As the Arctic Ice Shrinks, Polar Bears May Need to Work Harder for a Living

By Roberta Attanasio, Blog Editor

It’s celebration time for the iconic polar bear, the poster child of climate change. Or better, it’s a different type of celebration. Every year, February 27——highlights the challenges that this big, charismatic creature faces in a warming Arctic, and becomes a day of action to reduce carbon emissions. The nineteen subpopulations of polar bears spend their winter on sheets of frozen ocean water, which melt and retreat in warmer months, to then advance again in the fall. As ice keeps melting because of higher temperatures, their natural habitat shrinks, to travel, hunt, and breed. In other words, their lives are tied to the annual spread and shrinkage of Arctic sea ice.

Polar_bear_silently_stepping_from_an_ice_floe

Polar bear silently stepping from an ice floe by Andreas Weith [Wikimedia Commons – Creative Commons Attribution–Share Alike 4.0]

Last December, heartbreaking images of an apparently —visibly emaciated—captivated public attention, and raised awareness of climate change’s effects on polar bears’ foraging ability. Polar bears, the top predators in the Arctic marine ecosystem, eat mostly ringed seals—full of fat and high in calories. Seals poke breathing holes in thin ice, and then surface at different intervals of time to breathe. Bears stalk the seals, waiting at the holes to attack them once they surface.

Seals depend on ice, and when the ice retreats, polar bears follow the ice, traveling long distances to keep their food source handy. Despite the effort, the supply of their favorite and most nourishing food eventually dwindles and then disappears during the warmer season. Therefore, polar bears build most of their fat reserves during a mere few months, which allows them to survive during the lean period. The no-food season lasts typically 3 or 4 months. However, global warming is delaying formation of the ice pack, leading the bears to wait longer for their seals—seals are not available in ice-free conditions. Andrew Derocher, a polar bear scientist at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, told that while a few bears may be able to scrape out a living while eating a less than optimal number of seals, down at the genetic level the species is just too dependent on the high-fat marine mammal diet.

Polar bear with a cubs in the tundra. Canada. An excellent illustration.Interestingly, most information currently available on the behavior of polar bears on sea ice findings obtained more than 40 years ago by Ian Stirling, a Canadian scientist, combined with local traditional knowledge from Arctic indigenous peoples. Stirling collected his data by observing the bears at distance, using a spotting scope positioned on a cliff. However, results from a that relied on technological advancements provides unique insight on a variety of polar bears’ behaviors. It also highlights the challenges polar bears face because of increasingly longer ice-free seasons. The study was designed to measure the energy expenditure of the bears, and then link the measurements with the behavior of the bears on the sea ice.

Researchers monitored nine female free-ranging polar bears over 2 years off Alaska in the Beaufort Sea, where there are demonstrable declines in abundance, survival rates, and body condition of bears. They placed on the bears high-tech tracking collars, consisting of small video cameras mounted to GPS-equipped leather and plastic straps, and then measured patterns of daily activity, field metabolic rates, body condition—including weight and foraging success while the polar bears prowled the spring sea ice. They found that these animals are basically high energy, fat-burning machines, whose proper functioning requires consumption of high-fat prey. When activity levels are higher because the bears have to work harder and move around more to find scarce food, the high metabolic rates result in an energy deficit and the bears lose weight fast.

The Arctic sea ice is expected to undergo continuous decline and fragmentation in the next years. Therefore, we can expect polar bears to be exposed to increased energy demands due to the additional activity needed to find their seals, leading to deteriorating body condition and declined survival. No one knows for sure what caused the sadly crumbling appearance of the polar bear in the heartbreaking images that captivated public attention last December, but we can imagine they’re an apt representation of what climate change will likely bring to the Arctic in a not so distant future.

3 thoughts on “As the Arctic Ice Shrinks, Polar Bears May Need to Work Harder for a Living

  1. nickreality65

    See actual real data at DMI and NSIDC. The sea ice is not “shrinking” or doing anything new or unusual.

    Reply
  2. Ray Kinney

    But, aren’t glacial movements out to the sea in antarctica being undercut by warmer waters melting the ice at the resting points in contact with the bottom? As support for immense weights of ice is lost, huge chunks of ice enter the ocean as floating ice. This change from terrestrial ice to marine ice is going to cause changes, no?

    Reply
  3. Jen

    For those of you that have commented or are following this story, the New York Times had an interesting follow-up in yesterday’s paper:

    Reply

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