The polar bear (Ursus maritimus), also known as the white bear, northern bear, or sea bear, is a large bear native to the Arctic. It is the largest land carnivore species and the apex predator within its range. It is well-adapted to its habitat: its thick blubber and fur insulate it against the cold, its white color camouflages it from its prey, and it hunts well both on land and in the water. The polar bear also has a longer neck than other types of bears, though scientists debate why.
The polar bear is a circumpolar species found in and around the Arctic Ocean whose southern range limits are determined by pack ice (its southernmost point is James Bay in Canada). While their numbers thin north of 88 degrees, there is evidence of polar bears all the way across the Arctic. Population estimates are generally just over 20,000.http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/bear-facts
Their main population centers are:
Females are about half the size of males and normally weigh 200 to 300 kg (450 to 650 lb). Adult males measure 2.4 to 2.6 m (95 to 102 in); females, 1.9 to 2.1 m (75 to 83 in). At birth, cubs weigh 600 to 700 g.
In May 2006, a Grizzly-Polar bear hybrid was shot in Banks Island, Northwest Territory, Canada. It was later identified as a hybrid, of male Brown and female Polar offspring http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4766217.stm. Until this point, grizzly-polar hybrids, dubbed "grolar bears" or "pizzlies", have only been found in zoos. For polar bears and grizzly bears, the tail end of one species' mating period overlaps the beginning of the other species' mating period by about a month. Interbreeding is expected to continue and increase as a result of global warming, which is pushing the range of the grizzly bear into that of the polar bear, as temperate regions of grizzly bears expand and push into the declining polar bear populations whose habitat is melting away.
The number of distinct populations depends on who is counting. The IUCN/SSC Polar Bear Specialist Group ("PBSG"), the preeminent international scientific body for research and management relating to polar bears, currently recognizes twenty populations, or stocks, worldwide.http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/species/polarbear/nat-hist.html Other scientists recognize six distinct populations, but no (living) subspecies:http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/faq/
Other sources list these subspecies:
A polar bear's nose and skin are black and the fur is translucent despite its apparent white hue. The fur is good camouflage as well as insulation. Stiff hairs grow on the soles of its paws; these insulate and provide traction on ice.
Unlike other arctic mammals, polar bears never shed their coat for a darker shade in the summer. The fur absorbs ultraviolet light. The hair does not have fiber-optic properties nor does it transmit light or heat to the skin (an urban legend). The thick undercoat does however insulate the bears to the point where they overheat at temperatures above 10 °C (50 °F). It also renders them nearly invisible in the infrared; only their breath and muzzles can be seen. http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/species/polarbear/nat-hist.html Growing through the undercoat is a relatively sparse covering of hollow guard hairs about 6 inches long. These guard hairs are stiff, shiny and erect, and stop the undercoat from matting when wet. The water is then easily shaken off before it can freeze. The bear also rolls in snow to blot up moisture in the coat.
In July 2005, several polar bears in the Brookfield Zoo turned green as a result of algae growing in their hollow guard hair tubes. Chicago experienced an extremely hot, humid and dry summer that year. However, the zoo took no action since it has been shown the algae does not negatively affect the bears in any way. The staff believed that exposing the bears to chlorine or bleach would be more harmful than letting the algae run its course. Previously, in February 2004, two polar bears in the Singapore Zoo turned green due to algae growth. A zoo spokesman said that the algae had formed as a result of Singapore's hot and humid conditions. The bears were washed in a peroxide blonde solution to restore their expected colour. A similar algae grew in the hair of three polar bears at San Diego Zoo in the summer of 1980. They were cured by washing the algae away in a salt solution. In July 2003, the fur of Pelusa, a female polar bear in Argentina's Mendozas Zoo, turned purple for about a month. Drugs given in order to treat a skin infection caused the temporary side effect. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/3094259.stm
Polar bears are excellent swimmers and can often be seen in open waters miles from land. This may be a sign that they have begun aquatic adaptations to better catch their prey, although recent evidence indicates that they may be drowning in the open sea because global warming is melting the ice shelves that previously made up their homes.http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-1938132,00.html They also hunt very efficiently on land due to their prodigious speed; they are more than capable of outrunning a human. Still, caribou and musk oxen easily outrun a polar bear, and polar bears overheat quickly; thus the polar bear subsists almost totally on seals and on walrus calves or adult carcasses.
As a carnivore feeding largely upon fish-eating carnivores, the Polar Bear ingests large amounts of Vitamin A, which is stored in its liver; in the past, humans have been poisoned by eating Polar Bear liver. Although largely carnivorous, they will also feed on carrion (e.g. beached whales) and also eat some vegetable matter, mainly berries and roots in the late summer, as well as kelp.
Polar bears are aggressive, curious, and extremely dangerous to humans. A polar bear should never be approached and if one is spotted, it is best to retreat slowly on foot, preferably to indoors, or move away in a vehicle.
Regrettably, like other species of bear, they have developed a liking for garbage; the dump in Churchill, Manitoba is frequently scavenged by Polar Bears, who have been observed eating (among other things) grease and motor oil.Ed Struzik. "Nanook: In the tracks of the great wanderer" (1987). Equinox 6 (1): 18–30.
Polar bears mate in the spring; pairing is temporary, only lasting for the mating with no permanent bond between males and females. The gestation period is 240 days (8 months), with the cubs born in early winter in a cave dug in October by the mother in deep snow. Usually, two cubs are born, less often one or three; litters of four cubs have been recorded. As with other Ursus bears, the cubs are very small at birth, typically 30 cm long and weighing 700 g. The cubs are born nearly helpless and blind, opening their eyes at about one month old, able to walk at 1.5 months, and start eating solid food at 4-5 months. They remain with their mother, learning how to hunt and protect themselves against adult males (which have been known to cannibalize cubs), until 10 months old. Females nurse their young for up to two and a half years on milk that contains approximately 33% fat, higher than that of any other species of bear and comparable to that of marine mammals.http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/species/polarbear/nat-hist.html Sexual maturity is reached at 3-4 years. Adult polar bears are known to live to over 30 years. Polar bears do not hibernate, though the lactating females will not emerge from their cave while the cubs are very young. The mother will not have eaten for nine months, thus relying on stored body fat also known as blubber for both her own nutrition and that of the cubs.
One of the largest polar bear denning sites is located in Wapusk National Park on the coast of Hudson Bay in Canada.
Arctic land animals | Bears | Endangered species | Marine mammals | Fauna of Russia | Fauna of Finland | Fauna of Iceland | Fauna of Greenland | Fauna of Northern Canada | Fauna of Alaska | Fauna of Ontario | Fauna of Manitoba | Fauna of Newfoundland and Labrador
Pe̍h-hîm | Бяла мечка | Medvěd lední | Isbjørn | Eisbär | Ursus maritimus | Blanka urso | Ours blanc | 북극곰 | Polarni medvjed | Beruang kutub | Ísbjörn | Ursus maritimus | דוב הקוטב | Ursus maritimus | Baltasis lokys | Iesbeer | Beruang Polar | IJsbeer | ホッキョクグマ | Isbjørn | Isbjørn | Niedźwiedź polarny | Urso-polar | Urs polar | Белый медведь | Polar bear | Severni medved | Поларни медвед | Jääkarhu | Isbjörn | Gấu trắng Bắc Cực | Kutup ayısı | 北極熊
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