Heart-Wrenching
Video Shows Starving Polar Bear on Iceless Land
Lack of sea ice is making it more difficult for polar bears to find food.
Lack of sea ice is making it more difficult for polar bears to find food.
7
December, 2017
When
photographer Paul Nicklen and filmmakers from conservation group Sea
Legacy arrived in the Baffin Islands in late summer, they came across
a heartbreaking sight: a starving polar bear on its deathbed.
Nicklen
is no stranger to bears. From the time he was a child growing up in
Canada's far north the biologist turned wildlife photographer has
seen over 3,000 bears in the wild. But the emaciated polar bear,
featured in videos Nicklen published to social media on December 5,
was one of the most gut-wrenching sights he's ever seen.
"We
stood there crying—filming with tears rolling down our cheeks,"
he said.
Video
shows the polar bear clinging to life, its white hair limply covering
its thin, bony frame. One of the bear's back legs drags behind it as
it walks, likely due to muscle atrophy. Looking for food, the polar
bear slowly rummages through a nearby trashcan used seasonally by
Inuit fishers. It finds nothing and resignedly collapses back down
onto the ground.
In
the days since Nicklen posted the footage, he's been asked why he
didn’t intervene.
"Of
course, that crossed my mind," said Nicklen. "But it's not
like I walk around with a tranquilizer gun or 400 pounds of seal
meat."
And
even if he did, said Nicklen, he only would have been prolonging the
bear's misery. Plus, feeding wild polar bears is illegal in Canada.
The
wildlife photographer says he filmed the bear's slow, beleaguered
death because he didn't want it to die in vain.
"When
scientists say bears are going extinct, I want people to realize what
it looks like. Bears are going to starve to death," said
Nicklen. "This is what a starving bear looks like."
By
telling the story of one polar bear, Nicklen hopes to convey a larger
message about how a warming climate has deadly consequences.
Polar
bears have long been unwitting mascots for the effects of climate
change. As animals that live only in Arctic regions, they're often
the first to feel the impacts of warming temperatures and rising
seas.
The
large, half-ton bears find concentrations of seals on sea ice. During
summer months, it's not uncommon for polar bears to go months without
eating while they wait for Arctic ice to solidify.
In
2002, a World Wildlife Fund report predicted that climate change
could eventually lead to polar bear endangerment or extinction. Even
then, the report found that polar bears were moving from ice to land
earlier and staying on land longer, unhealthily extending the bears'
fasting season. By the end of summer, most bears studied by the World
Wildlife Fund showed signs of starvation.
Fifteen
years later, polar bears' icy hunting grounds are in even worse
shape. The National Snow and Ice Data Center, which tracks sea ice
cover annually, has regularly noted record lows in sea ice coverage—a
decline that is expected to only get worse. (Read more about drastic
predictions for dwindling sea ice.)
A
study recently published in the journal Biosciences looked at how
climate science is often falsely discredited. The study found climate
deniers are able to downplay the threat of climate change by
discrediting the threat facing polar bears.
However, a study published last year by the European Geosciences Union and this year by the U.S. Geological Survey confirms melting sea ice continues to be an existential threat to polar bears.
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