Polar Bears Drowing Because of Melting Ice |
| Written by spacetravel.org | |||
| Monday, 26 December 2005 22:57 | |||
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In one month, four bear carcases were found floating in a single patch of sea off the north coast of Alaska, where average summer temperatures have increased by 2-3C degrees since the 1950s. The scientists believe that such drownings are becoming widespread across the Arctic, as the proportion of polar bears having to swim in open seas has doubled in the past 20 years. The population of polar bears in Hudson Bay, Canada, fell from 1,194 in 1987 to 935 last year, a 22 per cent decrease. Polar bears are now roaming further south, rummaging in the dustbins of Canadian homes. Field researchers working for the World Wildlife Fund in Yakutia, on the northeast coast of Russia, has also found the regions first evidence of cannibalism among bears competing for food supplies.
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