For Threatened Polar Bears, the Climate Change Diet Is a Losing Proposition
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For polar bears, the climate change diet is a losing proposition, a new study suggests.
With Arctic sea ice shrinking from climate change, many polar bears have to shift their diets to land during parts of the summer. A study looking at Hudson Bay polar bears tries to figure out if they can keep up their roly-poly figure, which is what’s needed and found that an overwhelming number of them are dropping the pounds no matter what they do to try to beef up their weight.
Some bears find a lot of food — berries, eggs, sea birds and even caribou antlers — but it takes so much effort, so many calories are burned trying to eat, that they end up losing weight and expending more energy than they take in, according to a study in Tuesday’s journal Nature Communications.
Other bears go into a stage of semi-hibernation, don’t do much, but they also shed the pounds, so either way doesn’t work, said study lead author Anthony Pagano, a U.S. Geological Survey wildlife biologist.
Researchers found that 19 of the 20 bears studied dropped an average of 47 pounds (21 kilograms) over three weeks of being studied in research that monitored their calorie intake, energy use and respiration in the wild. That’s losing about 7% of their body mass on average in just 21 days, the study concluded.
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Polar bears try to keep up their weight in the summer after a spring when they feast and fatten prodigiously. In the area of the Hudson Bay where researchers studied, lack of sea ice has meant polar bears are on land three weeks longer than in the 1980s, Pagano said.
Usually polar bears eat high-fat seals while based on sea ice, near where the seals are. It’s especially good hunting in the spring when seal pups are weaning and easy pickings for polar bears before they learn to swim away from the ice base, Pagano said.
“This paper clearly shows that polar bears cannot adapt to the pace of change in the Arctic and that the bears are already using everything they have to stay alive,” said University of Alberta biologist Andrew Derocher, who wasn’t part of the research, but called it profoundly elegant and insightful.
“This is concerning because of course it really does raise the question of when will the individual bears run out of energy,” Derocher said. While research shows that some of the bears will be OK, “other bears were basically right on the edge of where they would potentially suffer from starvation and subsequent death.”
Overall, it shows that it’s unlikely polar bears can adapt to living on land, Derocher said.
When polar bears have sea ice, they feast on seals. Not just the seals, but their fat. About 70% of the polar bear diet while on ice is fat, said study co-author Karyn Rode, a USGS wildlife biologist.
“They have the highest fat content diet of any species in the world,” Rode said.
University of Washington biologist Kristin Laidre, who wasn’t part of the study team, said, “polar bears need sea ice to feed — this is how they access their primary prey (ice seals). They evolved from grizzly bears to live on a marine diet of fat and they have a remarkable ability to consume and digest lipids.”
To figure out what happens on land, the joint U.S.-Canada team of biologists put video on the bears’ collars, fed bears a type of water that allowed their calorie intake and expenditures to be tracked and returned them to the wild to watch.
The bears’ hunt for food was impressive. All but one of them ate grass and kelp, 10 of them feasted on berries, eight of them chomped on bird carcasses, a third of them chewed on bones and four of them ate caribou antlers, with bird eggs, a rodent and a rabbit also consumed.
But the bears had to expend a lot of energy in their efforts to fill their bellies. On average they travelled 58 miles (93 kilometers) with one young female putting in 233 miles (375 miles) in three weeks.
“This paper adds to a growing body of evidence that polar bears cannot sustain themselves on land as we continue to lose sea ice due to climate warming,” said Laidre, who chairs the polar bear specialist group for the International Union for Conservation of Nature, the international organization that monitors endangered species status.
Associated Press journalist Stephanie Windeler contributed from London.
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