'There
Are No Words': Tourists Spot Hundreds Of Polar Bears Swarming Whale
Carcass In Siberia
1
September, 2017
There
are around 26,000 polar bears on the planet, out there doing their
best as the ice caps melt. We've all seen the infamous starving polar
bear picture, which has become a symbol (rightfully or not) of the
impact of climate change on vulnerable species. But last week,
instead of starvation came a story of glut.
On
September 19, a bowhead whale carcass washed ashore the
remote Wrangel
Island State Nature Reserve off
the Northern coast of Siberia. Nearly one per cent of the world's
polar bears amassed beside it for a Siberian feast.
Image:
Alexander Gruzdev, Wrangel
Island State Nature Reserve
"You
had to live it to believe it, even now there are people pinching
themselves to make sure it really happened," Rodney Russ,
Expedition Leader, Owner and Founder of Heritage Expeditions writes
in his blog.
Russ
counted at least 150 polar bears in the group, while a Wrangel
Island news
release cites
230 as the most conservative estimate.
Image:
Alexander Gruzdev, Wrangel
Island State Nature Reserve
The
gathering was unique simply because so many humans were there to see
it. Scientists from nearby Chukotka, Siberia and as far away as
Alaska who study polar bears were informed of the event and are
making observations, according to the
release.
Polar
bears aren't classified as endangered — many of their populations
have healthy numbers, though some are in decline. Yet, due to melting
polar ice caps and a warming globe, there's a lot of concern for this
charismatic species and its habitat, as well as concern about
hunting, according
to the
World Wildlife Fund. The International Union for the Conservation of
Nature lists the bears as vulnerable for
that reason.
I've
reached out to the scientists at Wrangel Island for more information
about the gathering. But for the tourists on the boat, it was an
experience of a lifetime.
"We
launched the Zodiacs," writes Russ, referring to a brand name of
inflatable rafts, "for a closer look and that is the memory we
will all carry with us. There are no words to describe it."
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