Grizzly bears in Alaska and
Canada are moving north as their environment warms, bringing them into contact
with polar bears located on the coastline
Wednesday 18 May
201618.19 BST
Last modified on Wednesday 18 May 201621.43 BST
Climate
change is known for swelling the oceans and fueling extreme
weather, but it may be also causing the curious emergence of a new type of bear
in the Arctic.
A bear shot in the frigid expanse
of northern Canada is
believed to be a grizzly-polar bear hybrid, a consequence of the increasing
interactions between the two imposing bear species.
Hunter Didji Ishalook originally
thought he’d shot a small polar bear but he said it was a “half-breed” – a
position backed by several bear experts. The bear was shot near the small
community of Arviat, located on the Hudson Bay within Canada’s Arctic region.
“It looks like a polar bear but
it’s got brown paws and big claws like a grizzly,” Ishalook said. “And the
shape of a grizzly head.”
Sightings of this hybrid species
– which has been dubbed either a “grolar bear” or a “pizzly bear” – have become
more common in recent years as the Arctic has warmed at
twice the rate of the global average.
Grizzly bears found in Alaska and
Canada appear to be moving north as their environment warms, bringing them into
contact with polar bears located on the coastline.
Polar bears are spending more
time on land as Arctic ice diminishes, causing them to lose body
weight and decline
in numbers as they are unable to hunt for favored prey such as
seals.
“The combination of warmer
temperatures and vegetation growth means there is more overlap between the
species and I’d expect that overlap to increase,” Chris Servheen, a grizzly
bear expert at the University of Montana, told the Guardian.
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