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Archive for the ‘Animal World’

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Funny Dying Polar Bears Video11.15.07

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Arctic Melting - and Threat to Polar Bears - Accelerates10.25.07

By Lisa Raffensperger on Monday, October 22, 2007.

(c) http://earthtrends.wri.org/updates/node/250

Polar bear with cubs

If greenhouse gas emissions continue in the “business as usual” trend, two-thirds of the world’s polar bears may become extinct by 2050, according to a study released last month by the U.S. Geological Survey. The series of nine reports prepared by the USGS are intended to aid the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s upcoming decision on whether to designate the polar bear threatened under the Endangered Species Act. The period of public comments on these reports, which ended today, was the final period of public input before the January 9, 2008 final listing determination.
The listing process has been closely watched by many environmental groups since its beginning in February 2005 for its importance not only in determining the fate of the polar bear species, but also its far-reaching potential to force U.S. action to curb greenhouse gas emissions. If the polar bear is listed, all federal agencies will be prohibited from taking any action that will be likely to jeopardize the bear’s continued existence or adversely modify its critical habitat. This could potentially include permits for resource extraction, power-plant operation, and shipping routes through the Arctic.
Without action soon to reduce greenhouse gases, especially ones that disproportionately warm polar regions, polar bears could very possibly become the first mammals to lose 100 percent of their habitat by global warming.
Sea Ice Loss Accelerating

Polar bears depend upon sea ice from which to hunt seals, their primary prey. The extent of Arctic sea ice varies from year to year, but this summer saw the most drastic melting yet on record, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center. Measurements in September 2007 shattered the previous low, set in September 2005, by 23 percent. Arctic sea ice receded so much, in fact, that the well-known Northwest Passage became completely opened for the first time in human memory. The NSIDC scientists agree that the Arctic Ocean may be completely ice-free in the summer by 2030, a phenomenon that hasn’t happened in the last million years.
Even in the case of only partial melting, the Center for Biological Diversity says, polar bears will experience “shortening of the hunting season caused by delayed ice formation and earlier ice break-up, resulting in reduced fat stores, deteriorated body condition, and subsequent reduced survival and reproduction” (CBD, 2007).

Sea Ice Extent 2005 and 2007

Source: NSIDC, 2007 This image compares the average sea ice extent for September 2007 (on LEFT) to September 2005; the magenta line indicates the long-term median from 1979 to 2000.
What Can Be Done Right Now

While bills now being debated by Congress focus on CO2 reductions, non-CO2 greenhouse gases are at the center of a recent appeal by environmental group Center for Biological Diversity to save polar bears and their Arctic habitat. Last week the group introduced their “Rapid Action Plan” at a hearing of the House Committee on Science and Technology, outlining the most pressing steps that must be taken to slow Arctic melting. Though any long-term approach to global climate change must necessarily address CO2, the plan’s authors emphasized short-term reduction of non-CO2 pollutants, including methane and black carbon, or soot. These pollutants disproportionately affect the Arctic, accounting for at least half of warming there, compared to their estimated 30 percent contribution worldwide. In addition, both methane and black carbon have a much shorter atmospheric lifetime than CO2

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Polar Bears Shared by U.S., Russia to Be Managed Jointly09.25.07

WASHINGTON, DC, September 24, 2007 (ENS) - The United States and Russia have ratified a treaty for the long-term conservation of the population of the polar bears shared between the two countries. These are about 2,000 bears that inhabit the Alaska-Chukotka or Chukchi Sea between western Alaska and eastern Russia.

The treaty unifies American and Russian management programs that affect this shared population of bears and calls for the active involvement of Native people and their organizations in future management programs.

The treaty provides the framework for long-term joint efforts such as conservation of ecosystems and important habitats, harvest allocations based on sustainability, collection of biological information, and increased consultation and cooperation with state, local, and private interests.
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Third Blue Whale Found Dead Off California Coast09.24.07

SANTA BARBARA, California, September 21, 2007 (ENS) - Three dead blue whales have been found floating off the coast of Southern California within the past two weeks, alarming and puzzling marine mammal experts.

As many as 200 blue whales, members of the largest species on Earth, have been feeding in the Santa Barbara Channel during their annual summer migration from Mexico and Central America. About 3,000 of the world’s 12,000 blue whales swim off the west coast of the Americas.

The latest dead whale was spotted Wednesday floating in the Santa Barbara Channel.
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