| The “Pizzly” Bear
by Bill
Davis, Adventure Center
Although
the recent discovery of a hybrid grizzly bear & polar bear (“Pizzly”
bear) appears strange and bizarre, it brings attention to a bigger and
more serious issue.
Scientists have documented signs of
escalating temperatures as well as changes in the atmosphere and sea
currents in the
Arctic
, leading some to believe these trends may result in the
Arctic Ocean
being ice-free within a hundred years.
Although this may appear to be a
catastrophists view, there is no arguing the
Polar Regions
are in trouble – and this means we’re all in trouble. Even small
increments of increasing polar temperatures can affect global atmospheric
and oceanographic temperatures. These complex dynamics are partly affected
by Arctic sea ice – and the sea ice is disappearing at an alarming rate!
Minute increases in temperatures of the
Polar Regions
can play a critical role in delineating habitat for the Earths flora and
fauna. According to the IUCN, the polar bear has been moved from the
previously classified “conservation dependent” into the
“threatened” category, making it “one of the most notable casualties
of global warming”. The change in status has been directly correlated to
loss of habitat caused by melting Arctic ice floes that allow polar bears
to migrate and hunt for seals. The IUCN is projecting a 30-percent decline
of the species over the next 45 years.
As some habitats shrink, others grow and
shift, possibly allowing different habitats to merge. Although the exact
cause and/or reason for the hybrid bear is still being considered, it is
obvious the habitat of the two animals have overlapped somewhere.
It is a reasonable to argue the status of
the polar bear could be a global barometer for changes to our Earth.
Therefore, it is crucial more studies on polar climate and sea ice are
considered.
Polar tour operator, Peregrine Adventures
represented in the
USA
by Adventure Center, has been extremely effective in educating and
developing an awareness/fund-raising program of the vulnerable
Polar Regions
with their passengers. In fact they have raised more than $400,000.00 in
the last few years supporting the symbol of the Southern Ocean – the
albatross, whose numbers are drastically decreasing.
Peregrine is now planning to get involved
in the northern hemisphere where it operates two ships.
They operate one ship in the Canadian Arctic and
West Greenland
while their other vessel operates in
Svalbard
waters and
East Greenland
.
Peregrine’s theme will be “Protect Our
Poles”, and if their campaign and fund-raising prowess proves as
successful in the
Arctic
as in
Antarctica
, the chances of seeing another “pizzly” bear may be significantly
reduced in the future. |