Effects Of Climate Change On Polar Bears

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The Effects of Habitat Loss due to Climate Change on Polar Bears (Ursus maritimus)

The EPA describes climate change as any significant change in the measures of climate lasting for an extended period of time (Climate Change: Basic Information). The concept of climate change is one too familiar to one of the top artic predators, the polar bear (Ursus maririmus). Many people are aware that due to climate change, polar bears are experiencing extreme habitat loss in the form of melting ice sheets in the polar region. The Arctic is becoming warmer at a high rate, and contractions in the extent of sea ice are currently changing the habitats of marine top-predators dependent on ice (Prop 1). However, what many people don’t know is that the melting …show more content…

This isn’t necessarily the case. A typical diet for a polar bear revolves around sea lions, which gives polar bears enough energy to survive and reproduce. They were able to use this main source of food for their energy. These sea lions are not enough to support their energy needs anymore. Now, they have to look for other terrestrial food sources that can provide them with more energy. Subadult polar bears appear to come ashore before more mature individuals and the earliest subadults are beginning to overlap the nesting period of the large colony of snow geese also occupying the Cape Churchill Peninsula (Rockwell and Gormezano 539). Direct observations of nest predation showed that polar bears may severely affect reproductive success of the barnacle goose (Branta leucopsis), common eider (Somateria mollissima) and glaucous gull (Larus hyperboreus) (Prop 1). This is now starting to effect bird populations around the globe because polar bears are using the birds’ eggs as a source of energy. Jouke Prop goes on to say that over 90% of all nests are being predated …show more content…

Polar bears are naturally not diverse creatures. There isn’t a lot of genetic variation in them to help their population be able to produce future generations that could survive in these new environmental conditions. This occurrence happens in areas that are located in the more southern parts of the artic regions. Predicted changes in the distribution and duration of sea ice in Hudson Bay suggest that gene flow among these clusters may be reduced in the future (Crompton 1). However, other researchers studied this concept and found that other populations around the artic regions show the opposite. Although polar bears’ abundance, distribution, and population structure will certainly be negatively affected by ongoing —and increasingly rapid—loss of Arctic sea ice, these genetic data provide no evidence of strong directional gene flow in response to recent climate change (Malenfant 1). All in all, habitat loss is a crucial effect of climate change on polar bears. Without their habitat, polar bears will not be able to hunt, reproduce, or live. As long as climate change is occurring, polar bears have to work harder than ever before to stay alive. With these detrimental effects on the artic environment, polar bears could move from being threatened to being extinct. Today and future generations of polar bears are going to have to work twice as hard to survive to hopefully one day have their habitat

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