June 19, 2009 Friday
Updated

June 19, 2009
Polar bear numbers declining
Officials say the drop among the Chukchi and Bering bears is likely steeper than for those in the Beaufort, due to a more dramatic melt of sea ice. -- PHOTO: AP

ANCHORAGE - POLAR bear populations in and around Alaska are declining due to continued melting of sea ice and Russian poaching, according to reports released on Thursday by the US Fish and Wildlife Service.

Fewer polar bears have survived in the southern Beaufort Sea, which extends from northern Alaska to parts of Canada, and in the Chukchi and Bering Seas between north-western Alaska and Russia, the agency's draft population assessments show.

Officials say the drop among the Chukchi and Bering bears is likely steeper than for those in the Beaufort, due to a more dramatic melt of sea ice - which the bears need to travel and forage for food - and an illegal Russian hunt believed to be killing 150 to 250 bears a year.

The assessments, though incomplete, are disturbing, said an attorney with the Centre for Biological Diversity, which petitioned and later sued the federal government to add polar bears and walruses to the US Endangered Species Act list.

'That information, when you look at it, paints a pretty grim picture for the species,' attorney Brendan Cummings said.

The United States officially recognised polar bears as an endangered species last year as a result of the warming Arctic climate, which has wiped out much of the summer sea ice critical to the animals' survival.

Russian poaching, believed to be spurred by a market for bear hides, represents what the Fish and Wildlife Service describes as a potential compounding threat to the population, said Bruce Woods, the agency's spokesman in Alaska.

'Of course, since it's illegal hunting, it's very difficult to quantify,' Mr Woods said.

There was an estimated 0.3 per cent annual decline in the polar bear population in the southern Beaufort Sea between 2001 and 2007, with the total numbers likely hovering between 1,397 and 1,526 animals, according to the draft assessments. -- REUTERS

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