Number of Polar Bears in Severe Decline

By Anna Boyd
17:40, September 8th 2007
109 votes
Vote this story
Number of Polar Bears in Severe Decline

Polar bears could soon be declared a “threatened species,” as government officials warn that by 2050, two thirds of the world’s existing population could die out.

The U.S. Geological Survey released a report Friday that brings no good news for our children’s children and grandchildren: the world’s population of polar bears risks severe decimation within the following decades due to global warming.

As the bears’ indispensable ice sheets continue to melt, the carnivorous mammals will start to disappear. Polar bears depend on ice shelves, as they spend much of their lives here. They need sea ice as a platform for breeding and for hunting seals, their primary food.

Forced to swim out, they stand little chances of covering such long distances.

The study estimates that, by 2050, about 42 percent of “optimal polar bear habitat” could be lost in summertime. While the bears will not become extinct, they could disappear completely from Alaska, the study says.

“As the sea ice goes, so goes the polar bear,” said Steven Amstrup, lead biologist for the survey team.

The authors say the bears would be largely relegated to the Arctic archipelago of Canada, as well as to parts off the northern Greenland coast, where the sea ice usually persists even during the summertime.

It is up to the Fish and Wildlife Service to decide whether polar bears should be listed as a “threatened species,” protected under the Endangered Species Act. According to officials, this decision will be made by January 2008.

Various studies conducted by scientists have found that in some places, bears have adapted themselves to new foods such as snow geese and garbage, while in other parts there have been cases of cannibalism.

“It’s that declining sea ice that appears to be driving the results in our models,” said Amstrup. “As the sea ice goes, so goes the polar bear.”

Environmental groups that have been lobbying for polar bears to be declared a threatened species hope that this move will lead to governmental measures to decrease greenhouse gases.

Scientists however, have a somewhat bleaker perspective on the situation.

“Despite any mitigation of greenhouse gases, we are going to see the same amount of energy in the system the next 20, 30 or 40 years,” said Mark Myers, U.S. Geological Survey director.



© 2007 - 2009 - eFluxMedia
dotclear

Other News in

Obese Women at High Risk of Ovarian Cancer, Study Says

Obese Women at High Risk of Ovarian Cancer, Study Says

It is a known fact that obesity has something to do cancer. New research appearing in the journal Cancer comes to underline the idea saying that obesity can increase women’s risk of...

Early Trauma May Lead to CFS in Adulthood

Early Trauma May Lead to CFS in Adulthood

Children facing trauma may develop chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) in their adulthood, according to a study by researchers at Emory University School of Medicine and the Centers for Disease Control...

Milky Way on Collision Course With Andromeda Galaxy

Milky Way on Collision Course With Andromeda Galaxy

 Since Aristotle’s first theory on the Milky Way to present times, there’s still so much astronomers need to learn about the galaxy our Solar System lies in. Over the course of time,...

Gene Linked to Breast Cancer Spread Identified

Gene Linked to Breast Cancer Spread Identified

Researchers at Princeton University and The Cancer Institute of New Jersey have identified a gene associated with the poor prognosis of breast cancer, thus answering one of the biggest mysteries in...

National Health Spending Continues To Rise

National Health Spending Continues To Rise

According to a study published in the today’s issue of the journal Health Affairs, national health spending grew in 2007 at the lowest rate in nine years, mainly because prescription drug...

dotclear
Latest videos in Science
Death among the ruins
EU moves to fade-out old...
Body-swap Illusion Tricks...
Space beer lands in Japan
Up in the Canadian Sky, a...

dotclear
Science You are here: Science
» Science   » Health   
E-mail To A Friend Print RSS Text size: Decrease font size Increase font size
dotclear
dotclear
dotclear
Most Popular in Science
Mars Rovers – Five Years Instead Of Three Months!Mars Rovers – Five Years Instead Of Three Months!

» read full story
dotclear

Interested In This Topic?

News Alert will keep you informed. Find out more.
dotclear
Photos Gallery
dotclear
Today's Latest News
Grim mood at US tech-fests

» read full story
dotclear