Center for Biological Diversity


For Immediate Release, November 17, 2014

Contact: Sarah Uhlemann, (206) 327-2344, suhlemann@biologicaldiversity.org

New Study: Alaskan Polar Bear Population Has Dropped by 40 Percent

Global Warming Threatens Polar Bears; Two-thirds Could be Gone by 2050

ANCHORAGE, Alaska— Global warming has driven a 40-percent decline in the number of polar bears in eastern Alaska and western Canada, a new study finds. The Southern Beaufort Sea polar bear population has dropped to just 900 bears, a severe decline since the last estimate in 2006 that documented more than 1,500 bears. The Southern Beaufort Sea polar bears live in eastern Alaska and western Canada and are one of only two polar bear populations in the United States.

“Global warming has put Alaska’s polar bears in a deadly downward spiral,” said Sarah Uhlemann, the Center for Biological Diversity’s international program director. “It’s happening now, it’s killing polar bears now, and if we don’t act now, we will lose polar bears in Alaska.”

The study was published today in the journal Ecological Applications.

Polar bears suffered particularly low survival between 2004 and 2006, when “unfavorable ice conditions” limited the polar bears’ access to ice seals, their favored prey. Polar bear cubs were hit especially hard; only two of the 80 cubs observed in Alaska between 2003 and 2007 are known to have survived.

The Southern Beaufort Sea population appears to have stabilized between 2008 and 2010, possibly due to unusual oceanographic conditions, less competition, or because some polar bears stayed on land during the summer, feeding on subsistence-hunted bowhead whale carcasses. But the study’s authors cautioned that “given projections for continued climate warming” these changes are “unlikely to counterbalance the extensive habitat degradation projected to occur over the long term.”

In 2008 the United States protected polar bears as “threatened” under the Endangered Species Act, predicting that more than two-thirds of the world’s polar bears would be extinct by 2050. However, mounting evidence shows polar bears are already suffering severe declines from climate change and deserve stronger “endangered” species protections.

“We’re very worried that eastern Alaska’s polar bears may be among the first to go,” said Uhlemann. “The United States and the world have to get serious about reducing greenhouse gases if we want polar bears to survive.”

Polar bears are highly dependent on Arctic sea ice for their survival, but sea ice is declining because of climate change. The Arctic is warming about twice as fast as other parts of the world. In September 2012 Arctic summer sea ice reached a new record low minimum extent, losing an area about the size of Texas since the previous record low in 2007.

Despite the polar bears’ “threatened” designation and its increasing peril from global warming, polar bear hunting remains legal. While the United States only permits native subsistence hunting, Canada continues to allow both sport-hunting and hunting for the rug trade. In fact Canadian polar bear hunting is on the rise, as fur prices have skyrocketed, tripling since 2007.

The Center for Biological Diversity is working to strengthen polar bear protections in the United States and worldwide. Nations will be considering a total ban on commercial trade in polar bears in 2016.

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 800,000 members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.


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