in the northern Beaufort or Queen Elizabeth Islands — will probably be fine.

"With business-as-usual greenhouse gas emissions, polar bears are going to be gone from probably everywhere except the very High Arctic," Molnar said.

He acknowledged the conclusions are based on assumptions — though well-researched — and mathematical models. But the group used the same approach to look backward and compared the results to data from the field.

In every case, the model results agreed. Field studies in western Hudson Bay found bears healthy and fat through the 1980s, then with declining reproductive success and body condition into the late 1990s.

"That is exactly what our model 'predicts,' " said Molnar. "The model captures the dynamics of the past."

The information in the paper should be useful to polar bear managers in the years ahead. But Molnar hopes it will have a wider impact than that.

"My hope is that showing how grim and dire the situation really is will emphasize one more time how urgent the problem of dealing with climate change is.

"We know what needs to be done."

MORE National ARTICLES

New moms told go work to get EI parental benefits after jobs lost to COVID-19

New moms told go work to get EI parental benefits after jobs lost to COVID-19
Alexis Adams is joyful about the arrival of her third daughter but she is also concerned about how to pay for another maternity leave that is, like her daughter, barely a week old.

New moms told go work to get EI parental benefits after jobs lost to COVID-19

U.S. border rules loosening for families: PM

U.S. border rules loosening for families: PM
Canada's ban on non-essential crossings of the U.S.-Canada border is being loosened slightly to allow some families to reunite, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Monday morning.

U.S. border rules loosening for families: PM

Victoria demonstrators add to weekend rallies in B.C. against racism

Victoria demonstrators add to weekend rallies in B.C. against racism
Several thousand people gathered in downtown Victoria Sunday to show their support for the Black Lives Matter movement in the wake of George Floyd's death last month in Minneapolis.

Victoria demonstrators add to weekend rallies in B.C. against racism

Trudeau promises to push police body-cameras with premiers to aid 'transparency'

Trudeau promises to push police body-cameras with premiers to aid 'transparency'
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he's planning to push provincial premiers to equip police with body-worn cameras as a rapid, substantive solution to allegations of racism and brutality.

Trudeau promises to push police body-cameras with premiers to aid 'transparency'

Anti-racism rally in COVID-19 era a balance of competing interests: Trudeau

Anti-racism rally in COVID-19 era a balance of competing interests: Trudeau
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday his decision to attend an anti-black racism rally even amid ongoing restrictions on gatherings related to COVID-19 was a matter of balancing important competing interests.

Anti-racism rally in COVID-19 era a balance of competing interests: Trudeau

Vancouver police are on the lookout for a wanted male and female

Vancouver police are on the lookout for a wanted male and female
Vancouver Police are asking for the public’s help in locating two suspects recently charged and now wanted in relation to a violent sexual assault in Oppenheimer Park in April.

Vancouver police are on the lookout for a wanted male and female