Polar bears on some Norwegian islands are fatter and healthier, despite ice loss, scientists say. This article is an interesting commentary on how wildlife can adapt quite rapidly to climate change under the right conditions, even though it may be temporary. It gives a little bit of hope in the current atmosphere of dire predictions.

       Scientists expected the opposite, but polar bears in the Norwegian Arctic archipelago of Svalbard have become fatter and healthier since the early 1990s, all while sea ice has steadily declined due to climate change.

Polar bears rely on sea ice as a platform from which to hunt the seals that they rely on for blubber-rich meals. The bears’ fat reserves provide energy and insulation, and allow mothers to produce the rich milk needed for their cubs.

       Researchers weighed and measured 770 adults in Svalbard between 1992 and 2019 and found that bears had become significantly fatter. They think that Svalbard bears have adapted to recent ice loss by eating more land-based prey, including reindeer and walruses.

       The discovery, published in Scientific Reports, was particularly puzzling because of the impact of climate change in Svalbard. During the same period that this research was carried out, global temperature rise has increased the number of ice-free days per year in the region by almost 100 – at a rate of about four days each year.

       “The fatter a bear is the better it is,” explained lead researcher Dr Jon Aars from the Norwegian Polar Institute. “And I would have expected to see a decline in body condition when the loss of sea ice has been so profound.”

       Walruses have been officially protected in Norway since the 1950s, after they were hunted to near extinction. That protection has boosted their numbers and, apparently, provided a new source of fatty food for polar bears. “There are a lot more walruses around for them to hunt these days,” said Aars. “It is also possible that they are able to hunt seals more efficiently.” He explained that, if seals have smaller areas of sea ice available to them, they will congregate in those smaller areas, presenting easier collective pickings for bears.

       While this is unexpectedly good news for these Arctic predators, the researchers think the situation is unlikely to last. As the sea ice continues to decline, bears will have to travel further to access hunting grounds, using more energy and depleting precious fat reserves.

       The charity Polar Bears International points out that Svalbard’s polar bears were some of the most heavily-hunted in the world, until international protections were introduced in the 1970s. Experts think the new findings could be linked to the population recovering from that hunting pressure. That, combined with an increase in the number of walruses – and of reindeer – in recent decades, appears to have provided the bears with a temporary boost.

       Dr John Whiteman, chief research scientist at PBI said the results were “positive in the short term, but that body condition is only one piece of the puzzle for the bears. Other recent research on these bears found that more ice-free days reduced survival in cubs and in sub-adult and old females.”

       There are 20 known sub-populations of polar bears across the Arctic, and climate change is affecting different groups differently. In Canada’s Western Hudson Bay, where the most southerly, and best studied, bears live, a decline in the population has been directly linked to warming temperatures. Whiteman added that that the long-term picture for polar bears was clear – they need sea ice to survive. “Ice loss ultimately means that bear numbers will decline. This Svalbard study shows that the short-term picture can be very region-specific. In the long term, however, if ice loss continues unchecked, we know the bears will eventually disappear.” Not such good news!

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