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HomeNewsOpinionThe climate crisis is starving polar bears. Humans should take note

The climate crisis is starving polar bears. Humans should take note

Despite the belief that animals have an unimpeachable survival instinct, polar bears are increasingly making wrong energy expending decisions in their desperate search for food. In trying to adapt to the climate crisis, projects can actually make us more vulnerable or simply waste resources. For example, we keep building higher flood barriers, only to see the water redirected to an area without protections or have them breached as climate change intensifies storms

February 15, 2024 / 17:43 IST
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In trying to adapt to the climate crisis, projects can actually make us more vulnerable or simply waste resources.

A lone polar bear on an iceberg. This year’s Wildlife Photographer of the Year People’s Choice Award winner is, in many ways, a photo we’ve seen before. It’s a peaceful scene, with the slumbering bear reminiscent of a contented house cat. Yet it’s a reminder that all life depends on ecosystems that are growing increasingly fragile as the planet heats with our greenhouse-gas emissions.

new study underscores the same message of fragility through images of polar bears in a landscape we rarely envisage — terrain completely devoid of snow or ice. Researchers tracked 20 bears in Manitoba, Canada, equipping them with video collars to monitor activity levels and food intake. There’s a lesson for us all in the surprising and sobering results.

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Polar bears in this region have long become land-based during ice-free periods. But the time spent without sea ice – periods when they can’t hunt their usual prey – is getting longer. In the 1980s, they’d be on land for about 110 days. That’s since increased by three weeks, and is only expected to get longer thanks to the climate crisis (the Arctic is warming roughly four times faster than the planet as a whole).

While on shore, bears were thought to fast, conserving precious energy until the sea ice returned. However, the study showed differences in survival strategies between individuals. Some didn’t seek sustenance. The laziest bear rested for 98 percent of the time – making lead author Anthony Pagano’s job of watching 115 hours of video footage a slog at points. But others were surprisingly active, moving across the landscape and consuming a range of terrestrial foods including bird carcasses, duck eggs, berries and seaweed.