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Have you ever wondered how polar bears survived the
ice ages? Yes, ice ages! The question arises because scientists have
found that when spring conditions are more than usually icy, fewer
ringed seal pups—the bears' favorite food—are born. With less food
available for the mother bears, fewer bear cubs are born and survive.
You might also ask: How did the ice-loving polar bears survive periods much
warmer than we are currently experiencing—times when there was little
or no ice around the Arctic basin and Hudson Bay area? The most recent
such period occurred between 6,000 and 9,000 years ago and it was even
warmer between 110,000 and 130,000 years ago.
The
bears not only survived these periods of dramatically different climate
and environment, but provided an invaluable source of food, clothing,
and raw materials for tools and trade goods for peoples living in the
Arctic regions. In more recent times, during the 1950s and 1960s in
particular, hunting with the help of modern technology and in excess of
subsistence requirements reduced the population to perhaps as few as
5,000 bears. As their survival as a distinct species for as long as
250,000 years suggests, however, polar bears are robust. Once hunting
restrictions were enforced the population grew quickly and there are
now estimated to be as many as 27,000 bears; enough of them to pose a
danger to Alaskan townsfolk.
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