Archive for the ‘polar bear facts’ Category

Polar bear facts and global warming

April 12, 2008

In this article I write about polar bear facts and global warming issues. Two thirds of the world’s 25,000 polar bears live in Canada’s north. Hunting them is illegal in some jurisdictions and permitted in others. But hunting is not the biggest threat to a species that has become a symbol for Canada’s vast frozen spaces. Global warming is.

Researchers recently reported that the rising temperatures, which are causing Arctic ice to melt at an alarming rate, mean the polar bear – a Canadian icon – could be headed for extinction within the next 100 years. The bears are dependent on the ice that covers Arctic waters. That’s where they sniff out seals, who breath through holes in the ice. Polar bears can smell seals, their main food source, from up to a kilometre away.

Exciting reading about polar bears

Now that ice appears to be disappearing, pictures from space show that roughly 10% of the permanent ice cover is melting every year, and researchers predict that the process is likely to speed up.

That’s because as sea ice melts, it no longer reflects the sun’s heat back into the atmosphere. The water absorbs the heat instead, which means more melting. The bears already appear to be feeling the heat. They have a unique ability to conserve energy for months at a time when they can’t find food. But the melting ice means those periods of starvation are lasting longer.

Ian Stirling, one of Canada’s leading polar bear researchers, estimates that the bears have become 10% cent thinner over the past two decades. They are also having fewer cubs and are increasingly drawn to human settlements looking for food.

In Churchill, Manitoba, the polar bear capital of the world, the furry yellowish-white bears are a huge tourist attraction, drawing wealthy visitors who want a close, but safe encounter with the largest land carnivores on earth. As temperatures rise, the residents of Churchill have increasingly found themselves running into bears, at the dump, on city streets, even on their front porches.

This is no laughing matter. A hungry polar bear is a dangerous polar bear. Two people in the town have been killed by the polar bears. However, one of them was harassing a bear, and the other had his pockets full of meat.

It seems that we humans, with our continuing insistence on burning fossil fuels, are far more dangerous to the bears than they are to us. For now, the polar bear is still king of the ice, but it could be one of the first species to fall victim to global warming. In 100 years, the only polar bears could be the ones in zoos.

Source: guardian.co.uk

If you are interested in polar bears I recommend you reading this amazing book 101 Facts About Polar Bears. I have read it myself and there is a lot of great cotent in it and also great deal of polar bear facts. I found this very interesting topic and I’m going to study polar bears even further. I think it’s really important to let people now about these victims of global warmig.

Ten Amazing Polar Bear Facts

April 12, 2008

This is a list of 10 most exciting polar bear facts.

  • The global population of polar bears is estimated to be around 20,000 to 25,000. They are classified as a vulnerable species.
  • The number of polar bears is expected to decrease by at least two thirds by 2050 because of the global warming and melting of the ice where polar bears live.
  • An amazing 95% of the polar bear diet consists of seals, both ringed and bearded seals.
  • Adult male polar bears often have broken teeth and scars due to fighting with other males over mating rights.
  • The oldest polar bear lived to be 41 in captivity. In the wild, the oldest polar bear observed was 32.
  • Humans are the only hunters of adult polar bears.
  • Most polar bears live entire lives on ice without ever setting foot on land.
  • Polar bear cubs travel with their moms to learn to hunt for about two and a half years.
  • The bears have become 10% cent thinner over the past two decades, because it’s increasingly harder for them to find food due to the global warming.
  • 10% of the permanent ice cover is melting every year, and researchers predict that the process is likely to speed up

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