Nunavut Government Study: “the [polar] bear population is not in crisis as people believed,”

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From the Daily Globe and Mail in Canada:

Healthy polar bear count confounds doomsayers

The debate about climate change and its impact on polar bears has intensified with the release of a survey that shows the bear population in a key part of northern Canada is far larger than many scientists thought, and might be growing.

The number of bears along the western shore of Hudson Bay, believed to be among the most threatened bear subpopulations, stands at 1,013 and could be even higher, according to the results of an aerial survey released Wednesday by the Government of Nunavut. That’s 66 per cent higher than estimates by other researchers who forecasted the numbers would fall to as low as 610 because of warming temperatures that melt ice faster and ruin bears’ ability to hunt. The Hudson Bay region, which straddles Nunavut and Manitoba, is critical because it’s considered a bellwether for how polar bears are doing elsewhere in the Arctic.

I located the survey done by the Government of Nunavut, here:

http://env.gov.nu.ca/sites/default/files/foxe_basin_polar_bears_2012.pdf

It seems sound in methodology. Some excerpts from it are posted below.

Summary

Polar bear population assessment in North America has historically relied on physical mark-recapture. These studies are logistically and financially intensive, and while widely accepted in the scientific community, local Inuit have voiced opposition to wildlife handling. To better reflect Inuit values and provide a rapid tool for monitoring polar bear population size, we developed and implemented an aerial survey in the Foxe Basin subpopulation (FB) during late summer, 2009 and 2010. FB, a seasonally ice-free subpopulation, spans some 1.1 million km2 in Nunavut. Polar bears concentrate along the coast during late summer, so we delineated survey zones based on proximity to the coastline.

We used coastal contour transects, inland transects oriented perpendicular to the coast, and total counts on a sample of small islands and ice floes. We focused effort in the high-density coastal region and designed protocols to enable simultaneous collection of double-observer and distance sampling data from a helicopter. We flew >300 hours and 40,000 km during each year’s survey and observed 816 and 1,003 individuals in 2009 and 2010, respectively. In both years, we observed high numbers of bears on islands in northern Foxe Basin and on Southampton Island, neighboring islands and near Lyon Inlet.

Encounter rates were highest near the coast, although bears were observed >40 km inland. The shape of the detection function differed substantially between years, likely attributable to observer experience and variable sighting conditions. However, our abundance estimates were highly consistent between years and survey methods, (~2,580 bears (95% CI: about 2,100 – 3,200), and were comparable to an estimate from the early 1990s. Our results suggest that Nunavut’s management regime has enabled polar bear abundance in FB to remain relatively stable.

Whereas mark−recapture data provide direct estimates of population growth, aerial survey data yield information population on trend only via a time series of population estimates; accordingly, reliance on such data may require more conservative harvest management. The FB aerial surveys provide a framework for future studies during the ice-free season. Ongoing analysis will evaluate the distribution of bears in Foxe Basin and assess alternatives for long-term monitoring.

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Figure 2. Transects flown during the Foxe Basin polar bear subpopulation aerial survey, August to October, 2010.

Results

We completed the FB aerial surveys during August – September, 2009 and August – October, 2010. We successfully sampled nearly all planned transects in both years (Figure 2), despite particularly challenging weather conditions in 2010. We observed 816 and 1,003 polar bears, including 616 and 790 independent bears, in 2009 and 2010, respectively. Observed litter sizes were similar between years: in 2009, cub of the year (coy) and yearling / 2-year-old litter sizes averaged 1.57 (SD: 0.55, n = 75) and 1.55 (SD: 0.54, n = 53); mean litter sizes were 1.53 (SD: 0.57, n = 80) and 1.40 (SD: 0.50, n=65) for coy and yearlings / 2-year-olds, respectively, in 2010.

The distribution of polar bears was generally consistent between years (Figure 3). High concentrations of bears were observed in central Foxe Basin near Lyon Inlet and on Southampton Island and neighboring Coats, Vansittart, and White Islands and in northern Foxe Basin on Rowley, Koch, Prince Charles, and the Spicer Islands. Relatively few bears were spotted along Hudson Strait and in the Bowman Bay region of western Baffin Island, and sightings were rare near communities. Bears were most frequently observed along coastal contour transects, in the nearshore inland stratum and on large and small islands, but sightings were documented across all strata (Figure 3).

Total Abundance

Despite different analytical techniques and detection functions, the four preliminary abundance estimates were remarkably consistent (Table 2). Model averaging yielded a preliminary overall abundance estimate of about 2,580 bears in the Foxe Basin subpopulation, with a 95% lognormal confidence interval of 2,093 to 3,180 (CV: 10.7%).

Survey done by the Government of Nunavut, here:

http://env.gov.nu.ca/sites/default/files/foxe_basin_polar_bears_2012.pdf

It seems like a superior methodology to say, seeing three drowned polar bears at sea after a storm and then extrapolating that to the entire population like one now discredited and disgraced researcher did. Of course, honest science like what was done in this survey doesn’t make headlines or wailing and gnashing of teeth by NGO’s and Al Gore, and even Science magazine who much prefer to stick to the view of a declining Ursus Bogus population:

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Back to the Globe and Mail article:

The study shows that “the bear population is not in crisis as people believed,” said Drikus Gissing, Nunavut’s director of wildlife management. “There is no doom and gloom.”

Mr. Gissing added that the government isn’t dismissing concerns about climate change, but he said Nunavut wants to base bear-management practices on current information “and not predictions about what might happen.”

The debate over the polar-bear population has been raging for years, frequently pitting scientists against Inuit. In 2004, Environment Canada researchers concluded that the numbers in the region had dropped by 22 per cent since 1984, to 935. They also estimated that by 2011, the population would decrease to about 610. That sparked worldwide concern about the future of the bears and prompted the Canadian and American governments to introduce legislation to protect them.

But many Inuit communities said the researchers were wrong. They said the bear population was increasing and they cited reports from hunters who kept seeing more bears. Mr. Gissing said that encouraged the government to conduct the recent study, which involved 8,000 kilometres of aerial surveying last August along the coast and offshore islands.

===================================================================

What I found most interesting is the clear message that polar bears are thriving in an environment where sea ice (NSIDC includes Hudson Bay as sea ice) seasonally disappears entirely.

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Note in the Cryosphere Today comparison image above, Hudson Bay is completely ice free around the time of Arctic maximum melt ~ Sept 30.

It seems the Polar bears can adapt to non-existent sea ice and do just fine.

Of course this isn’t news, as I’ve previously reported: Polar Bears Survived the Ice Free Arctic

So when you see claims like this one from the National Resources Defense Council

Scientists predict that Arctic summers could be ice-free by the middle of this century-without sea ice, polar bears cannot survive.

Or this one from Polar Bears International

Asked by CNSNews.com about the IUCN body’s findings regarding populations remaining stable, Buchanan pointed out the group’s acknowledgment of insufficient data in some of the 19 sub-populations. He concluded that “without ice polar bears can’t survive.”

…we can pull out Dr. Roger Pielke Jr.’s handy button that he provided for the IPCC SREx report and apply it to polar bears and sea ice, citing the survey done by the Government of Nunavut.

 

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David
April 6, 2012 5:51 am

I’m so glad the £3 the WWF commercials wanted us in the UK to send to help the polar bears has worked – I sort of visualised a WWF operative sidling up to a polar bear and saying: ‘Here’s three quid. Go and get yourself a nice fish supper…’
I resisted the temptation, even though they would have sent me a nice cuddly polar bear toy in appreciation…

Richard
April 6, 2012 6:56 am

1,013 is considered a thriving population in an area as enormous as the western shore of Hudson Bay? Give me a break. I don’t believe in AGW, but those numbers are not healthy. How low does the population have to go before it inter-breeds itself into extinction. Or the population gets so low and spread far apart that they don’t find mates. And I don’t trust aerial counts. They could be counting the same bear 2 or 3 times.

Richard
April 6, 2012 7:06 am

“Prof. Derocher also said some details in the survey pointed to a bear population in trouble. For example, the survey identified 50 cubs, which are usually less than 10 months old, and 22 yearlings, roughly 22 months old. That’s nearly one-third the number required for a healthy population, he said. “This is a clear indication that this population is not sustaining itself in any way, shape, or form.”
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Only one third the number required for a healthy population. And the cubs aren’t as fat and healthy as they were in the past. And if the adults can’t find food, they will eat their cubs. Or they will hunt more on land, increasing the chances of being killed by people. Lets not fool ourselves. Polar bears are in a lot of trouble, and it’s getting worse.

Blade
April 6, 2012 9:46 am

“Or this one from Polar Bears International

“Asked by CNSNews.com about the IUCN body’s findings regarding populations remaining stable, Buchanan pointed out the group’s acknowledgment of insufficient data in some of the 19 sub-populations. He concluded that “without ice polar bears can’t survive.”””

Huh? Are you kidding me? (~sigh~) These people are really too stupid to describe. How do they remember to eat and breathe?
New York City …

San Diego …

Chicago …

Kansas City …

Germany …

There are probably Polar Bears in every city that has a zoo. This is the consequence of arguing and debating with idiots – they multiply and spread their mental illness. These people are corrupting your own childrens’ logic and mental development while you pay taxes to support them. They must be ridiculed and humiliated.

April 6, 2012 1:52 pm

Richard says:
April 6, 2012 at 6:56 am
1,013 is considered a thriving population in an area as enormous as the western shore of Hudson Bay? Give me a break.
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Not when you consider home range.
http://www.seaworld.org/animal-info/info-books/polar-bear/habitat-&-distribution.htm
MIGRATION
1.
Polar bears travel throughout the year within loose, individual home ranges.

Home range size varies among individuals depending upon access to food, mates, and dens.

Home ranges tend to be larger than for other mammal species because sea ice habitat changes from season to season and year to year.
°
A small home range may be 50,000 to 60,000 sq. km (19,305-23,166 sq. mi.). Small home ranges can be found near Canadian Arctic islands.
° A large home range may be in excess of 350,000 sq. km (135,135 sq. mi.). Large home ranges can be found in the Bering or Chukchi seas.
• Polar bears don’t mark their home ranges.
2.
Polar bears undergo seasonal migrations, following the movements of the ice pack. Some bears prefer to remain at the edge of the ice pack year-round, making extensive migrations as the ice advances and recedes. On the southern shores of Hudson Bay, some bears move onto land for summer and disperse over ice for the winter.
3.
Polar bears are capable of traveling 30 km (19 mi.) or more per day for several days. One polar bear was tracked traveling 80 km (50 mi.) in 24 hours. Another polar bear traveled 1,119 km (695 mi.) in one year.

April 6, 2012 2:00 pm

Richard says:
April 6, 2012 at 6:56 am
How low does the population have to go before it inter-breeds itself into extinction.
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Polar Bears are natural inter-breeders.
“Scientists believe there are 15 relatively discrete polar bear subpopulations (four others are recognized for management purposes). A subpopulation is a group of polar bears that interbreed with a range independent of but overlapping that of other polar bears. For example, two subpopulations live in the James/Hudson Bay area, one in western Hudson Bay, and the other in northwestern Ontario and James Bay.”
Richard says:
April 6, 2012 at 6:56 am
Or the population gets so low and spread far apart that they don’t find mates.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
“The ratio of males to females is approximately one to one.”
http://www.seaworld.org/animal-info/info-books/polar-bear/habitat-&-distribution.htm

Andrew30
April 6, 2012 4:07 pm

The question is:
Who is going to try and correct the Wikipedia miss-information?

pwl
April 6, 2012 4:22 pm

“The study shows that “the bear population is not in crisis as people believed,” said Drikus Gissing, Nunavut’s director of wildlife management. “There is no doom and gloom.”
Mr. Gissing added that the government isn’t dismissing concerns about climate change, but he said Nunavut wants to base bear-management practices on current information “and not predictions about what might happen.””
When it comes to the CO2 doomsayers “gloom and doom” the Nunavut Government is clearly having none-of-it. [;)]

April 6, 2012 4:43 pm

Richard says:
April 6, 2012 at 6:56 am
“1,013 is considered a thriving population in an area as enormous as the western shore of Hudson Bay? Give me a break. I don’t believe in AGW, but those numbers are not healthy.”
I thought the total Polar Bear population was around 5000 in the 1950s, which would mean the population on the western part of Hudson Bay should have been much less than today.

Richard
April 6, 2012 5:25 pm

Thanks for the info, kim2000.

April 6, 2012 8:23 pm

Forgive me for seeming really really thick, but what could POSSIBLY cause a warm-blooded mammal to die simply from a few less degrees of cold?
What kind of freaking logic is that, anyway? What POSSIBLE mechanism are they imagining???
This is NOT a snarc. This has always just made me smack myself up side of my head.

CRS, DrPH
April 6, 2012 11:00 pm

According to this article, there are plenty of polar bears & they are having a grand old time, feasting on tasty seals in Newfoundland and Labrador!!
http://news.yahoo.com/pack-ice-near-shore-means-polar-bear-encounters-210223235.html

Les Johnson
April 7, 2012 1:50 am

I don’t know if anyone noticed, but there is a tie in here, and with Monnett (Drowning Polar Bears) and this story.
The expert who spoke out about the low number of cubs, Andrew Derocher, was the recipient of $1,000,000 from Monnett’s department, after Derocher gave Monnett a positive review for his paper on the bears drowning.

April 7, 2012 5:18 am

Richard says:
April 6, 2012 at 5:25 pm
Thanks for the info, kim2000
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You are very welcome.

April 7, 2012 5:26 am

In case you missed it:
Nunavut may be too optimistic about its polar bears
The government of Nunavut says it has wonderful news for those worried about the decrease in the polar bear population. After sending planes and helicopters to survey the Western Hudson’s Bay area, Nunavut Tunngavik reports that the frosty white bears aren’t really in peril, despite dire warnings from environmental experts. Really?
“There are concerns about the effects of global warming,” allows Drikus Gissing, Nunavut’s director of wildlife. “But they are not endangered.” In fact, he says, there are about 1,000 bears in the Western Hudson Bay area, up from the 935 estimated in 2004.
Hold on a minute. Groups such as the World Wildlife Fund Canada say the Nunavut survey doesn’t state the whole story. Over the past few decades the bears have lost six weeks of hunting time due to the late freeze and early thaw of sea ice. This affects their health and the number of cubs, explains Peter Ewins, the WWFC’s director of species conservation. “No ice, no bears,” he says.
The news about healthy polar bears reflects a bit of self-interest on the part of Nunavut. It wants to increase the quota for hunting bears, a profitable venture for the Inuit. Hard to shrug off 30 years of studies by environmentalists, though. No bears, no hunt.
http://www.thestar.com/opinion/editorials/article/1157577–nunavut-may-be-too-optimistic-about-its-polar-bears

Chris Edwards
April 7, 2012 7:08 am

MM computer modelling can be sound, the EU had cruise ships studied and in 11 out of 16 scenarios the modelled cruise ship turned over with a minor gash in its side, just like for real in the Med recently, sadly this model was rejected by the EU but then the dynamics of a modern ship are but a drop in the ocean compared to the earth we live on but the monolithic and stupid management to the EU is just the norm for megalomaniac socialist policies !

Les Johnson
April 7, 2012 7:18 am

jrwakefield: 6 weeks of lost time on the ice? Nope. The melt season has an insignificant shortening trend over the record, according to Walt Meier. Shortening, not lengthening.

Les Johnson
April 7, 2012 9:42 am

my mistake.
The melt season has had an insignificant increase, over the record of 0.07 days per year, 2.3 days total. Over the record, the maximum is coming very slightly earlier, but so is the minimum. The melt is starting sooner, but so is the freeze up.
The record is remarkably smooth. There are only 9 years outside 1 SD (10.16 days), 5 with shorter melt seasons, and 4 with longer melt seasons. There is only 1 year outside 2 std dev, when 1997 had the melt season over 20 days over the average. 2003 had the shortest melt season in the record. Since 1998, 8 out of 14 years have had a SHORTER melt season than the average. Since 1997, all years are inside 1 SD, except 2003.
http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/timeseries.anom.1979-2008

April 7, 2012 10:01 am

jrwakefield says:
April 7, 2012 at 5:26 am
In case you missed it:
Nunavut may be too optimistic about its polar bears”
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I can’t tell by your post if you are agreeing with the article.
I can tell you – If I tried to use an opinion piece, without authorship and references, to bolster my debate…in my school……..
I went for a BING search for these words.
“Peter Ewins, the WWFC’s director of species conservation. “No ice, no bears,” he says.”
HERE IS RESULTS:
[ ” All Results
1-1 of 1 results·Advanced
Nunavut may be too optimistic about its polar bears – thestar.com2 hours ago “]
ON GOOGLE:
[” 1 result (0.30 seconds)
Search Results
Nunavut may be too optimistic about its polar bears – thestar.com
http://www.thestar.com/…/1157577–nunavut-may-be-too-optimisti... – Canada
10 hours ago – This affects their health and the number of cubs, explains Peter Ewins, the WWFC’s director of species conservation. “No ice, no bears,” he says … ”]
My bold:
The name on the Picture Credit is, “jonathan hayward canadian press”
Who is a Photojournalist:
http://npac.ca/?page_id=5170
http://www.thecanadianpress.com/news_and_events.aspx?id=97