Polar bear sanctuary on icebergs
A hitherto unknown polar bear
sanctuary in the Arctic has been discovered by the makers of a
documentary. An estimated 20 of the bears were seen on the Peterman Iceberg in Baffin Bay,
50km off the Canadian coast.
For most of the year, polar bears live on the frozen sea water where they hunt seals. So this finding challenges present knowledge about where polar bears spend the summer months, when the sea ice melts. It had been assumed that polar bears had to move on to the land during the summer, in this case, Baffin Island.
But now it is clear that not all polar bears return to land. Some spend the summer months surviving on large tabular icebergs off the coast.
Researcher Chris Packham commented: "What's there for them is security, and I think they are taking advantage of that. I believe they are living on this iceberg to stay safe, and just wait for the sea ice to come back in." American biologist and polar bear expert Steven Amstrup said this was the first time he had heard of the bears living in large numbers on a tabular iceberg out at sea.
Dr Keith Nicholls of the British Antarctic Survey was also on the expedition. He said: "In recent years we've been seeing a lot more big tabular icebergs break off the Greenland ice sheet and they're now ending up in Baffin Bay." The huge chunks of ice are so large they are providing islands for the bears. It's a new habitat for them. Unfortunately the melting of the polar ice caps has also driven many of the seals away. Seals are the major food source for the bears.
Polar bears are hunted by humans on both the mainlands of Greenland and Canada so the icebergs may enable the bears to remain safe from hunters.
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