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Wednesday, 15 May, 2002, 17:26 GMT 18:26 UK
Polar bears on the web
![]() Marooned: Shrinking ice makes hunting harder
The Norwegian Polar Institute (NPI) and WWF, the global environment network, have launched a website to track the bears' movements across the Arctic. They hope to find out what effect climate change is having on the bears. WWF thinks this may be one of the biggest challenges to the animals' wellbeing. In a report, Vanishing Kingdom: The Melting Realm Of The Polar Bear, WWF says the Arctic is undergoing rapid warming.
"It can no longer be dismissed as a theoretical, academic concept nor as a politically motivated doomsday prophecy. "The Arctic is one of the regions on Earth where climate change will be seen early, and where the impacts are dramatic." Forced to starve It says traditional knowledge echoes the scientific evidence:
Plentiful food is critical at this time, but if it is not available the bears fast for long stretches, which can make severe demands on them, and especially on pregnant females. Pollution hazard WWF says the melting of the sea-ice, the platform the bears use to hunt the seals which are their primary prey, means they have less fat to help them to survive the long summer season.
"This lower body weight reduces female bears' ability to lactate, leading to greater mortality among cubs." The report says climate change is not the bears' only problem, with research in some areas showing a link between high contaminant levels and reduced immune system function. There are thought to be about 22,000 polar bears in the wild, 60% of them in Canada. Constant tracking WWF says scientists now predict a 60% loss of summer sea-ice by about 2050, and its complete disappearance by 2080 during the summer months. Some scientists do not accept the IPCC forecasts of Arctic warming, or even that climate change shows a discernible human influence at all. They point to some of the patchiness of the ice thickness data, which is based on intermittent submarine surveys. The two female bears being tracked by WWF and NPI are from Svalbard. Earlier this year, they were fitted with radio collars which beam their positions via satellite to the new website. One is called Louise, after Louise Arner Boyd, the first woman to fly over the geographic North Pole, at the age of 67. The other bear is Gro, named in honour of the former Norwegian Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland, now director of the World Health Organisation.
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