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The '''polar bear (''Ursus maritimus'')''' is a large [[bear]] native to the [[Arctic]] and surrounding areas. Its range includes the nations of Canada, Denmark ([[Greenland]]), the United States ([[Alaska]]), Russia and Norway ([[Svalbard]]). It is closely related to the [[brown bear]] and the two species can [[Grizzly–polar bear hybrid|interbreed]] and have so in the last hundreds of thousands of years. The polar bear is the largest species of bear, an adult male is {{convert|200|–|250|cm|ft|abbr=on}} long and weighs {{convert|300|–|800|kg|abbr=on}}. Adult females are much smaller and the species is [[sexual dimorphism|sexual dimorphic]]. The polar bear is white or yellowish-furred with black skin and a thick layer of fat. It is more slenderly built than the brown bear, with a narrower skull, longer neck and lower shoulder hump. Its teeth are sharper and more adapted to cutting meat.
The '''polar bear''' ('''''Ursus maritimus''''') is a [[hypercarnivore|hypercarnivorous]] [[species]] of [[bear]]. Its [[species distribution|native range]] lies largely within the [[Arctic Circle]], encompassing the [[Arctic Ocean]] and its surrounding seas and landmasses, which includes the northernmost regions of [[North America]] and [[Eurasia]]. It is the largest [[extant taxon|extant]] bear species, as well as the largest extant land carnivore.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://defenders.org/polar-bear/basic-facts |title=Basic Facts About Polar Bears |date=24 February 2012 |website=Defenders of Wildlife |access-date=13 June 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.fws.gov/endangered/esa-library/pdf/polar_bear.pdf |title=Polar bear, (''Ursus maritimus'') |publisher=United States Fish and Wildlife service |access-date=9 September 2009 |quote=Appearance. The polar bear is the largest member of the bear family, with the exception of Alaska's [[Kodiak bear]]s, which equal polar bears in size. |archive-date=11 July 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080711033807/http://www.fws.gov/endangered/factsheets/polar_bear.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> A boar (adult male) weighs around {{cvt|350|–|700|kg|lb}},<ref name="Animal">{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/animals00dkpu_0 |title=Animal |publisher=[[DK (publisher)|DK]] |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-7894-7764-4 |location=New York City |url-access=registration}}</ref> while a sow (adult female) is about half that size. Although it is the [[sister species]] of the [[brown bear]],<ref name="MSW3">{{MSW3 Carnivora |id=14000987 |page=589}}</ref> it has evolved to occupy a narrower [[ecological niche]], with many body characteristics adapted for cold temperatures, for moving across snow, ice and open water, and for hunting [[Pinniped|seals]], which make up most of its diet.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ursus_maritimus.html |title=''Ursus Maritimus'' |access-date=27 October 2007 |last=Gunderson |first=Aren |year=2007 |website=Animal Diversity Web |publisher=University of Michigan Museum of Zoology |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071024174536/http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ursus_maritimus.html |archive-date=24 October 2007 }}</ref> Although most polar bears are born on land, they spend most of their time on the [[sea ice]]. Their scientific name means "[[sea|maritime]] bear" and derives from this fact. Polar bears hunt their preferred food of seals from the edge of sea ice, often living off fat reserves when no sea ice is present. Because of their dependence on the sea ice, polar bears are classified as [[marine mammal]]s.<ref name="StirlingGuravich1998">{{cite book|last1=Stirling|first1=Ian|last2=Guravich|first2=Dan|title=Polar Bears|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ViOiGWPQRjIC|year=1998|publisher=University of Michigan Press|isbn=978-0-472-08108-0|page=191}}</ref>


Polar bears are both terrestrial and [[Pagophily|pagophilic]] (ice-living) and are considered to be [[marine mammal]]s due to their dependence on [[marine ecosystem]]s. They prefer the annual [[sea ice]], but travel onto land when the ice melts in the summer. They are mostly [[carnivorous]] and specialized for preying on ice-living [[pinniped|seals]], particularly [[ringed seal]]s and [[bearded seal]]s. Such prey is typically taken by ambush; the bear may stalk its prey on the ice or in the water, but also will stay at a breathing hole or ice edge to wait for prey to swim by. The bear primary feed on the seal's energy-rich [[blubber]]. Other food items include [[walrus]]es, [[beluga whale]]s and some terrestrial foods. Polar bears are usually solitary with large [[home range]]s but can be found in aggregations when on land. During the breeding season, male bears guard females and defend them from rivals. Mothers give birth to cubs in a maternity den during the winter, which is also when they [[hibernate]]. Young stay with their mother for up to to two-and-a-half years.
Because of expected [[habitat loss]] caused by [[climate change]], the polar bear is classified as a [[vulnerable species]]. For decades, large-scale hunting raised international concern for the future of the species, but populations rebounded after controls and quotas began to take effect.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/about-polar-bears/what-scientists-say/why-polar-bear-hunting-allowed|title=Why is polar bear hunting allowed?|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150708181817/http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/about-polar-bears/what-scientists-say/why-polar-bear-hunting-allowed|archive-date=8 July 2015|last=Amstrup|first=Steven C.|author-link=Steven Amstrup|access-date=8 July 2015}}</ref> For thousands of years, the polar bear has been a key figure in the material, spiritual, and cultural life of [[circumpolar peoples]], and polar bears remain important in their cultures. Historically, the polar bear has also been known as the "white bear".<ref>{{cite encyclopedia | title =Definition of 'white bear' | encyclopedia =Collins English Dictionary | publisher =HarperCollins Publishers LLC | location =Glasgow, Scotland | url =https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/white-bear | access-date =21 October 2017 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20171015202910/https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/white-bear | archive-date =15 October 2017 | url-status =live }}</ref> It is sometimes referred to as the "nanook", based on the [[Inuit languages|Inuit]] term ''nanuq''.<ref name=":1"/>


The polar bear is considered to be a [[vulnerable species]] by the [[International Union for Conservation of Nature]] (IUCN). Its biggest threats are [[climate change]], pollution and oil/gas development. Climate change threatens the bear's habitat on the sea ice and access to its favoured prey, leading to malnutrition or starvation. Less sea ice also means that the bears must spend more time on land, increasing conflicts with people. Polar bears have been hunted, both by [[Circumpolar peoples|indigenous peoples of the Arctic]] and Europeans, for their coats, meat and other items. They have been kept in captivity in [[zoo]]s and [[circus]]es. Polar bears are prevalent have been featured in art, folklore, religion and modern culture.
==Naming and etymology==
[[Constantine Phipps, 2nd Baron Mulgrave|Constantine John Phipps]] was the first to describe the polar bear as a distinct species in 1774 in his report about his [[1773 Phipps expedition towards the North Pole|1773 expedition towards the North Pole]].<ref name="Phipps1774">{{cite book |last=Phipps |first=John |author-link=Constantine John Phipps |title=A voyage towards the North Pole undertaken by His Majesty's command, 1773 |location=London |publisher=W. Bowyer and J. Nicols, for J. Nourse |year=1774 |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/628763 |page=185 |access-date=13 January 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170707094547/http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/628763 |archive-date=7 July 2017 |url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="iucn status 19 November 2021" /> He chose the [[scientific name]] ''Ursus maritimus'', the [[Latin]] for "maritime bear",<ref name="LatDic">{{cite book |last=Kidd |first=D.A. |year=1973 |title=Collins Latin Gem Dictionary |publisher=Collins |location=London |isbn=978-0-00-458641-0}}</ref> due to the animal's native habitat. The [[Inuit]] refer to the animal as ''[[nanook]]'' ([[transliteration|transliterated]] as {{lang|ik|nanuq}} in the [[Inupiat language]]).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.marinemammalcenter.org/learning/education/mammalinfo/polarbear.asp|title=Education: Marine Mammal Information: Polar Bears|last=<!-- no byline provided, presumed 'staff' -->|date=February 2006|publisher=The Marine Mammal Center|quote=The Inuit name for the polar bear is nanook.|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090604063108/http://www.marinemammalcenter.org/learning/education/mammalinfo/polarbear.asp|archive-date=4 June 2009}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{cite web|url=http://www.thearcticsounder.com/news/show/1309|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081217021542/http://www.thearcticsounder.com/news/show/1309|website=The Arctic Sounder|title=Alaska, Chukotka sign agreement to manage polar bears|last=Ben-Yosef|first=Tamar|date=1 February 2008|archive-date=17 December 2008|access-date=4 September 2020}}</ref> The [[Yupik peoples|Yupik]] also refer to the bear as {{lang|ess|nanuuk}} in [[Siberian Yupik language|Siberian Yupik]].<ref>Hall, Sam (1988) ''[[iarchive:fourthworldherit00hall/page/29/mode/2up|The fourth world: the heritage of the Arctic and its destruction]]'', Vintage Books, {{ISBN|0394559428}}, pp. 29, 232.</ref> In the [[Chukotko-Kamchatkan languages]] of [[Alyutor language|Alyutor]] and [[Koryak language|Koryak]], the name of the polar bear is {{lang|kpy|umqa}}, while in the related [[Chukchi language|Chukchi]], it is {{lang|ckt|umqə}}.<ref>{{cite book |last=Fortescue |first=Michael |editor-last1=Bisang |editor-first1=Walter |editor-last2=Hock |editor-first2=Hans Henrich |editor-last3=Winter |editor-first3=Werner |title=Comparative Chukotko-Kamchatkan Dictionary |chapter=Proto-Chukotian and Proto-Chukotko-Kamchatkan stems |year=2005 | series=Trends in Linguistics. Documentation |publisher=Mouton de Gruyter |isbn=3-11-018417-6 |doi=10.1515/9783110925388 |page=307}}</ref> In Russian, it is usually called {{lang|ru|бе́лый медве́дь}} ({{lang|ru-Latn|bély medvéd'}}, 'white bear'), though an older word still in use is {{lang|ru|ошку́й}} ({{lang|ru-Latn|Oshkúj}}, which comes from the [[Komi language|Komi]] {{lang|kv|oski}}, "bear").<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nicomant.fils.us.edu.pl/jrn/2000/j12/pril/etim-zv.html|title=Этимологический Словарь: ДИКИЕ ЗВЕРИ|last=<!-- no byline provided -->|date=<!-- no source date provided -->|publisher=Science Research Center of Linguopsychology (NICOMANT)|at=ОШКУЙ|trans-title=Etymological Dictionary: Wild Animals<!--via Google Translate-->|access-date=20 March 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080504040221/http://www.nicomant.fils.us.edu.pl/jrn/2000/j12/pril/etim-zv.html|archive-date=4 May 2008}}</ref> In [[Quebec]], the polar bear is referred to by the [[French language|french]] terms {{lang|fr|ours blanc}} ('white bear') or {{lang|fr|ours polaire}} ('polar bear').<ref>.{{cite web|url=http://grandquebec.com/faune-quebecoise/ours-polaire |title=Ours polaire |website=Grand Quebec |date=6 May 2008 |access-date=20 March 2011|language=fr|trans-title=Polar bear}}</ref> In [[Norwegian language|Norwegian]], one of the primary languages of the [[Svalbard]] archipelago,<ref>{{cite web |work=[[The World Factbook]] |title=Svalbard |access-date=13 December 2022 |url=https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/svalbard/}}</ref> the polar bear is referred to as {{lang|no|isbjørn}} ('ice bear') or {{lang|no|kvitbjørn}} ('white bear').<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |editor-last=Brøgger |editor-first=Waldemar |year=1983 |title=Cappelens leksikon |edition=4 |publisher=J.W. Cappelens Forlag |isbn=82-02-04965-2 |page=192}}</ref>


==Naming==
The polar bear was previously considered to be in its own [[genus]], ''Thalarctos''.<ref name="Liddell 1980">This combines the [[Ancient Greek]] words ''thalassa''/θαλασσα 'sea', and ''arctos''/αρκτος 'bear' and also, with reference to [[Ursa Major]], 'northern' or 'of the north pole' {{cite book |author=Liddell, Henry George |url=https://archive.org/details/alexiconabridge00whitgoog/mode/2up |title=A Greek-English Lexicon |title-link= |author2=Robert Scott |publisher=[[Oxford University Press]] |year=1980 |isbn=978-0-19-910207-5 |edition=Abridged |location=United Kingdom |author-link=Henry George Liddell |author2-link=Robert Scott (philologist) |name-list-style=amp}}</ref> However, evidence of hybrids between [[Ursid hybrid|polar bears and brown bears]], and of the recent evolutionary divergence of the two species, does not support the establishment of this separate genus, and the accepted scientific name is now therefore ''Ursus maritimus'', as Phipps originally proposed.<ref name="iucn status 19 November 2021" />
The polar bear was given its common name by [[Thomas Pennant]] in ''A Synopsis of Quadrupeds'' (1771). It was historically known as the "white bear" in Europe between the 13th and 18th centuries as well as "ice bear", "sea bear" and "[[Greenland]] bear".{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=13, 68–69, 253}} The scientific name ''Ursus maritimus'' is [[Latin]] for "bear" and "maritime" or "sea bear".{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|p=48}}{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=1}} The bear is called ''nanook'' by the [[Inuit]], and those of the [[Netsilik]] cultures have names for different bears based on factors such as sex and age: these include adult males (''anguraq''), single adult females (''tattaq''), gestating females (''arnaluk''), newborns (''hagliaqtug''), large adolescents (''namiaq'') and denning bears (''apitiliit'').{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=68, 122}}


==Taxonomy and evolution==
==Taxonomy==
[[Carl Linnaeus]] classified the polar bear as a type of [[brown bear]] (''Ursus arctos''), labeling it as ''Ursus maritimus albus-major, articus'' in his [[10th edition of Systema Naturae|1758 edition]] of his work ''[[Systema Naturae]]''.{{sfn|Fee|2019|p=48}} [[Constantine John Phipps]] formally described the polar bear as a distinct species, ''Ursus maritimus'' in 1774, following his [[1773 Phipps expedition towards the North Pole|1773 voyage towards the North Pole]].{{sfn|Fee|2019|p=41}} Due to its adaptations to a marine environment, some have placed the polar bear in its own genus ''Thalarctos''.{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=67}} However ''Ursus'' is widely considered to be the valid genus for the species based on the fossil record and the fact that it is interfertile with the brown bear.{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=67}}<ref name="ReferenceC"/>
[[File:Polarbearonice.jpg|thumb|Polar bears have evolved adaptations for Arctic life. For example, large furry feet and short, sharp, stocky claws give them good traction on ice.]]
The bear [[family (biology)|family]], [[Ursidae]], is thought to have split from other carnivorans about 38&nbsp;million years ago.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Nakagome|first1=Shigeki|title=Unequal Rates of Y Chromosome Gene Divergence during Speciation of the Family Ursidae|journal=Molecular Biology and Evolution|date=2008|volume=25|issue=7|pages=1344–1356|doi=10.1093/molbev/msn086|display-authors=etal|pmid=18400788|doi-access=free}}</ref> The subfamily [[Ursinae]] originated approximately 4.2&nbsp;million years ago.<ref>{{cite journal|pmid=2072860|year=1991|last1=Wayne|first1=R. K.|title=Molecular distance and divergence time in carnivores and primates|journal=Molecular Biology and Evolution|volume=8|issue=3|pages=297–319|last2=Van Valkenburgh|first2=B.|last3=O'Brien|first3=S. J.|doi=10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a040651|doi-access=free}}</ref> The oldest known polar bear [[fossil]] is a 130,000 to 110,000-year-old jaw bone, found on [[Prince Charles Foreland]] in 2004.<ref name="Lindqvist">{{cite journal|doi=10.1073/pnas.0914266107|pmid=20194737|pmc=2841953 |title=Complete mitochondrial genome of a Pleistocene jawbone unveils the origin of polar bear |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |volume=107 |issue=11 |pages=5053–7 |year=2010 |last1=Lindqvist |first1=C. |last2=Schuster |first2=S. C. |last3=Sun |first3=Y. |last4=Talbot |first4=S. L. |last5=Qi |first5=J. |last6=Ratan |first6=A. |last7=Tomsho |first7=L. P. |last8=Kasson |first8=L. |last9=Zeyl |first9=E. |last10=Aars |first10=J. |last11=Miller |first11=W. |last12=Ingolfsson |first12=O. |last13=Bachmann |first13=L. |last14=Wiig |first14=O. |bibcode=2010PNAS..107.5053L|doi-access=free}}</ref> Fossils show that between 10,000 and 20,000 years ago, the polar bear's [[molar (tooth)|molar teeth]] changed significantly from those of the brown bear.<ref name="ReferenceC">{{cite journal|last1=Kurtén|first1=B|title=The evolution of the polar bear, ''Ursus maritimus'' Phipps|journal=Acta Zoologica Fennica|date=1964|volume=108|pages=1–30|url=https://helda.helsinki.fi/handle/10138/37762}}</ref> Polar bears are thought to have diverged from a population of brown bears that became isolated during a period of glaciation in the [[Pleistocene]]<ref name="DeMaster1981"/> from the eastern part of [[Siberia]] (from [[Kamchatka]] and the Kolym Peninsula).<ref name="ReferenceC"/>


Different [[subspecies]] have been proposed including ''Ursus maritimus maritimus'' (Phipps in 1774), ''U. m. marinus'' ([[Peter Simon Pallas|Pallas]] 1776).<ref name="Wilson1976">{{cite journal|last1=Wilson|first1=Don E.|title=Cranial variation in polar bears|journal=Bears: Their Biology and Management|date=1976|volume=3|pages=447–453|doi=10.2307/3872793|jstor=3872793|url=http://www.bearbiology.com/fileadmin/tpl/Downloads/URSUS/Vol_3/Wilson_Vol_3.pdf}}</ref> However these are not widely supported and the polar bear is offically considered to be [[monotypic taxon|monotypic]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://www.marinemammalscience.org/species-information/list-of-marine-mammal-species-subspecies/|title=List of Marine Mammal Species & Subspecies|author=Committee on Taxonomy|date=October 2014|publisher=The Society for Marine Mammalogy|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150106152733/https://www.marinemammalscience.org/species-information/list-of-marine-mammal-species-subspecies/|archive-date=6 January 2015}}</ref> One alleged fossil subspecies has been identified: ''[[Ursus maritimus tyrannus]]'', which was significantly larger than the living polar bear.<ref name="ReferenceC"/> However, it may in fact be a large brown bear.<ref name=Harington>{{cite journal|last=Harington|first=C. R.|year=2008|title=The evolution of Arctic marine mammals|journal=Ecological Adapations|volume=18|issue=sp2|pages=S23-S40|doi=10.1890/06-0624.1}}</ref>
The evidence from DNA analysis is more complex. The [[mitochondrial DNA]] (mtDNA) of the polar bear diverged from the brown bear, ''Ursus arctos'', roughly 150,000 years ago.<ref name="Lindqvist"/> Further, some [[clade]]s of brown bear, as assessed by their mtDNA, were thought to be more closely related to polar bears than to other brown bears,<ref name="Waits">{{cite journal |doi=10.1111/j.1523-1739.1998.96351.x|jstor=2387511 |title=Mitochondrial DNA Phylogeography of the North American Brown Bear and Implications for Conservation |journal=Conservation Biology |volume=12 |issue=2 |pages=408–417 |year=2008 |last1=Waits |first1=L. P. |last2=Talbot |first2=S. L. |last3=Ward |first3=R. H. |last4=Shields |first4=G. F.|s2cid=86172292 }}</ref> meaning that the brown bear might not be considered a species under some [[species concepts]], but [[Paraphyly|paraphyletic]].<ref>{{cite journal|last=Marris|first=E.|author-link=Emma Marris|date=15 March 2007|title=Linnaeus at 300: The species and the specious|journal=Nature|volume=446|issue=7133|pages=250–253|doi=10.1038/446250a|pmid=17361153|bibcode=2007Natur.446..250M|s2cid=4420048}}</ref> The mtDNA of extinct Irish brown bears is particularly close to polar bears.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/j.cub.2011.05.058 |pmid=21737280 |pmc=4677796 |title=Ancient Hybridization and an Irish Origin for the Modern Polar Bear Matriline |journal=Current Biology |volume=21 |issue=15 |pages=1251–8 |year=2011 |last1=Edwards |first1=C. J. |last2=Suchard |first2=M. A. |last3=Lemey |first3=P. |last4=Welch |first4=J. J. |last5=Barnes |first5=I. |last6=Fulton |first6=T. L. |last7=Barnett |first7=R. |last8=O'Connell |first8=T. C. |last9=Coxon |first9=P. |last10=Monaghan |first10=N. |last11=Valdiosera |first11=C. E. |last12=Lorenzen |first12=E. D. |last13=Willerslev |first13=E. |last14=Baryshnikov |first14=G. F. |last15=Rambaut |first15=A. |last16=Thomas |first16=M. G. |last17=Bradley |first17=D. G. |last18=Shapiro |first18=B. }}</ref> A comparison of the [[nuclear genome]] of polar bears with that of brown bears revealed a different pattern, the two forming genetically distinct clades that diverged approximately 603,000 years ago,<ref name="Hailer">{{cite journal |doi=10.1126/science.1216424 |pmid=22517859 |title=Nuclear Genomic Sequences Reveal that Polar Bears Are an Old and Distinct Bear Lineage |journal=Science |volume=336 |issue=6079 |pages=344–7 |year=2012 |last1=Hailer |first1=F. |last2=Kutschera |first2=V. E. |last3=Hallstrom |first3=B. M. |last4=Klassert |first4=D. |last5=Fain |first5=S. R. |last6=Leonard |first6=J. A. |last7=Arnason |first7=U. |last8=Janke |first8=A. |bibcode=2012Sci...336..344H|hdl=10261/58578 |s2cid=12671275 |url=https://digital.csic.es/bitstream/10261/58578/1/science.pdf |hdl-access=free }}</ref> although the latest research is based on analysis of the complete genomes (rather than just the mitochondria or partial nuclear genomes) of polar and brown bears, and establishes the divergence of polar and brown bears at 400,000 years ago.<ref name="Liu et al 2014">{{cite journal|last1=Liu|first1=Shiping|last2=Lorenzen|first2=Eline D.|last3=Fumagalli|first3=Matteo|last4=Li|first4=Bo|last5=Harris|first5=Kelley|last6=Xiong|first6=Zijun|last7=Zhou|first7=Long|last8=Korneliussen|first8=Thorfinn Sand|last9=Somel|first9=Mehmet|last10=Babbitt|first10=Courtney|last11=Wray|first11=Greg|last12=Li|first12=Jianwen|last13=He|first13=Weiming|last14=Wang|first14=Zhuo|last15=Fu|first15=Wenjing|last16=Xiang|first16=Xueyan|last17=Morgan|first17=Claire C.|last18=Doherty|first18=Aoife|last19=O'Connell|first19=Mary J.|last20=McInerney|first20=James O.|last21=Born|first21=Erik W.|last22=Dalén|first22=Love|last23=Dietz|first23=Rune|last24=Orlando|first24=Ludovic|last25=Sonne|first25=Christian|last26=Zhang|first26=Guojie|last27=Nielsen|first27=Rasmus|last28=Willerslev|first28=Eske|last29=Wang|first29=Jun|title=Population Genomics Reveal Recent Speciation and Rapid Evolutionary Adaptation in Polar Bears|journal=Cell|date=2014|volume=157|issue=4|pages=785–794|doi=10.1016/j.cell.2014.03.054|url= |pmid=24813606|pmc=4089990}}</ref>


===Evolution===
However, the two species have mated intermittently for all that time, most likely coming into contact with each other during warming periods, when polar bears were driven onto land and brown bears migrated northward. Most brown bears have about 2 percent genetic material from polar bears, but one population, the [[ABC Islands bear]]s, has between 5 percent and 10 percent polar bear genes, indicating more frequent and recent mating.<ref name="NewYorkTimes">{{cite news |author=Gorman J|date=23 July 2012|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/24/science/brown-bears-and-polar-bears-split-up-but-continued-coupling.html |title=Brown bears and polar bears split up, but continued coupling|work=The New York Times |access-date=24 July 2012}}</ref> Polar bears can breed with brown bears to produce fertile [[grizzly–polar bear hybrid]]s;<ref name="DeMaster1981">{{cite journal |last1=DeMaster |first1=Douglas P. |last2=Stirling |first2=Ian |author2-link=Ian Stirling (biologist) |date=8 May 1981 |title= ''Ursus maritimus''|jstor=3503828 |journal=Mammalian Species |pages=1–7 |doi=10.2307/3503828 |oclc=46381503 |issue=145 |doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name="Schliebe 2006">{{cite book |last1=Schliebe |first1=Scott |last2=Evans |first2=Thomas |last3=Johnson |first3=Kurt |last4=Roy |first4=Michael |last5=Miller |first5=Susanne |last6=Hamilton |first6=Charles |last7=Meehan |first7=Rosa |last8=Jahrsdoerfer |first8=Sonja |date=21 December 2006 |title=Range-wide status review of the polar bear (''Ursus maritimus'') |place=Anchorage, Alaska |publisher=[[United States Fish and Wildlife Service]] |url=http://www.fws.gov/alaska/fisheries/mmm/polarbear/pdf/Polar_Bear_%20Status_Assessment.pdf |access-date=29 December 2015 |archive-date=4 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304120714/http://www.fws.gov/alaska/fisheries/mmm/polarbear/pdf/Polar_Bear_%20Status_Assessment.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> rather than indicating that they have only recently diverged, the new evidence suggests more frequent mating has continued over a longer period of time, and thus the two bears remain genetically similar.<ref name="NewYorkTimes"/> However, because neither species can survive long in the other's ecological niche, and because they have different [[morphology (biology)|morphology]], [[metabolism]], social and feeding behaviours, and other [[phenotype|phenotypic]] characteristics, the two bears are generally classified as separate species.<ref name="first">{{cite book |last=Stirling |first=Ian |year=1988 |title=Polar Bears |location=Ann Arbor |publisher=University of Michigan Press |isbn=978-0-472-10100-9 |chapter=The First Polar Bears |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/polarbears00stir }}</ref>
The polar bear is one of eight species in the [[bear]] family Ursidae and of six species in the subfamily [[Ursinae]]. Ursine bears may have originated around 5 million years ago and show extensive [[hybridization]] of species in their lineage. The following cladogram is based on a genetic study by Kumar and collages (2017):<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Kumar|first1=V|last2=Lammers|first2=F|last3=Bidon|first3=T|last4=Pfenninger|first4=M|last5=Kolter|first5=L|last6=Nilsson|first6=M. A.|last7=Janke|first7=A|year=2017|title=The evolutionary history of bears is characterized by gene flow across species|journal=scientific reports|volume=7|page=46487|doi=10.1038/srep46487}}</ref>

When the polar bear was originally documented, two [[subspecies]] were identified: the American polar bear (''Ursus maritimus maritimus'') by Constantine J. Phipps in 1774, and the Siberian polar bear (''Ursus maritimus marinus'') by [[Peter Simon Pallas]] in 1776.<ref>{{cite book |last=Rice |first=Dale W. |year=1998 |title=Marine Mammals of the World: Systematics and Distribution |volume=4 |series=Special Publications of the Society for Marine Mammals |place=Lawrence, Kansas |publisher=The Society for Marine Mammalogy |isbn=978-1-891276-03-3}}</ref> This distinction has since been invalidated.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://www.marinemammalscience.org/species-information/list-of-marine-mammal-species-subspecies/|title=List of Marine Mammal Species & Subspecies|author=Committee on Taxonomy|date=October 2014|publisher=The Society for Marine Mammalogy|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150106152733/https://www.marinemammalscience.org/species-information/list-of-marine-mammal-species-subspecies/|archive-date=6 January 2015}}</ref><ref name="Wilson1976">{{cite journal|last1=Wilson|first1=Don E.|title=Cranial variation in polar bears|journal=Bears: Their Biology and Management|date=1976|volume=3|pages=447–453|doi=10.2307/3872793|jstor=3872793|url=http://www.bearbiology.com/fileadmin/tpl/Downloads/URSUS/Vol_3/Wilson_Vol_3.pdf|access-date=29 December 2015|archive-date=3 December 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101203100558/http://www.bearbiology.com/fileadmin/tpl/Downloads/URSUS/Vol_3/Wilson_Vol_3.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name=paetkau1999/> One alleged fossil subspecies has been identified: ''[[Ursus maritimus tyrannus]]'', which became extinct during the Pleistocene. ''U.m. tyrannus'' was significantly larger than the living subspecies.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/> However, recent reanalysis of the fossil suggests that it was actually a brown bear.<ref name="polarresearch"/>
{{clade

|label1=[[Ursidae]]
==Population and distribution==
|1={{clade
[[File:Polar bears near north pole.jpg|thumb|left|Bears investigate the submarine ''[[USS Honolulu (SSN-718)|USS Honolulu]]'' {{convert|280|mi|km|order=flip|-1}} from the [[North Pole]]|alt=Three polar bears walk across ice sheets towards a submarine that has surfaced]]
|2=[[Giant panda]] [[File:Recherches pour servir à l'histoire naturelle des mammifères (Pl. 50) (white background).jpg|70px]]
The polar bear is found in the Arctic Circle and adjacent land masses as far south as [[Newfoundland (Island)|Newfoundland]]. Due to the absence of human development in its remote habitat, it retains more of its original range than any other [[extant taxon|extant]] [[carnivore]].<ref name="derocher2004">{{cite journal|last1=Derocher|first1=Andrew E.|last2=Lunn|first2=Nicholas J.|last3=Stirling|first3=Ian|author3-link=Ian Stirling (biologist)|year=2004|title=Polar bears in a Warming Climate|journal=Integrative and Comparative Biology|volume=44|issue=2|pages=163–176|doi=10.1093/icb/44.2.163|pmid=21680496|doi-access=free}}</ref> While they are rare north of 88°, there is evidence that they range all the way across the [[Arctic]], and as far south as [[James Bay]] in Canada. Their southernmost range is near the boundary between the [[subarctic climate|subarctic]] and [[humid continental climate]] zones. They can occasionally [[drift ice|drift]] widely with the sea ice, and there have been anecdotal sightings as far south as [[Berlevåg]] on the Norwegian mainland and the [[Kuril Islands]] in the [[Sea of Okhotsk]]. It is difficult to estimate a global population of polar bears as much of the range has been poorly studied; however, biologists use a working estimate of about 20–25,000 or 22–31,000 polar bears worldwide.<ref name="iucn status 19 November 2021" /><ref name="PBI">{{citation |url=http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/bear-facts/ |title=Polar Bears and Conservation |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100210010512/http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/bear-facts |archive-date=10 February 2010 |access-date=29 December 2015 }}
|1={{clade
</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Polar bear FAQ |url=http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/faq/ |website=[[Polar Bears International]] |access-date=14 July 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090619110152/http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/faq/ |archive-date=19 June 2009 }}</ref>
|2=[[Spectacled bear]] [[File:Spectacled bear (1829).jpg|70px]]

|label1=[[Ursinae]]
With the discovery of a southeast Greenland population in 2022,<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Laidre |first1=Kristin L. |last2=Supple |first2=Megan A. |last3=Born |first3=Erik W. |last4=Regehr |first4=Eric V. |last5=Wiig |first5=Øystein |last6=Ugarte |first6=Fernando |last7=Aars |first7=Jon |last8=Dietz |first8=Rune |last9=Sonne |first9=Christian |last10=Hegelund |first10=Peter |last11=Isaksen |first11=Carl |date=2022-06-17 |title=Glacial ice supports a distinct and undocumented polar bear subpopulation persisting in late 21st-century sea-ice conditions |url=https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abk2793 |journal=Science |language=en |volume=376 |issue=6599 |pages=1333–1338 |doi=10.1126/science.abk2793 |pmid=35709290 |bibcode=2022Sci...376.1333L |s2cid=249746650 |issn=0036-8075}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Yong |first=Ed |date=2022-06-16 |title=Will These Be the Last Polar Bears on Earth? |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2022/06/greenland-polar-bear-extinction-climate-change/661300/ |access-date=2022-06-20 |website=The Atlantic |language=en}}</ref> there are 20 generally recognized, discrete subpopulations of polar bears.<ref name="PBI"/><ref name="PBSG14">[[#Aars|Aars]], pp. 33–55.</ref> The subpopulations display seasonal fidelity to particular areas, but [[DNA]] studies show that they are not reproductively isolated.<ref name="paetkau1999">{{cite journal|last2=Amstrup|first2=S. C.|last3=Born|first3=E. W.|last4=Calvert|first4=W.|last5=Derocher|first5=A. E.|last6=Garner|first6=G. W.|last7=Messier|first7=F.|last8=Stirling|first8=I.|last9=Taylor|first9=M. K.|year=1999|title=Genetic structure of the world's polar bear populations|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/15534910|format=PDF|journal=[[Mol. Ecol.|Molecular Ecology]]|volume=8|issue=10|pages=1571–1584|doi=10.1046/j.1365-294x.1999.00733.x|pmid=10583821|via=ResearchGate|last1=Paetkau|first1=D.|access-date=17 November 2007|last10=Wiig|first10=Ø.|last11=Strobeck|first11=C.|s2cid=5076223|display-authors=8}}</ref> The 14 North American subpopulations range from the [[Beaufort Sea]] south to [[Hudson Bay]] and east to eastern [[Greenland]] and account for about 54% of the global population.<ref>[http://www.iucnredlist.org/attachments/2630 Supplementary material for Ursus maritimus Red List assessment]{{Dead link|date=December 2016|fix-attempted=yes}}</ref>
|1={{clade

|2={{clade
[[File:Play fight of polar bears edit 1.avi.OGG|thumb|Bears play-fighting]]
|1=[[Asiatic black bear]] [[File:Ursus thibetanus - 1700-1880 - Print - Iconographia Zoologica - Special Collections University of Amsterdam -(white background).jpg|70px]]
The usual range includes the territory of five nations: [[Denmark]] ([[Greenland]]), [[Norway]] ([[Svalbard]]), [[Russia]], the [[United States]] ([[Alaska]]) and [[Canada]]. These five nations are the signatories of the [[International Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears]], which mandates cooperation on research and conservation efforts throughout the polar bear's range.<ref>{{cite web |title=Agreements and Conventions |work=Polar Bear Specialist Group|url=http://pbsg.npolar.no/en/agreements/agreement1973.html |access-date=12 April 2019 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161221180702/http://pbsg.npolar.no/en/agreements/agreement1973.html |archive-date=21 December 2016 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Bears sometimes swim to [[Iceland]] from Greenland—about 600 sightings since the country's settlement in the 9th century, and five in the 21st century {{asof|2016|lc=y}}—and are always killed because of their danger, as well as the cost and difficulty of repatriation.<ref name="im20160718">{{Cite web |url=https://icelandmonitor.mbl.is/news/nature_and_travel/2016/07/18/killing_polar_bears_in_iceland_only_logical_thing_t/ |title=Killing polar bears in Iceland "only logical thing to do" |date=18 July 2016 |website=Iceland Monitor |access-date=29 July 2018}}</ref>
|2={{clade

|1=[[Sloth bear]] [[File:Tremarctos ornatus 1824 (flipped).jpg|70px]]
Modern methods of tracking polar bear populations have been implemented only since the mid-1980s, and are expensive to perform consistently over a large area. The most accurate counts require flying a helicopter in the [[Climate of the Arctic|Arctic climate]] to find polar bears, shooting a tranquilizer dart at the bear to sedate it, and then tagging the bear. In [[Nunavut]], some Inuit have reported increases in bear sightings around human settlements in recent years, leading to a belief that populations are increasing. Scientists have responded by noting that hungry bears may be congregating around human settlements, leading to the illusion that populations are higher than they actually are.<ref name="campbell">{{cite news|first=Colin |last=Campbell |author2=Lunau, Kate |title=The war over the polar bear: Who's telling the truth about the fate of a Canadian icon? |url=http://polarbearalley.com/polar-bear-news/war-for-the-polar-bear/|work=Maclean's |date=25 January 2008 |access-date=30 December 2016 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080503214228/http://www.macleans.ca/science/environment/article.jsp?content=20080123_5242_5242&page=1 |archive-date=3 May 2008 }}</ref> The Polar Bear Specialist Group of the [[IUCN Species Survival Commission]] takes the position that "estimates of subpopulation size or [[sustainable yield|sustainable harvest]] levels should not be made solely on the basis of [[traditional ecological knowledge]] without supporting scientific studies."<ref name="pbsgpr">[[#Aars|Aars]], pp. 61–62</ref>
|2=[[Sun bear]] [[File:Ursus malayanus - 1700-1880 - Print - Iconographia Zoologica - Special Collections University of Amsterdam - (white background).jpg|70px]]
}}
}}
|1={{clade
|2=[[American black bear]] [[File:Ursus americanus - 1700-1880 - Print - Iconographia Zoologica - Special Collections University of Amsterdam - (white background).jpg|70px]]
|1={{clade
|2=[[Brown bear]] [[File:Ursus arctos - 1700-1880 - Print - Iconographia Zoologica - Special Collections University of Amsterdam - (white background).jpg|70px]]
|1='''Polar bear''' [[File:Lossy-page1-2518px-Ursus maritimus - 1700-1880 - Print - Iconographia Zoologica - Special Collections University of Amsterdam - (white background).jpg|70px]]
}}
}}
}}
}}
}}
}}


Fossils of polar bears are uncommon and limited to [[Pleistocene]] deposits.<ref name="ReferenceC">{{cite journal|last1=Kurtén|first1=B|title=The evolution of the polar bear, ''Ursus maritimus'' Phipps|journal=Acta Zoologica Fennica|date=1964|volume=108|pages=1–30|url=https://helda.helsinki.fi/handle/10138/37762}}</ref><ref name=Harington/> The oldest known fossil is a 130,000 to 110,000-year-old jaw bone, found on [[Prince Charles Foreland]], Norway in 2004.<ref name="Lindqvist">{{cite journal|doi=10.1073/pnas.0914266107|pmid=20194737|pmc=2841953 |title=Complete mitochondrial genome of a Pleistocene jawbone unveils the origin of polar bear |journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |volume=107 |issue=11 |pages=5053–7 |year=2010 |last1=Lindqvist |first1=C. |last2=Schuster |first2=S. C. |last3=Sun |first3=Y. |last4=Talbot |first4=S. L. |last5=Qi |first5=J. |last6=Ratan |first6=A. |last7=Tomsho |first7=L. P. |last8=Kasson |first8=L. |last9=Zeyl |first9=E. |last10=Aars |first10=J. |last11=Miller |first11=W. |last12=Ingolfsson |first12=O. |last13=Bachmann |first13=L. |last14=Wiig |first14=O. |bibcode=2010PNAS..107.5053L|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref name="polarresearch">{{cite journal|last1=Ingólfsson|first1=Ólafur|last2=Wiig|first2=Øystein|title=Late Pleistocene fossil find in Svalbard: the oldest remains of a polar bear (''Ursus maritimus'' Phipps, 1744) ever discovered|journal=Polar Research|date=2009|volume=28|issue=3|doi=10.3402/polar.v28i3.6131|doi-access=free}}</ref> Scientists in the 20th century surmised that polar bears directly descended from a population of brown bears, possibly in eastern [[Siberia]] or [[Alaska]].<ref name="ReferenceC"/><ref name=Harington/> [[Mitochondrial DNA]] studies in the 1990s and 2000s have supported the status of the polar bear as a derivative of the brown bear, finding that some brown bear populations were more closely related to polar bears than other brown bears, particularly the [[ABC Islands bear]]s.<ref name="Lindqvist"/><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Talbot|first1=S. L.|last2=Shields|first2=G. F.|year=1996|title=Phylogeography of Brown Bears (Ursus arctos) of Alaska and Paraphyly within the Ursidae|journal=Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution|volume=5|issue=3|pages=477–494|doi=10.1006/mpev.1996.0044}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Shields|first1=G.F.|last2=Adams|first2=D|last3=Garner|first3=G|last4=Labelle|first4=M|last5=Pietsch|first5=J|last6=Ramsay|first6=M|last7=Schwartz|first7=C|last8=Titus|first8=K|last9=Williamson|first9=S|year=2000|title=Phylogeography of mitochondrial DNA variation in brown bears and polar bears|journal=Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution|volume=15|issue=2|pages=19–26|doi=10.1006/mpev.1999.0730}}</ref> Lindqvist and collages (2010) estimated that the polar bear linage split from other brown bears around 150,000 years ago.<ref name="Lindqvist"/>
Of the 19 polar bear subpopulations recognized in 2017, one was in decline, two were increasing, seven were stable, and nine had insufficient data.<ref name="pbsg2017">IUCN Polar Bear Specialist Group, 2017.[http://pbsg.npolar.no/en/status/status-table.html Summary of polar bear population status] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151224224314/http://pbsg.npolar.no/en/status/status-table.html |date=24 December 2015 }}.</ref>
[[File:polarbrown-1.jpg|thumb|Polar/brown bear hybrid taxidermy specimen on display at [[Natural History Museum at Tring]] in [[Hertfordshire]], England]]
More extensive genetic studies have found that the two species are in fact separate [[sister group|sister lineages]]. The genetic similarities between polar bears and some brown bears was found to be the result of interbreeding.<ref name="Hailer">{{cite journal |doi=10.1126/science.1216424 |pmid=22517859 |title=Nuclear Genomic Sequences Reveal that Polar Bears Are an Old and Distinct Bear Lineage |journal=Science |volume=336 |issue=6079 |pages=344–7 |year=2012 |last1=Hailer |first1=F. |last2=Kutschera |first2=V. E. |last3=Hallstrom |first3=B. M. |last4=Klassert |first4=D. |last5=Fain |first5=S. R. |last6=Leonard |first6=J. A. |last7=Arnason |first7=U. |last8=Janke |first8=A. |bibcode=2012Sci...336..344H|hdl=10261/58578 |s2cid=12671275 |url=https://digital.csic.es/bitstream/10261/58578/1/science.pdf |hdl-access=free }}</ref><ref name=Lan>{{cite journal|last1=Lan|first1=T|last2=Leppälä|first2=K|last3=Tomlin|first3=C|last4=Talbot|first4=S. L.|last5=Sage|first5=G. K.|last6=Farley|first6=S. D.|last7=Shideler|first7=R. T.|last8=Bachmann|first8=L|last9=Wiig|first9=Ø|last10=Albert|first10=V. A.|last11=Salojärvi|first11=J|last12=Mailund|first12=T|last13=Drautz-Moses|first13=D. I.|last14=Schuster|first14=S. C.|last15=Herrera-Estrella|first15=L|last16=Lindqvist|first16=C|year=2022|title=Insights into bear evolution from a Pleistocene polar bear genome|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|volume=119|issue=14|page=e2200016119|doi=10.1073/pnas.2200016119}}</ref> Hailer and colleges (2012) estimate the split between polar and brown bears occurring around 600,000 years ago.<ref name="Hailer"/> Lan and collages (2022) estimated the divergence occurring even earlier at over one million years ago.<ref name=Lan/> [[Glaciation]] events over hundreds of thousands of years led to both the origin of polar bears and their subsequent interactions and hybridizations with brown bears.<ref name=Hassanin>{{cite journal|last1=Hassanin|first1=A|year=2015|title=The role of Pleistocene glaciations in shaping the evolution of polar and brown bears. Evidence from a critical review of mitochondrial and nuclear genome analyses|journal=Comptes Rendus Biologies|volume=338|issue=7|pages=494–501|doi=10.1016/j.crvi.2015.04.008}}</ref>


Studies in 2011 and 2012 concluded that the genetics of brown bears passed into polar bears.<ref name="Hailer"/><ref name=Edwards>{{cite journal|last1=Edwards|first1=C. J.|last2=Suchard|first2=M. A.|last3=Lemey|first3=P|last4= Welch|first4=J. J.|last5=Barnes|first5=I|last6=Fulton|first6=T. L.|last7=Barnett|first7=R|last8=O’Connell|first8=T|last9=Coxon|first9=P|last10= Monaghan|first10=N|last11=Valdiosera|first11=C. E.|last12=Lorenzen|first12=E. D.|last13=Willerslev|first13=E|last14=Baryshnikov|first14=G. F.|last15=Rambaut|first15=A|last16=Thomas|first16=M. G.|last17=Bradley|first17=D. G.|last18=Shapiro|first18=B|year=2011|title=Ancient Hybridization and an Irish Origin for the Modern Polar Bear Matriline|journal=Current Biology|volume=21|issue=15|pages=1251-1258|doi=10.1016/j.cub.2011.05.058}}</ref> In particular Edwards and collages (2011) concluded that living polar bear populations derived their [[matriline]]s from now extinct Irish brown bears.<ref name=Edwards/> Later studies have clarified that [[gene flow]] went from polar to brown bears rather than the reverse.<ref name=Hassanin/><ref name=Cahill>{{cite journal|last1=Cahill|first1=J. A.|last2=Heintzman|first2=P. D.|last3=Harris|first3=K|last4=Teasdale|first4=M. D.|last5=Kapp|first5=M. D.|last6=Soares|first6=A. E. R.|last7=Stirling|first7=I|last8=Bradley|first8=D|last9=Edward|first9=C. J.|last10=Graim|first10=K|last11=Kisleika|first11=A. A.|last12=Malev|first12=A. V.|last13=Monaghan|first13=N|last14=Green|first14=R. E.|last15=Shapiro|first15=B|year=2018|title=Genomic Evidence of Widespread Admixture from Polar Bears into Brown Bears during the Last Ice Age|journal=Molecular Biology and Evolution|volume=35|issue=5|pages=1120–1129|doi=10.1093/molbev/msy018}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Wang|first1=M-S|last2=Murray|first2=G. G. R.|last3=Mann|first3=D|last4=Groves|first4=P|last5=Vershinina|first5=A. O.|last6=Supple|first6=M. A.|last7=Kapp|first7=J. D.|last8=Corbett-Detig|first8=R|last9=Crump|first9=S. E.|last10=Stirling|first10=I|last11=Laidre|first11=K. L.|last12=Kunz|first12=M|last13=Dalén|first13=L|last14=Green|first14=R. E.|last15=Shapiro|first15=B|year=2022|title=A polar bear paleogenome reveals extensive ancient gene flow from polar bears into brown bears|journal=Nature Ecology & Evolution|volume=6|issue=7|pages=1–9|doi=10.1038/s41559-022-01753-8}}</ref> Close to 9 percent of the genome of ABC bears resulted from [[introgression]] from polar bears,<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Cahill|first1=J. A.|last2=Stirling|first2=I|last3=Kistler|first3=L|last4=Salamzade|first4=R|last5=Ersmark|first5=E|last6=Fulton|first6=T. L.|last7=Stiller|first7=M|last8=Green|first8=R. E.|last9=Shapiro|first9=B|year=2015|title=Genomic evidence of geographically widespread effect of gene flow from polar bears into brown bears|journal=Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution|volume=24|issue=6|pages=1205–1217|doi=10.1111/mec.13038}}</ref> while Irish bears had 20 percent polar bear origin.<ref name=Cahill/> Mass hybridization between the two species appears to have stopped around 260,000 years ago. [[Grizzly–polar bear hybrid|Modern hybrids]] are relatively rare in the wild.<ref name=Lan/>
==Habitat==
[[File:Polar Bear AdF.jpg|thumb|right|Polar bear jumping on [[fast ice]] in [[Spitsbergen]] Island, [[Svalbard]] Archipelago, [[Norway]]]]
The polar bear is a [[marine mammal]] because it spends many months of the year at sea.<ref name="stirling1988intro">{{cite book |last=Stirling |first=Ian |year=1988 |title=Polar Bears |location=Ann Arbor |author-link=Ian Stirling (biologist) |publisher=University of Michigan Press |isbn=978-0-472-10100-9 |chapter=Introduction |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/polarbears00stir }}</ref> However, it is the only living marine mammal with powerful, large limbs and feet that allow them to cover kilometres on foot and run on land.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Bernd G. Würsig|author2=J. G. M. [[Hans Thewissen|Thewissen]]|title=Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TwFUimDtz7sC&pg=PA70|year=2002|publisher=Gulf Professional Publishing|isbn=978-0-12-551340-1|page=70}}</ref> Its preferred habitat is the annual [[sea ice]] covering the waters over the [[continental shelf]] and the Arctic inter-island [[archipelago]]s. These areas, known as the "Arctic ring of life", have high biological productivity in comparison to the deep waters of the high Arctic.<ref name="derocher2004"/><ref name="distribution"/> The polar bear tends to frequent areas where sea ice meets water, such as [[polynya]]s and leads (temporary stretches of open water in Arctic ice), to hunt the seals that make up most of its diet.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Stirling |first1=Ian |date=January 1997 |title=The importance of polynyas, ice edges, and leads to marine mammals and birds |volume=10 |issue=1–4 |pages=9–21 |doi=10.1016/S0924-7963(96)00054-1 |journal=Journal of Marine Systems|bibcode=1997JMS....10....9S }}</ref> Freshwater is limited in these environments because it is either locked up in snow or saline. Polar bears are able to produce water through the metabolism of fats found in seal blubber,<ref>{{cite web|last1=Purcell |first1=Adam |title=Carnivora |url=https://www.basicbiology.net/animal/mammals/carnivora/ |website=Basic Biology |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160422161436/https://www.basicbiology.net/animal/mammals/carnivora/ |archive-date=22 April 2016 }}</ref> and are therefore found primarily along the perimeter of the [[Arctic ice pack|polar ice pack]], rather than in the [[Arctic Basin|Polar Basin]] close to the [[North Pole]] where the density of seals is low.<ref name="matthews15">[[#Matthews|Matthews]], p. 15</ref>


Analysis of the [[copy number variation]] in the genes of polar bears compared to brown bears and [[American black bears]] shows distinct adaptions. Polar bears have a less diverse array of [[olfactory receptor]] genes, a result of there being less odours in their Arctic habitat. With its carnivorous, high fat diet; the species has less copies of the gene involved in making [[amylase]], an enzyme that breaks down [[starch]], and more selection for genes for fatty acid breakdown and a more efficient [[circulatory system]]. The bear's thicker [[Animal coat|coat]] is the result of more copies of genes involved in [[keratin]] creating proteins.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Rink|first1=D. C.|last2=Specian|first2=N. K.|last3=Zhao|first3=S|last4=Gibbons|first4=J. G.|year=2019|title=Polar bear evolution is marked by rapid changes in gene copy number in response to dietary shift|journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|volume=116|issue=27|pages=13446-13451|doi=10.1073/pnas.19010931}}</ref>
Annual ice contains areas of water that appear and disappear throughout the year as the weather changes. Seals migrate in response to these changes, and polar bears must follow their prey. In [[Hudson Bay]], [[James Bay]], and some other areas, the ice melts completely each summer (an event often referred to as "ice-floe breakup"), forcing polar bears to go onto land and wait through the months until the next freeze-up.<ref name="distribution">{{cite book |last=Stirling |first=Ian |year=1988 |title=Polar Bears |location=Ann Arbor |publisher=University of Michigan Press |isbn=978-0-472-10100-9 |chapter=Distribution and Abundance |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/polarbears00stir }}</ref> In the [[Chukchi Sea|Chukchi]] and Beaufort seas, most polar bears retreat each summer to the ice further north that remains frozen year-round, though a large portion of the population (15&ndash;40%) has been observed spending all summer on land every year in these areas since the 1980s.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Rode |first1=Karyn D. |last2=Douglas |first2=D.C. |last3=Atwood |first3=T.C. |last4=Durner |first4=G.M. |last5=Wilson |first5=R.R. |last6=Pagano |first6=A.M. |date=December 2022 |journal=[[Global Ecology and Conservation]] |publisher=[[Elsevier]] |volume=40 |title=Observed and forecasted changes in land use by polar bears in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, 1985–2040 |doi=10.1016/j.gecco.2022.e02319 |doi-access=free |page=2}}</ref>


==Physical characteristics==
==Physical characteristics==
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| caption1 = Polar bear skeleton
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| image2 = Ursus maritimus 05 MWNH 420.JPG
| caption2 = Skull
| caption2 = Skull
| image3 = Polarskeleton.jpg
| image3 = Polarbearonice.jpg
| caption3 = Polar bear skeleton
| caption3 = Bear climbing on ice
| image4 = PolarBearLincolnParkZoo.webm
| image4 = PolarBearLincolnParkZoo.webm
| caption4 = Captive bear swimming
| caption4 = Captive bear swimming
| image5 = Ursus maritimus ranua 04.jpg
| caption5 = A female bear at the [[Ranua Zoo]]
}}
}}
The only other bear of comparable size to the polar bear is the [[Kodiak bear]], which is a subspecies of [[brown bear]].<ref name="kodiak">{{cite web |url=http://www.fws.gov/endangered/factsheets/polar_bear.pdf |title=Polar bear, (''Ursus maritimus'') |publisher=United States Fish and Wildlife service |access-date=22 March 2008 |quote=Appearance. The polar bear is the largest member of the bear family, with the exception of Alaska's Kodiak brown bears, a [[brown bear]] subspecies, which equal polar bears in size. |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080605045644/http://www.fws.gov/endangered/factsheets/polar_bear.pdf |archive-date=5 June 2008}}</ref> Adult male polar bears weigh {{convert|350|-|700|kg|lb|sigfig=2|abbr=on}} and measure {{convert|2.4|-|3|m|ftin|sigfig=1}} in total length.<ref name="hemstock4">[[#Hemstock|Hemstock]], p. 4</ref> Around the Beaufort Sea, however, mature males reportedly average {{convert|450|kg|lb|sigfig=1|abbr=on}}.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1017/S0952836902000377 |title=Postnatal growth in body length and mass of polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'') at Svalbard |journal=Journal of Zoology |volume=256 |issue=3 |pages=343–349 |year=2002 |last1=Derocher |first1=A. E. |last2=Wiig |first2=Ø.}}</ref> Adult females are roughly half the size of males and normally weigh {{convert|150|-|250|kg|sigfig=2|abbr=on}}, measuring {{convert|1.8|-|2.4|m|ftin|sigfig=1}} in length. Elsewhere, a slightly larger estimated average weight of {{convert|260|kg|lb|sigfig=2|abbr=on}} was claimed for adult females.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1046/j.1461-0248.1999.00090.x|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/229906772 |title=Determinants of Home Range Size for Polar Bears (''Ursus maritimus'') |journal=Ecology Letters |volume=2 |issue=5 |pages=311–318 |year=1999 |last1=Ferguson |first1=S. H. |last2=Taylor |first2=M. K. |last3=Born |first3=E. W. |last4=Rosing-Asvid |first4=A. |last5=Messier |first5=F.|pmid=33810629 }}</ref> When pregnant, however, females can weigh as much as {{convert|500|kg|sigfig=2|abbr=on}}.<ref name="hemstock4"/> The polar bear is among the most [[sexual dimorphism|sexually dimorphic]] of mammals, surpassed only by the [[pinniped]]s such as [[elephant seal]]s.<ref name="perrin">{{cite book|last=Perrin|first=William F. |author2=Bernd Würsig |author3=J. G. M. Thewissen |title=Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals|publisher=Academic Press|location=San Diego, CA|year=2008|edition=2nd|page=1009|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2rkHQpToi9sC&pg=PA1009|isbn=978-0-12-373553-9}}</ref> The largest polar bear on record, reportedly weighing {{convert|1002|kg|0|abbr=on}}, was a male shot at [[Kotzebue Sound]] in northwestern Alaska in 1960. This specimen, when mounted, stood {{convert|3.39|m|ftin|abbr=on}} tall on its hindlegs. The shoulder height of an adult polar bear is {{convert|122|to|160|cm|ftin|0|abbr=on}}.<ref name="Wood">{{cite book |last=Wood |first=G.L. |year=1983 |title=The Guinness Book of Animal Records |page=[https://archive.org/details/guinnessbookofan00wood/page/240 240] |isbn=978-0-85112-235-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/guinnessbookofan00wood/page/240 |publisher=Enfield, Middlesex : Guinness Superlatives }}</ref><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20110930194832/http://wildlife1.wildlifeinformation.org/s/0MCarnivor/ursidae/ursus/Ursus_maritimus/01ursus_maritimusamwtht.html Polar bear ''Ursus maritimus'' – Appearance/Morphology: Measurement and Weight (Literature Reports)]. Wildlife1.wildlifeinformation.org. Retrieved 15 September 2011.</ref> While all bears are short-tailed, the polar bear's tail is relatively the shortest amongst living bears, ranging from {{convert|7|to|13|cm|in|abbr=on}} in length.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://wildpro.twycrosszoo.org/S/0MCarnivor/ursidae/ursus/Ursus_maritimus/04Ursus_maritimusAMTail.htm |title=Polar Bear Ursus maritimus – APPEARANCE/ MORPHOLOGY: TAIL |publisher=Wildpro |access-date=1 July 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131202233733/http://wildpro.twycrosszoo.org/S/0MCarnivor/ursidae/ursus/Ursus_maritimus/04Ursus_maritimusAMTail.htm |archive-date=2 December 2013 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
The polar bear is both the largest living species of bear and land [[carnivore]], though some brown bear subspecies like the [[Kodiak bear]] can rival it in size.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=10}}{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=74}} Males are generally {{convert|200||250|cm|ft|abbr=on}} long with a weight of {{convert|300||800|kg|abbr=on}}. Females are smaller being {{convert|180|–|200|cm|ft|abbr=on}} with a weight of {{convert|150||300|kg|abbr=on}}.<ref name="DeMaster1981">{{cite journal |last1=DeMaster |first1=Douglas P. |last2=Stirling |first2=Ian |author2-link=Ian Stirling (biologist) |date=8 May 1981 |title= ''Ursus maritimus''|jstor=3503828 |journal=Mammalian Species |pages=1–7 |doi=10.2307/3503828 |oclc=46381503 |issue=145 |doi-access=free }}</ref> [[Sexual dimorphism]] in the species is particularly high compared to most other mammals.{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=75}} The weight of polar bears fluctuates during the year, as they can bulk up on fat and increase their mass by 50 percent.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=10}} A fattened, pregnant female can weigh as much as {{convert|500|kg|abbr=on}}.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=38}} Adults may stand {{convert|130|–|160|cm|ft|abbr=on}} tall at the shoulder. The tail is {{convert|76||126|mm|in|abbr=on}} long.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/> The largest polar bear on record, reportedly weighing {{convert|1002|kg|0|abbr=on}}, was a male shot at [[Kotzebue Sound]] in northwestern Alaska in 1960. This specimen, when mounted, stood {{convert|3.39|m|ftin|abbr=on}} tall on its hindlegs.<ref name="Wood">{{cite book |last=Wood |first=G.L. |year=1983 |title=The Guinness Book of Animal Records |page=[https://archive.org/details/guinnessbookofan00wood/page/27/mode/2up?q=polar+bear 28] |isbn=978-0-85112-235-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/guinnessbookofan00wood/page/27/mode/2up?q=polar+bear |publisher=Enfield, Middlesex : Guinness Superlatives }}</ref>


Compared to the brown bear, this species has a more slender build, with a narrower, smaller skull, longer neck, and lower shoulder hump.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=10}} Male polar bears have larger heads than females.{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=80}} The snout profile is curved, resembling a "[[Roman nose]]".{{sfn|Derocher|2012|pp=14}} The more streamlined build of the polar bear is likely an adaption for swimming. The long neck may allow it more easily poke into ice holes and [[pinniped|seal]] dens.<ref name=Slater2010>{{cite journal|last1=Slater|first1=G. J.|last2=Figueirido|first2=B|last3=Louis|first3=L|last4=Yang|first4=P|last5=Van Valkenburgh|first5=B|year=2010|title=Biomechanical Consequences of Rapid Evolution in the Polar Bear Lineage|journal=PLoS ONE|volume=5|issue=11|page=e13870|doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0013870}}</ref> They have 34–42 teeth including 12 [[incisor]]s, 4 [[Canine tooth|canines]], 8–16 [[premolar]]s and 10 [[Molar (tooth)|molar]]s. The teeth are adapted for a more carnivorous diet than the brown bear, having longer, sharper and more spaced out canines, and smaller, more pointed [[cheek teeth]] (premolars and molars).{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=75}}{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=17}}<ref name=Slater2010/> The species has a large space or [[diastema]] between the canines and cheek teeth, which may allow it to better bite into prey.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=17}}<ref name=Figueirido>{{cite journal|last1=Figueirido|first1=B|last2=Palmqvist|first2=P|last3=Pérez-Claros|first3=J. A.|year=2009|title=Ecomorphological correlates of craniodental variation in bears and paleobiological implications for extinct taxa: an approach based on geometric morphometrics|journal=Journal of Zoology|volume=277|issue=1|pages=70–80|doi=10.1111/j.1469-7998.2008.00511.x}}</ref> Since it normally preys on animals much smaller than it, the polar bear does not have a particularly strong bite.<ref name=Figueirido/>
Compared with its closest relative, the brown bear, the polar bear has a more elongated body build and a longer skull and nose.<ref name="first"/> As predicted by [[Allen's rule]] for a northerly animal, the legs are stocky and the ears and tail are small.<ref name="first"/> However, the feet are very large to distribute load when walking on snow or thin ice and to provide propulsion when swimming; they may measure {{convert|30|cm|in|abbr=on}} across in an adult.<ref name="lw2">[[#Lockwood|Lockwood]], pp. 10–16</ref> The pads of the paws are covered with small, soft papillae (dermal bumps), which provide traction on the ice. The polar bear's claws are short and stocky compared to those of the brown bear, perhaps to serve the former's need to grip heavy prey and ice.<ref name="first"/> The claws are deeply scooped on the underside which assists in digging in the ice of the natural habitat. Research of injury patterns in polar bear forelimbs found injuries to the right forelimb to be more frequent than those to the left, suggesting, perhaps, right-handedness.<ref>{{cite web|title=Fractures of the radius and ulna secondary to possible vitamin 'D' deficiency in captive polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'') |url=http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/pbhc/fractures.htm |website=polarbearsinternational.org |author=Engeli, Emmanuel |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100226210104/http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/pbhc/fractures.htm |archive-date=26 February 2010}}</ref> Unlike the brown bear, polar bears in captivity are rarely overweight or particularly large, possibly as a reaction to the warm conditions of most zoos.{{citation needed|date=April 2022}}


Polar bears have large paws; the front paws being broader than the back. They move around by walking or galloping. The feet are hairier than in other bear species, which allows then to walk on snow and sea ice. Walking bears tilt their front paws towards each other. They can run at speeds of up to {{convert|20|km/h|abbr=on}},{{sfn|Derocher|2012|pp=11, 21–22}} but typically move at around {{convert|5.5|km/h|abbr=on}}.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=140}} When swimming, the broad front paws do the paddling, while the hind legs play a role in steering and diving.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/>{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=21}} They can transverse water at up to {{convert|6|km/h|abbr=on}}.{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=88}} The claws are small but sharp and hooked, and are used both to snatch prey and climb onto ice.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=21}}{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=79}}
The 42 teeth of a polar bear reflect its highly carnivorous diet. The cheek teeth are smaller and more jagged than in the brown bear, and the [[canine tooth|canines]] are larger and sharper. The [[dental formula]] is {{DentalFormula|upper=3.1.4.2|lower=3.1.4.3}}.<ref name="first"/>


The coat consists of dense [[underfur]] around {{convert|5|cm|abbr=on}} long and [[guard hair]]s around {{convert|15|cm|abbr=on}} long.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/> Males have significantly longer hairs on their forelegs, which is thought to attract females, serving a similar function to the [[Lion#Mane|lion's mane]].<ref name="Dimorph">{{cite journal|last=Derocher|first=Andrew E.|author2=Magnus Andersen|author3=Øystein Wiig|year=2005|title=Sexual dimorphism of polar bears|jstor=4094434|journal=Journal of Mammalogy|volume=86|issue=5|pages=895–901|url=http://www.biology.ualberta.ca/faculty/andrew_derocher/uploads/abstracts/Sexual%20dimorphism%20of%20polar%20bears%202005.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110110120300/http://www.biology.ualberta.ca/faculty/andrew_derocher/uploads/abstracts/Sexual%20dimorphism%20of%20polar%20bears%202005.pdf |archive-date=10 January 2011 |doi=10.1644/1545-1542(2005)86[895:SDOPB]2.0.CO;2 |doi-access=free }}</ref> The outer surface of the hairs has a scaly appearance, and the guard hairs are hollow, which allows the animals to trap heat and float in the water.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|pp=7–8}} The transparent guard hairs [[forward scatter]] [[ultraviolet|UV]] light between the underfur and the skin, leading to a cycle of absorption and re-emission.<ref name=Khattab/> The fur appears white due to the [[backscatter]] of [[Ray_(optics)#Interaction_with_surfaces|incident light]] and the absence of pigment.<ref name=Khattab>{{cite journal|last1=Khattab|first1=M. Q.|last2=Tributsch|first2=H|year=2015|title=Fibre-Optical Light Scattering Technology in Polar Bear Hair: A Re-Evaluation and New Results|journal=Journal of Advanced Biotechnology and Bioengineering|volume=3|issue=2|pages=38–51|doi=10.12970/2311-1755.2015.03.02.2}}</ref>{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=7}} Polar bears are pure white after they [[moulting|molt]] and gain a more yellowish colouration as they are exposed more to the sun. They can also be grayish or brownish.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/> Their light fur provides [[camouflage]] in their snowy environment. After emerging from the water, the bear can easily shake itself dry before freezing since the hairs are resistant to tangling when wet.{{sfn|Ellis|2009|pp=65, 72}} The skin, including the nose and lips, is black and absorbs heat.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/><ref name=Khattab/> Polar bears have a {{convert|5|–|10|cm|abbr=on}} thick layer of fat underneath the skin,<ref name="DeMaster1981"/> which provides both warmth and energy.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=12}} Polar bears maintain their core body temperature at about.{{convert|36.9|C|F|0|abbr=on}}.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Best|first=R. C.|year=1982|title=Thermoregulation in resting and active polar bears|journal=Journal of Comparative Physiology A|volume=146|pages=63–73|doi=10.1007/BF00688718}}</ref>
Polar bears are superbly insulated by up to {{convert|10|cm|0|abbr=on}} of [[adipose tissue]],<ref name="lw2"/> their hide and their fur. Polar bear fur consists of a layer of dense underfur and an outer layer of [[guard hair]]s, which appear white to tan but are actually transparent.<ref name="lw2"/> Two genes that are known to influence melanin production, LYST and AIM1, are both mutated in polar bears, possibly leading to the absence on this pigment in their fur.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Liu|first1=S|last2=Lorenzen|first2=ED|last3=Fumagalli|first3=M|display-authors=etal|title=Population genomics reveal recent speciation and rapid evolutionary adaptation in polar bears|journal=Cell|date=8 May 2014|volume=157|issue=4|pages=785–794|doi=10.1016/j.cell.2014.03.054|pmid=24813606|pmc=4089990}}</ref> The guard hair is {{convert|5|-|15|cm|0|abbr=on}} over most of the body.<ref>{{cite book |last=Uspenskii |first=S. M. |title=The Polar Bear |year=1977 |publisher=Nauka |location=Moscow}}</ref> Polar bears gradually [[moult]] from May to August,<ref>Kolenosky G. B. 1987. Polar bear. pp. 475–485 in Wild furbearer management and conservation in North America (M. Novak, J. A. Baker, M. E. Obbard, and B. Malloch, eds.). Ontario Fur Trappers Association, North Bay, Ontario, Canada.</ref> but, unlike other Arctic mammals, they do not shed their coat for a darker shade to provide camouflage in summer conditions.<ref name="Churchill">{{cite web | url=http://churchillpolarbears.org/churchill/arctic-wildlife | title=Arctic Wildlife | publisher=Churchill Polar Bears | year=2011 | access-date=27 February 2017}}</ref> The hollow guard hairs of a polar bear coat were once thought to act as fiber-optic tubes to conduct light to its black skin, where it could be absorbed; however, this hypothesis was disproved by a study in 1998.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Koon |first=Daniel W. |year=1998 |title=Is polar bear hair fiber optic? |journal=Applied Optics |volume=37 |issue=15 |pages=3198–3200 |doi=10.1364/AO.37.003198 |pmid=18273269|bibcode=1998ApOpt..37.3198K }}</ref>


The eyes of a polar bear are located close to the roof of the head, which may allow them to stay out of the water when the animal is swimming at the surface. They are relatively small, which may be an adaption against blowing snow and [[snow-blindness]]. They are [[dichromat]]s, having only two types of [[cone cell]]s, one for seeing blue-violet and the other for yellow. They have many [[rod cell]]s which allow them to see at night. The ears are small, allowing them to retain heat and not get [[frost bite|frostbitten]].{{sfn|Derocher|2012|pp=14, 16, 18–19}} They can hear best at frequencies of {{convert|11.2|–|22.5|kHz|abbr=on}}.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Nachtigall|first1=P. E.|last2=Supin|first2=A. Y.|last3=Amundin|first3=M|last4=Röken|first4=B|last5=Møller|first5=T|last6=Mooney|first6=T. A.|last7=Taylor|first7=K. A.|last8=Yuen|first8=M|year=2007|title=Polar bear ''Ursus maritimus'' hearing measured with auditory evoked potentials|journal=Journal of Experimental Biology|volume=210|issue=7|pages=1116–1122|doi=10.1242/jeb.02734}}</ref> The [[nasal concha]] has a large surface area, so more warm air can move through the nasal passages.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=14}} Their [[olfactory system]] is also large and adapted for smelling prey over vast distances.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Green|first1=P. A.|last2=Van Valkenburgh|first2=B|last3=Pang|first3=B|last4=Bird|first4=B|last5=Rowe|first5=T|last6=Curtis|first6=A|year=2012|title=Respiratory and olfactory turbinal size in canid and arctoid carnivorans|journal=Journal of Anatomy|volume=221|issue=6|pages=609–621|doi=10.1111/j.1469-7580.2012.01570.x}}</ref> The animal has [[reniculate kidney]]s which can efficiently filter out salt.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=26}}
The white coat usually yellows with age. When kept in captivity in warm, humid conditions, the fur may turn a pale shade of green due to [[algae]] growing inside the guard hairs.<ref>In unusually warm conditions, the hollow tubes provide an excellent home for algae. While the algae is harmless to the bears, it is often a worry to the zoos housing them, and affected animals are sometimes washed in a salt solution, or mild [[hydrogen peroxide|peroxide bleach]] to make the fur white again.</ref> Males have significantly longer hairs on their forelegs, which increase in length until the bear reaches 14 years of age. The male's ornamental foreleg hair is thought to attract females, serving a similar function to the [[Lion#Mane|lion's mane]].<ref name="Dimorph">{{cite journal|last=Derocher|first=Andrew E.|author2=Magnus Andersen|author3=Øystein Wiig|year=2005|title=Sexual dimorphism of polar bears|jstor=4094434|journal=Journal of Mammalogy|volume=86|issue=5|pages=895–901|url=http://www.biology.ualberta.ca/faculty/andrew_derocher/uploads/abstracts/Sexual%20dimorphism%20of%20polar%20bears%202005.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110110120300/http://www.biology.ualberta.ca/faculty/andrew_derocher/uploads/abstracts/Sexual%20dimorphism%20of%20polar%20bears%202005.pdf |archive-date=10 January 2011 |doi=10.1644/1545-1542(2005)86[895:SDOPB]2.0.CO;2 |doi-access=free }}</ref>


==Distribution and habitat==
The polar bear has an extremely well developed sense of [[olfaction|smell]], being able to detect seals nearly {{convert|1|mi|order=flip|abbr=on}} away and buried under {{convert|3|ft|0|abbr=on|order=flip}} of snow. Its hearing is about as acute as that of a human, and its vision is also good at long distances.<ref name="rosing20-23">[[#Rosing|Rosing]], pp. 20–23</ref>
{{Multiple image
| align = right
| direction = vertical
| width =
|image1=Polar bear subpopulation map.svg|caption1=Map of 19 polar bear subpopulations. The colours represent the four major genetic clusters
|image2=Polar Bear AdF.jpg|caption2=Polar bear jumping on floating ice in [[Spitsbergen]] Island, Svalbard Archipelago, Norway
}}
Polar bears inhabit the [[Arctic]] and adjacent areas. Their range includes Greenland, Canada, the US state of Alaska, Russia and the [[Svalbard Archipelago]] of Norway.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/>{{sfn|Ellis|2009|pp=73, 140}}{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=3}} Polar bears have been recorded just {{convert|25|km|abbr=on}} from the [[North Pole]].<ref>{{cite journal|last1=van Meurs|first1=R|last2=Splettstoesser|first2=J. F.|year=1993|title=Letter to the Editor: Farthest North Polar Bear|journal=Arctic|volume=56|issue=3|page=309|doi=10.14430/arctic626}}</ref> The southern limits of their range include [[James Bay]] and [[Newfoundland and Labrador|Newfoundland/Labrador]] in Canada and [[St. Matthew Island]] and the [[Pribilof Islands]] of Alaska.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/> They are not permanent residents of Iceland, but have historically been recorded visiting there if they can reach it via sea ice.{{sfn|Ellis|2009|pp=122–124}} Due to minimal human development in its remote habitat, it can still be found in much of its original range, more so than any other large carnivore.<ref name="derocher2004">{{cite journal|last1=Derocher|first1=Andrew E.|last2=Lunn|first2=Nicholas J.|last3=Stirling|first3=Ian|author3-link=Ian Stirling (biologist)|year=2004|title=Polar bears in a Warming Climate|journal=Integrative and Comparative Biology|volume=44|issue=2|pages=163–176|doi=10.1093/icb/44.2.163|pmid=21680496|doi-access=free}}</ref>


Polar bears have been divided into 19 subpopulations labeled the East Greenland (ES), [[Barents Sea]] (BS), [[Kara Sea]] (KS), [[Laptev Sea]] (LVS), [[Chukchi Sea]] (CS), northern and southern [[Beaufort Sea]] (SBS and NBS), [[Viscount Melville Sound|Viscount Melville]] (VM), [[M'Clintock Channel]] (MC), [[Gulf of Boothia]] (GB), [[Lancaster Sound]] (LS), [[Norwegian Bay]] (NB), [[Kane Basin]] (KB), [[Baffin Bay]] (BB), [[Davis Strait]] (DS), [[Foxe Basin]] (FB) and the western and southern [[Hudson Bay]] (WD AND SH) populations.<ref name=Peacock2015>{{cite journal|last1=Peacock|first1=E|last2=Sonsthagen|first2=S. A.|last3=Obbard|first3=M. E.|last4=Boltunov|first4=A|last5=Regehr|first5=E. V.|last6=Ovsyanikov|first6=N|last7=Aars|first7=J|last8=Atkinson|first8=S. N.|last9=Sage|first9=G. K.|last10=Hope|first10=A. G.|last11=Zeyl|first11=E|last12=Bachmann|first12=L|last13=Ehrich|first13=D|last14=Scribner|first14=K. T.|last15=Amstrup|first15=S. C.|last16=Belikov|first16=S|last17=Born|first17=E. W.|last18=Derocher|first18=A. E.|last19=Stirling|first19=I|last20=Taylor|first20=M. K.|last21=Wiig|first21=Ø|last22=Paetkau|first22=D|last23=Talbot|first23=S. L.|year=2015|title=Implications of the circumpolar genetic structure of polar bears for their conservation in a rapidly warming Arctic|journal=PLoS ONE|volume=10|issue=1|page=e112021|doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0112021}}</ref><ref name=statusreport/> A 2022 study has suggested that the bears in eastern Greenland should be divided into north and south.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Laidre|first1=K. L.|last2=Supple|first2=M. A.|last3=Born|first3=E. W.|last4=Regehr|first4=E. V.|last5=Wiig|first5=Ø|last6=Ugarte|first6=F|last7=Aars|first7=J|last8=Dietz|first8=R|last9=Sonne|first9=C|last10=Hegelund|first10=P|last11=Isaksen|first11=C|last12=Akse|first12=G. B.|last13=Cohen|first13=B|last14=Stern|first14=H. L.|last15=Moon|first15=T|last16=Vollmers|first16=C|last17=Corbett-Detig|first17=R|last18=Paetkau|first18=D|last19=Shapiro|first19=B|year=2022|title=Glacial ice supports a distinct and undocumented polar bear subpopulation persisting in late 21st-century sea-ice conditions polar bear subpopulation persisting in late 21st-century sea-ice conditions|journal=Science|volume=376|issue=6599|pages=1333–1338|doi=10.1126/science.abk2793}}</ref> The bears can also be divided into four [[gene cluster]]s; Southern Canadian, [[Arctic Archipelago|Canadian Archipelago]], Western Basin (northwestern Canada west to the [[Russian Far East]]) and Eastern Basin (Greenland east to Siberia).<ref name=Peacock2015/>
The polar bear is an excellent [[aquatic locomotion|swimmer]] and often will swim for days.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Pagano|first1=A. Am|title=Long-distance swimming by polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'') of the southern Beaufort Sea during years of extensive open water|journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology|date=2012|volume=90|issue=5|pages=663–676|doi=10.1139/z2012-033|doi-access=free}}</ref> One bear swam continuously for 9 days in the frigid [[Bering Sea]] for {{convert|700|km|-2|abbr=on}} to reach ice far from land. She then travelled another {{convert|1800|km|-2|abbr=on}}. During the swim, the bear lost 22% of her body mass and her yearling cub died.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Durner |first1=George M. |title=Consequences of long-distance swimming and travel over deep-water pack ice for a female polar bear during a year of extreme sea ice retreat |journal=Polar Biology |date=2011 |volume=34 |issue=7 |pages=975–984 |doi=10.1007/s00300-010-0953-2 |s2cid=3807334 |display-authors=etal}}</ref> With its body fat providing buoyancy, the bear swims in a [[dog paddle]] fashion using its large forepaws for propulsion. Polar bears can swim at {{convert|6|mph|-1|order=flip|abbr=on}}. When walking, the polar bear tends to have a lumbering gait and maintains an average speed of around {{convert|3.5|mph|order=flip|abbr=on}}.<ref name="behavior"/> When sprinting, they can reach up to {{convert|25|mph|order=flip|abbr=on}}.<ref>[http://www.seaworld.org/infobooks/polarbears/pbbehavior.html Polar Bears: VI. Behavior.], [[SeaWorld]]. Retrieved 21 January 2011.</ref> Researches have engineered synthetic textiles that mimic the fur's ability to transmit solar radiation toward the bears’ skin and insulate heat from escaping.<ref>{{cite web |title=New Textile Unravels Warmth-trapping Secrets of Polar Bear Fur |url=https://www.umass.edu/news/article/new-textile-unravels-warmth-trapping-secrets-polar-bear-fur |website=University of Massachusetts |access-date=13 April 2023}}</ref>


The polar bear is dependent enough on the ocean to be considered a [[marine mammal]].<ref name=":0"/>{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=XIII}} It prefers the annual [[sea ice]] over [[continental shelf|continental shelves]] and between islands of archipelagos. These areas, known as the "Arctic ring of life", have high biological productivity in comparison to the deep waters of the high Arctic.<ref name="derocher2004"/>{{sfn|Stirling|2011|pp=9–10}} The species tends to frequent areas where sea ice meets water, such as [[polynya]]s and [[lead (sea ice)|leads]], to hunt the seals that make up most of its diet.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Stirling |first1=Ian |date=January 1997 |title=The importance of polynyas, ice edges, and leads to marine mammals and birds |volume=10 |issue=1–4 |pages=9–21 |doi=10.1016/S0924-7963(96)00054-1 |journal=Journal of Marine Systems|bibcode=1997JMS....10....9S }}</ref> Polar bears travel in response to changes in ice cover throughout the year. They are forced onto land in summer when the sea ice disappears.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=9}} Terrestrial habitats used by polar bears include forests, mountains, rocky areas, lakeshores and creeks.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|pp=67–68}} In the Chukchi and Beaufort seas, where the sea ice breaks off and floats north during the summer, polar bears generally stay on the ice, though a large portion of the population (15&ndash;40%) has been observed spending all summer on land since the 1980s.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Rode |first1=Karyn D. |last2=Douglas |first2=D.C. |last3=Atwood |first3=T.C. |last4=Durner |first4=G.M. |last5=Wilson |first5=R.R. |last6=Pagano |first6=A.M. |date=December 2022 |journal=Global Ecology and Conservation |volume=40 |title=Observed and forecasted changes in land use by polar bears in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, 1985–2040 |page=e02319|doi=10.1016/j.gecco.2022.e02319 |doi-access=free |page=2}}</ref> Some areas have thick [[Sea ice#Old sea ice|multiyear]] ice that doesn't completely melt and the bears can stay on all year,<ref name=Vongraven>{{cite journal|last1=Vongraven|first1=D|last2=Aars|first2=J|last3=Amstrup|first3=S|last4=Atkinson|first4=S. N.|last5=Belikov|first5=S|last6=Born|first6=E. W.|last7=DeBruyn|first7=T. D.|last8=Derocher|first8=A. E.|last9=Durner|first9=G|last10=Gill|first10=M|last11=Lunn|first11=N|last12=Obbard|first12=M. E.|last13=Omelak|first13=J|last14=Ovsyanikov|first14=N|last15=Peacock|first15=E|last16=Richardson|first16=E|last17=Sahanatien|first17=V|last18=Stirling|first18=I|last19=Wiig|first19=Ø|year=2012|title=A circumpolar monitoring framework for polar bears|journal=Ursus: Monograph Series Number 5|volume=23|pages=1-66|doi=10.2192/URSUS-D-11-00026.1}}</ref> though this type of ice has less seals and allows for less [[Primary production|productivity]] in the water.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=4}}
==Life history and behaviour==
[[File:Polar Bears Play fight.JPG|thumb|right|Subadult males frequently play-fight. During the mating season, actual fighting is intense and often leaves scars or broken teeth.]]
Unlike brown bears, polar bears are not [[territory (animal)|territorial]]. Although stereotyped as being voraciously aggressive, they are normally cautious in confrontations, and often choose to escape rather than fight.<ref name="matthews2729">[[#Matthews|Matthews]], pp. 27–29</ref> Satiated polar bears rarely attack humans unless severely provoked.<ref>[http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/about-polar-bears/essentials/conflicts-and-encounters Conflicts and Encounters] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151226172736/http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/about-polar-bears/essentials/conflicts-and-encounters |date=26 December 2015 }}. ''Polar Bears International''. 2015.</ref><ref>[http://news.discovery.com/animals/polar-bear-attacks-surprisingly-rare-110805.htm Polar Bear Attacks Surprisingly Rare]. Kieran Mulvaney, ''Discovery News''. 5 August 2011.</ref> However, due to their lack of prior human interaction, hungry polar bears are extremely unpredictable, fearless towards people and are known to kill and sometimes eat humans.<ref name="bruemmer2533">[[#Bruemmer|Bruemmer]], pp. 25–33</ref> Many attacks by [[brown bear]]s are the result of surprising the animal, which is not the case with the polar bear. Polar bears are stealth hunters, and the victim is often unaware of the bear's presence until the attack is underway. Whereas brown bears often maul a person and then leave, polar bear attacks are more likely to be predatory and are almost always fatal.<ref name="conflicts">{{cite book |last=Stirling |first=Ian |year=1988 |title=Polar Bears |location=Ann Arbor |author-link=Ian Stirling (biologist) |publisher=University of Michigan Press |isbn=978-0-472-10100-9 |chapter=Distribution and Abundance |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/polarbears00stir }}</ref> However, due to the very small human population around the [[Arctic]], such attacks are rare. [[Michio Hoshino]], a Japanese wildlife photographer, was once pursued briefly by a hungry male polar bear in northern Alaska. According to Hoshino, the bear started running but Hoshino made it to his truck. The bear was able to reach the truck and tore one of the doors off the truck before Hoshino was able to drive off.<ref>{{cite book |last=Hoshino |first=M. |url=https://archive.org/details/hoshinosalaska0000hosh |title=Hoshino's Alaska |publisher=[[Chronicle Books]] |year=2007 |isbn=978-0-8118-5651-5 |url-access=registration}}</ref>


==Natural history==
In general, adult polar bears live solitary lives. Yet, they have often been seen playing together for hours at a time and even sleeping in an embrace,<ref name="bruemmer2533"/> and polar bear zoologist Nikita Ovsianikov has described adult males as having "well-developed friendships."<ref name="matthews2729"/> Cubs are especially playful as well. Among young males in particular, play-fighting may be a means of practicing for serious competition during mating seasons later in life.<ref>[[#Matthews|Matthews]], p. 95</ref> Polar bears are usually quiet but do communicate with various sounds and vocalizations. Females communicate with their young with moans and chuffs, and the distress calls of both cubs and subadults consists of bleats.<ref name=Naughton/> Cubs may hum while nursing.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Derocher, A. E.|author2=Van Parijs, S. M.|author3=Wiig, Ø.|year=2010|title=Nursing vocalization of a polar bear cub|journal=Ursus|volume=21|issue=2|pages=189–191|doi=10.2192/09SC025.1|s2cid=55599722}}</ref> When nervous, bears produce huffs, chuffs and snorts while hisses, growls and roars are signs of aggression.<ref name=Naughton>{{cite book|author=Naughton, D.|year=2014|title=The Natural History of Canadian Mammals: Opossums and Carnivores|publisher=University of Toronto Press|pages=251–252|isbn=978-1-4426-4483-0}}</ref> Chemical communication can also be important: bears leave behind their scent in their tracks which allow individuals to keep track of one another in the vast Arctic wilderness.<ref>{{cite journal |author1=Owen, M. A. |author2=Swaisgood, R. R. |author3=Slocomb, C. |author4=Amstrup, S. C. |author5=Durner, G. M. |author6=Simac, K. |author7=Pessier, A. P. |year=2014 |title=An experimental investigation of chemical communication in the polar bear |journal=Journal of Zoology |volume=295 |issue=1 |pages=36–43 |doi=10.1111/jzo.12181}}</ref>
[[File:Ursus maritimus posture.svg|thumb|Some characteristic postures: {{ordered list |at rest; |assessing a situation; |breaking into a seal den}}]]
Polar bears have wide [[home range]]s. They may independently travel an average of {{cvt|142332|km2|abbr=on}} per year, while drifting ice allows them to move even further at {{cvt|178040|km2|abbr=on}} per year.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Auger-Méthé|first1=M|last2=Lewis|first2=M. A.|last3=Derocher|first3=A. E.|year=2016|title=Home ranges in moving habitats: polar bears and sea ice|journal=Ecography|volume=32|issue=1|pages=26–35|doi=10.1111/ecog.01260}}</ref> Depending on ice conditions, a bear can travel an average of {{convert|12|km|mi|abbr=on}} per day.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Ferguson|first1=S. H.|last2=Taylor|first2=M. K.|last3=Born|first3=E. W.|last4=Rosing-Asvid|first4=A|last5=Messier|first5=F|year=2001|title=Activity and Movement Patterns of Polar Bears Inhabiting Consolidated versus Active Pack Ice|journal=Arctic|volume=54|issue=1|pages=49–54|doi=10.14430/arctic763}}</ref> These movements are powered by their energy-rich diet.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=12}} Bears are also capable swimmers. One study found they can swim an average of {{convert|154.2|km|mi|abbr=on}} with an average duration of 3.4 days.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Pagano|first1=A. M.|last2=Durner|first2=G M.|last3=Amstrup|first3=S. C.|last4=Simac|first4=K. S.|last5=York|first5=G. S.|year=2012|title=Long-distance swimming by polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'') of the southern Beaufort Sea during years of extensive open water|journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology|volume=90|issue=5|pages=663–676|doi=10.1139/Z2012-033}}</ref> They can dive for as long as three minutes.<ref name="Stirling & van Meurs 2015">{{cite journal|last1=Stirling|first1=Ian|last2=van Meurs|first2=Rinie|title=Longest recorded underwater dive by a polar bear|journal=Polar Biology|volume=38|issue=8|date=2015|pages=1301–1304|doi=10.1007/s00300-015-1684-1|s2cid=6385494}}</ref>


Polars bears are active year-round, [[hibernation]] occurring only among pregnant females.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=28}} They typically have a normal [[Circadian rhythm|24-hour cycle]] even during days of all [[Polar night|darkness]] or [[Midnight sun|sunlight]], though cycles less than a day are more common during the former.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Ware|first1=J. V.|last2=Rode|first2=K. D.|last3=Robbins|first3=C. T.|last4=Leise|first4=T|last5=Weil|first5=C. R.|last6=Jansen|first6=H. T.|year=2020|title=The Clock Keeps Ticking: Circadian Rhythms of Free-Ranging Polar Bears|journal=Journal of Biological Rythms|volume=35|issue=2|doi=10.1177/0748730419900877}}</ref> The species is generally [[Diurnality|diurnal]]; being more active early in the day and less so towards the end.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Stirling|first1=I|year=1974|title=Midsummer observations on the behavior of wild polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'')|journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology|volume=52|issue=9|pages=1191–1198|doi=10.1139/z74-157}}</ref> Polar bears sleep close to eight hours a day on average.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=141}} They will sleep in various positions, including being curled up, sitting up, laying on the side, on the back with limbs spread or on the belly with the rump elevated.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=140}}{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=79}} On sea ice, polar bears snooze at [[Pressure ridge (ice)|pressure ridges]] where they dig on the sheltered side and lie down. After a snowstorm, a bear may rest under the snow for hours or days. On land, the bears may dig a resting spot on gravel or sand beaches.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=140}} They will also sleep on rocky outcrops. Adult males require less shelter for sleeping as they are less at risk from other bears.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=68}}
In 1992, a photographer near Churchill took a now widely circulated set of photographs of a polar bear playing with a [[Canadian Eskimo Dog]] (''Canis familiaris'') a tenth of its size.<ref name="rosing128132"/><ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20140318174652/http://nifplay.org/polar-husky.html Why Didn't the Wild Polar Bear eat the Husky?] The National Institute for Play</ref> The pair wrestled harmlessly together each afternoon for 10 days in a row for no apparent reason, although the bear may have been trying to demonstrate its friendliness in the hope of sharing the kennel's food. This kind of social interaction is uncommon; it is far more typical for polar bears to behave aggressively towards dogs.<ref name="rosing128132">[[#Rosing|Rosing]], pp. 128–132</ref>
===Social life===
[[File:Play fight of polar bears edit 1.ogv|thumb|right|Young males play-fighting]]
Polar bears are typically solitary, aside from mothers with cubs and mating pairs.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=105}} On land, they are found closer together and gather around food resources. Adult males in particular are more tolerant of each other in terrestrial environments and outside the breeding season.<ref name=Derocher1990>{{cite journal|last1=Derocher|first1=A. E.|last2=Stirling|first2=I|year=1990|title=Observations of aggregating behaviour in adult male polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'')|journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology|volume=68|issue=7|pages=1390–1394|doi=10.1139/z90-207}}</ref><ref name=Ferguson1997>{{cite journal|last1=Ferguson|first1=S. H.|last2=Taylor|first2=M. K.|last3=Messier|first3=F|year=1997|title=Space use by polar bears in and around Auyuittuq National Park, Northwest Territories, during the ice-free period|journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology|volume=75|issue=10|pages=1585–1594|doi=10.1139/z97-785}}</ref> They have been recorded forming stable "alliances", traveling, resting and playing together. A [[dominance hierarchy]] exists among polar bears with the largest, mature males ranking at the top. Adult females outrank subadults and adolescents and younger males outrank females of the same age. In addition, cubs with their mothers outrank those on their own.<ref name=Ovsyanikov2005>{{cite journal|last=Ovsyanikov|first=N. G.|year=2005|title=Behavior of polar bears in coastal congregations|journal=Zoologicheskiĭ Zhurnal|volume=84|issue=1|pages=94–103|url=https://www.arlis.org/docs/vol1/E/Walrus/Russian/Ovsyanikov.2005.BehaviorPolarBearCoastalCongreg.ZoolZhurnal.pdf}}</ref> Females with dependent offspring tend to stay away from males,<ref name=Ferguson1997/> but sometimes associate with other female-offspring units creating "composite families".<ref name=Ovsyanikov2005/>


Polar bears are generally quite but are heard to produce various sounds.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=30}} [[Prusten|Chuffing]], a soft pulsing call, is made by mother bears presumably to keep in contact with their young.<ref name=Wemmer1976/> During the breeding season, adult males will chuff at potential mates.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=31}} Unlike in other animals where chuffing is passed through the nostrils, in polar bears it is emitted through a partially open mouth.<ref name=Wemmer1976>{{cite journal|last1=Wemmer|first1=C|last2=Von Ebers|first2=M|last3=Scow|first3=K|year=1976|title=An analysis of the chuffing vocalization in the Polar bear (Ursus maritimus)|journal=Journal of Zoology|volume=180|issue=3|pages=425–439|doi=10.1111/j.1469-7998.1976.tb04686.x}}</ref> Cubs will cry for attention and produce humming noises while nursing.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Derocher|first1=A. E.|last2=Van Parijs|first2=S. M.|last3=Wiig|first3=Ø|year=2010|title=Nursing vocalization of a polar bear cub|journal=Ursus|volume=21|issue=2|pages=189–191|doi=10.2192/09SC025.1}} </ref> Teeth chops, jaw pops, blows, huffs, moans, [[growling|growls]] and [[roar (vocalization)|roars]] are heard in more hostile encounters.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=31}} Chemical communication can also be important: bears secret their scent from their foot pads into their tracks which allow individuals to keep track of one another in the vast Arctic wilderness.<ref>{{cite journal |author1=Owen, M. A. |author2=Swaisgood, R. R. |author3=Slocomb, C. |author4=Amstrup, S. C. |author5=Durner, G. M. |author6=Simac, K. |author7=Pessier, A. P. |year=2014 |title=An experimental investigation of chemical communication in the polar bear |journal=Journal of Zoology |volume=295 |issue=1 |pages=36–43 |doi=10.1111/jzo.12181}}</ref>
===Hunting and diet===
[[File:Polarbear spitzbergen 1.jpg|thumb|right|The polar bear's long muzzle and neck help it to search in deep holes for seals, while its powerful hindquarters enable it to drag massive prey<ref name="matthews73-88"/>]]
The polar bear is the most carnivorous member of the bear family, and throughout most of its range, its diet primarily consists of [[Ringed seal|ringed]] (''Pusa hispida'') and [[bearded seal]]s (''Erignathus barbatus'').<ref>{{cite episode |title=Arctic Bears |url=https://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/arcticbears/index.html |series=PBS Nature |series-link=Nature (TV series) |airdate=17 February 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080616221443/http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/arcticbears/index.html |archive-date=16 June 2008}}</ref> The Arctic is home to millions of seals, which become prey when they surface in holes in the ice in order to breathe, or when they haul out on the ice to rest.<ref name="matthews73-88">[[#Matthews|Matthews]], pp. 73–88</ref><ref name="ReferenceA">{{cite journal |author1=Dyck, M. G. |author2=Romberg, S. |title=Observations of a wild polar bear (''Ursus maritimus'') successfully fishing Arctic charr (''Salvelinus alpinus'') and Fourhorn sculpin (''Myoxocephalus quadricornis'') |journal=Polar Biology |date=2007 |volume=30 |issue=12 |pages=1625–1628 |doi=10.1007/s00300-007-0338-3|s2cid=31644963 }}</ref> Polar bears hunt primarily at the interface between ice, water, and air; they only rarely catch seals on land or in open water.<ref name="amstrup2007"/>


===Diet and hunting===
The polar bear's most common hunting method is called ''still-hunting'':<ref name="hemstock24-27">[[#Hemstock|Hemstock]], pp. 24–27</ref> the bear uses its excellent sense of smell to locate a seal breathing hole, and crouches nearby in silence for a seal to appear. The bear may lie in wait for several hours. When the seal exhales, the bear smells its breath, reaches into the hole with a forepaw, and drags it out onto the ice. The polar bear kills the seal by biting its head to crush its skull. The polar bear also hunts by stalking seals resting on the ice: upon spotting a seal, it walks to within {{convert|100|yd|-1|order=flip|abbr=on}}, and then crouches. If the seal does not notice, the bear creeps to within {{convert|30|to|40|ft|0|order=flip|abbr=on}} of the seal and then suddenly rushes forth to attack.<ref name="matthews73-88"/> A third hunting method is to raid the birth lairs that female seals create in the snow.<ref name="hemstock24-27"/>
The polar bear is a [[hypercarnivore]],<ref name=Sacco2004/> and the most carnivorous species of bear.<ref name=Slater2010/> It is the [[apex predator]] of the Arctic,{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=155}} preying on [[Ice seal|ice-living seals]] and consuming their energy-rich [[blubber]].{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=69}} The most commonly taken species is the [[ringed seal]], but they also prey on [[bearded seal]]s and [[harp seal]]s.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/> Ringed seals are ideal prey as they are abundant and small enough to be overpowered by even small bears.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|pp=155–156}} Bearded seal adults are larger and are more likely to break free from an attacking bear, hence adult male bears are more successful in hunting them. Less common prey are [[hooded seal]]s, [[spotted seal]]s, [[ribbon seal]]s and the more temperate-living [[harbor seal]]s.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|pp=73, 76–77}} Polar bears, mostly adult males, will occasionally hunt [[walrus]]es, both on land and on ice, though they mainly target the young, as adults are too large and formidable, with their thick skin and long tusks.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=161}}
{{Multiple image
| align = right
| direction = vertical
|image1=Polar bear after unlucky hunt for a seal.jpg|caption1=Polar bear after failing to catch a [[bearded seal]] and on his way to find another prey
|image2=Polar bear (Ursus maritimus) with its prey.jpg|caption2=Bear feeding on a bearded seal
|image3=Ursus maritimus 4 1996-08-04.jpg|caption3=Bear out at sea. Polar bears sometimes stalk their prey from the water.
|image4=Polar Bear ANWR 10.jpg|caption4=Bear with whale carcass
}}
Besides seals, bears will prey on [[cetacean]] species such as [[beluga whale]]s and [[narhwal]]s, as well as [[ungulate|hoofed mammal]]s, birds and their eggs, fish and [[marine invertebrates]]. A small percentage of their diet is plant matter, such as berries, moss, grass and [[seaweed]].{{sfn|Derocher|2012|pp=80–88}} In their southern range, especially near Hudson Bay and James Bay, polar bears endure all summer without sea ice to hunt from. Hence they most sustain more on terrestrial foods.<ref name="ReferenceB">{{cite journal |last1=Russell |first1=Richard H. |title=The Food Habits of Polar Bears of James Bay and Southwest Hudson Bay in Summer and Autumn |journal=Arctic |date=1975|volume=28 |issue=2 |pages=117–129 |doi=10.14430/arctic2823|url=https://arctic.journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/arctic/index.php/arctic/article/download/2823/2800 |doi-access=free }}</ref> The polar bear cannot derive enough energy from such foods as its [[metabolism]] is specialized to require large amounts of fat from marine mammals.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Ramsay |first1=M. A. |last2=Hobson |first2=K. A. |date=May 1991 |title=Polar bears make little use of terrestrial food webs: evidence from stable-carbon isotope analysis |volume=86 |issue=4 |pages=598–600 |doi=10.1007/BF00318328 |pmid=28313343 |journal=Oecologia|bibcode=1991Oecol..86..598R |s2cid=32221744 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Best |first=R. C. |year=1985 |title=Digestibility of ringed seals by the polar bear |journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology |volume=63 |issue=5 |pages=1033–1036 |doi=10.1139/z85-155}}</ref>


Polar bears hunt their prey in several different ways. When a bear spots a seal [[hauling out]] on the sea ice it slowly stalks it with the head and neck lowered, possibly to make its dark nose and eyes less noticeable. As it gets closer, the bear crouches more and eventually charges at a high speed, attempting to catch the seal before it can escape into its ice hole. Some stalking bears need to move through water; transversing though water cavities in the ice when approaching the seal or swimming towards a seal on an ice floe. The polar bear can stay underwater with its nose exposed. When it gets close enough, the animal lunges from the water to attack. Despite popular legend, there is no reliable evidence that polar bears cover their black noses with their paws when hunting.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|pp=170–171, 174–175}}
A widespread legend tells that polar bears cover their black noses with their paws when hunting. This behaviour, if it happens, is rare – although the story exists in the [[oral history]] of northern peoples and in accounts by early [[Arctic exploration|Arctic explorers]], there is no record of an eyewitness account of the behaviour in recent decades.<ref name="behavior"/>


During a limited time in spring, polar bears will search for ringed seal pups in their birth lairs underneath the ice. Once a bear catches the scent of a hiding pup and pinpoints its location, it approaches the den quietly so as to not alert it. It uses its front feet to smash through the ice and then pokes its head in to catch the pup before it can escape. A ringed seal's lair can be more then {{convert|1|m|ft|abbr=on}} below the surface of the ice and thus more massive bears are better equipped for breaking in. Some bears may simply stay still near a breathing hole or other spot near water and [[sit-and-wait predators|wait]] for prey to come by.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|pp=127–129, 131}} This can last hours and when a seal surfaces the bear will try to pull it out with its paws and claws.{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=91}} This tactic is the primary hunting method from winter to early spring.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/>
[[File:Polar bear (Ursus maritimus) with its prey.jpg|thumb|left|Bear feeding on a [[bearded seal]]]]
Mature bears tend to eat only the calorie-rich skin and blubber of the seal, which are highly digestible,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Best |first1=R. C. |title=Digestibility of ringed seals by the polar bear |journal=Can. J. Zool. |date=1984 |volume=63 |issue=5 |pages=1033–1036 |doi=10.1139/z85-155}}</ref> whereas younger bears consume the protein-rich red meat.<ref name="matthews73-88"/> Studies have also photographed polar bears scaling near-vertical cliffs, to eat birds' chicks and eggs.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/earth/hi/earth_news/newsid_8622000/8622244.stm |work=BBC News |title=In pictures: Rock climbing polar bears |date=20 April 2010}}</ref> For [[Juvenile (organism)|subadult]] bears, which are independent of their mother but have not yet gained enough experience and body size to successfully hunt seals, scavenging the carcasses from other bears' kills is an important source of nutrition. Subadults may also be forced to accept a half-eaten carcass if they kill a seal but cannot defend it from larger polar bears. After feeding, polar bears wash themselves with water or snow.<ref name="behavior">{{cite book |last=Stirling |first=Ian |author-link=Ian Stirling (biologist) |year=1988 |chapter=behavior |title=Polar Bears |location=Ann Arbor |publisher=University of Michigan Press |isbn=978-0-472-10100-9 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/polarbears00stir }}</ref>


During walrus hunts, the sight of an approaching polar bear can cause aggregations of walruses to panic and stampede. The bear will look for young that was crushed or separated during the turmoil.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=161}} There are reports of bears trying to kill walruses using rocks and pieces of ice.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Stirling|first1=I|last2=Laidre|first2=K. L.|last3=Born|first3=E. W.|year=2021|title=Do Wild Polar Bears (''Ursus maritimus'') Use Tools When Hunting Walruses (''Odobenus rosmarus'')?|journal=Arctic|volume=74|issue=2|pages=175–187|doi=10.14430/arctic72532}}</ref> Belugas and narwhals are vulnerable to bear attacks when they are stranded in shallow water or isolated holes in sea ice.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|pp=80–83}} When stalking land animals such as [[reindeer]], polar bears will hide in vegetation before an ambush.<ref name="Brook">{{cite journal |last1=Brook |first1=R. K. |last2=Richardson |first2=E. S. |year=2002 |title=Observations of Polar Bear Predatory Behaviour toward Caribou |journal=Arctic |volume=55 |issue=2 |pages=193–196 |doi=10.14430/arctic703|doi-access=free }}</ref> On some occasions, bears may try to catch prey in open water, swimming underneath a seal or [[aquatic bird]]. Seals in particular, however, are more agile than bears in the water.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|pp=84–85, 132}} Polar bears rely on raw power when trying to kill their prey, and will employ bites or paw swipes.<ref name=Sacco2004>{{cite journal|last1=Sacco|first1=T|last2=Van Valkenburgh|first2=B|year=2004|title=Ecomorphological indicators of feeding behaviour in the bears (Carnivora: Ursidae)|journal=Journal of Zoology|volume=263|issue=1|pages=41–54|doi=10.1017/S0952836904004856}}</ref> They have the strength to pull a mid-sized seal out of the water or haul a beluga carcass for quite some distance.{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=112}} Polar bears only occasionally [[Hoarding (animal behavior)|store]] food for later—burying it under snow—and only in the short term.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Stirling|first1=I|last2=Laidre|first2=K. L.|last3=Derocher|first3=A. E.|last4=Van Meurs|first4=R|year=2020|title=The ecological and behavioral significance of short-term food caching in polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'')|journal=Arctic Science|volume=6|issue=1|doi=10.1139/as-2019-0008}}</ref>
Although polar bears are extraordinarily powerful, its primary prey species, the ringed seal, is much smaller than itself, and many of the seals hunted are pups rather than adults. Ringed seals are born weighing {{convert|5.4|kg|lb|abbr=on}} and grown to an estimated average weight of only {{convert|60|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1139/z06-001 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/237973693 |title=The influence of climate variability on polar bear (''Ursus maritimus'') and ringed seal (''Pusa hispida'') population dynamics |journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology |volume=84 |issue=3 |pages=357–364 |year=2006 |last1=Rosing-Asvid |first1=A.}}</ref><ref name="link.springer.com">{{cite journal|date=June 2002|title=Diet composition of polar bears in Svalbard and the western Barents Sea|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/225758891|journal=[[Polar Biol.|Polar Biology]]|volume=25|issue=6|pages=448–452|doi=<!-- this DOI is broken - 10.1007/s00300-002-0364-0 -->|via=ResearchGate|vauthors=Derocher AE, Wiig Ø, Andersen M}}</ref> They also in places prey heavily upon the [[harp seal]] (''Pagophilus groenlandicus''), the [[harbor seal|harbour seal]] (''Phoca vitulina''), or the [[hooded seal]] (''Cystophora cristata'').<ref name="animaldiversity.org">{{Cite web|url=https://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Ursus_maritimus/|title = Ursus maritimus (Polar bear)| website=[[Animal Diversity Web]] }}</ref> The bearded seal, on the other hand, can be nearly the same size as the bear itself, averaging {{convert|270|kg|lb|abbr=on}}.<ref name="link.springer.com"/> Adult male bearded seals, at {{convert|350|to|500|kg|lb|abbr=on}} are too large for a female bear to overtake, and so are potential prey only for mature male bears.<ref name="overtake">{{cite journal |doi=10.1139/z07-028 |title=Unusual fatty acid biomarkers reveal age- and sex-specific foraging in polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'') |journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology |volume=85 |issue=4 |pages=505–517 |year=2007 |last1=Thiemann |first1=G. W. |last2=Budge |first2=S. M. |last3=Iverson |first3=S. J. |last4=Stirling |first4=I.}}</ref> Large males also occasionally attempt to hunt and kill even larger prey items.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Thiemann |first1=G. W. |last2=Iverson |first2=S. J. |last3=Stirling |first3=I. |last4=Obbard |first4=M. E. |year=2011 |title=Individual patterns of prey selection and dietary specialization in an Arctic marine carnivore |journal=Oikos |volume=120 |issue=10 |pages=1469–1478 |doi=10.1111/j.1600-0706.2011.19277.x}}</ref> It can kill an adult [[walrus]] (''Odobenus rosmarus''),<ref name="link.springer.com"/><ref name="OverwinteringWalruses"/> although this is rarely attempted. At up to {{convert|2000|kg|lb|abbr=on}} and a typical adult mass range of {{convert|600|to|1500|kg|lb|abbr=on}}, a walrus can be more than twice the bear's weight,<ref name="Clarkson1994"/> has extremely thick skin and has up to {{convert|3|ft|0|order=flip|adj=on}}-long ivory tusks that can be used as formidable weapons. A polar bear may charge a group of walruses, with the goal of separating a young, infirm, or injured walrus from the pod. They will even attack adult walruses when their diving holes have frozen over or intercept them before they can get back to the diving hole in the ice. Yet, polar bears will very seldom attack full-grown adult walruses, with the largest male walrus probably invulnerable unless otherwise injured or incapacitated. Since an attack on a walrus tends to be an extremely protracted and exhausting venture, bears have been known to back down from the attack after making the initial injury to the walrus.<ref name="OverwinteringWalruses">{{Cite journal |jstor=3872939 |title=Interactions between polar bears and overwintering walruses in the Central Canadian High Arctic |journal=Bears: Their Biology and Management |last1=Calvert |first1=Wendy |last2=Stirling |first2=Ian |volume=8 |series=A Selection of Papers from the Eighth International Conference on Bear Research and Management, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, February 1989 |year=1990 |pages=351–356 |doi=10.2307/3872939|s2cid=134001816 |url=https://semanticscholar.org/paper/a8ff741268ba9465e2600101c43fddb69a10e179 }}</ref> Polar bears have also been seen to prey on [[beluga whale]]s (''Delphinapterus leucas'')<ref name="link.springer.com"/> and [[narwhal]]s (''Monodon monoceros''),<ref name="link.springer.com"/> by swiping at them at breathing holes. The whales are of similar size to the walrus and nearly as difficult for the bear to subdue.<ref name="Macdonald">{{cite book |year=1993 |title=Mammals of Europe |publisher=Princeton University Press |location=New Jersey |isbn=978-0-691-09160-0 |last1=Macdonald |first1=D.W. |last2=Barrett |first2=P. |url=https://archive.org/details/mammalsofeurope00macd }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Heyland |first1=J.D. |last2=Hay |first2=Keith |year=1976 |title=An Attack by a Polar Bear on a Juvenile Beluga |journal=Arctic |volume=29 |issue=1 |pages=56–57 |doi=10.14430/arctic2789 |doi-access=free }}</ref> Most terrestrial animals in the Arctic can outrun the polar bear on land as polar bears overheat quickly, and most marine animals the bear encounters can outswim it. In some areas, the polar bear's diet is supplemented by walrus calves and by the carcasses of dead adult walruses or whales, whose blubber is readily devoured even when rotten.<ref name="bruemmer2533"/> Polar bears sometimes swim underwater to catch fish like the [[Arctic charr]] or the [[fourhorn sculpin]].<ref name="ReferenceA"/>


[[Arctic fox]]es routinely follow polar bears and scavenge scraps from their kills. The bears usually tolerate them but will charge a fox that gets too close when it is feeding. Polar bears themselves will scavenge. Subadult bears will eat remains left behind by others. Females with cubs often defer a carcass to an approaching adult male, though they may be less likely to if they haven't eaten in a long time.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|pp=191–193}} Whale carcasses are a valuable food source, particularly on land and after the sea ice melts, and attract several bears.<ref name=Derocher1990/> In one area in northeastern Alaska, polar bears have been recorded competing with [[grizzly bear]]s for whale carcasses. Despite their smaller size, grizzlies are more aggressive and polar bears are more likely to yield to them in confrontations.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Miller|first1=S|last2=Wilder|first2=J|last3=Wilson|first3=R. R.|year=2015|title=Polar bear–grizzly bear interactions during the autumn open-water period in Alaska|journal=Journal of Mammalogy|volume=96|issue=6|pages=1317–1325|doi=10.1093/jmammal/gyv140}}</ref> Polar bears will also scavenge at garbage dumps during ice-free periods.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Lunn|first1=N. J.|last2=Stirling|first2=I|year=1985|title=The significance of supplemental food to polar bears during the ice-free period of Hudson Bay|journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology|volume=63|issue=10|pages=2291–2297|doi=10.1139/z85-340}}</ref> Enough fat reserves allow polar bears to [[Fasting|fast]] for months.{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=89}}
[[File:Ursus maritimus posture.svg|thumb|Some characteristic postures: {{ordered list |at rest; |assessing a situation; |when feeding}}]]
With the exception of pregnant females, polar bears are active year-round, although they have a vestigial [[hibernation induction trigger]] in their blood. Unlike brown and black bears, polar bears are capable of [[fasting]] for up to several months during late summer and early fall, when they cannot hunt for seals because the sea is unfrozen.<ref name="tick"/> When sea ice is unavailable during summer and early autumn, some populations live off fat reserves for months at a time,<ref name="stirling1988"/> as polar bears do not 'hibernate' any time of the year.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Cesare |first=Chris |date=16 July 2015 |title=Polar bear metabolism cannot cope with ice loss |url=http://www.nature.com/news/polar-bear-metabolism-cannot-cope-with-ice-loss-1.17992 |journal=Nature |access-date=22 July 2015 |doi=10.1038/nature.2015.17992 |s2cid=181566373 }}</ref>


===Reproduction and development===
Being both curious animals and scavengers,<ref name="Clarkson1994"/><ref name="Manning"/> polar bears investigate and consume [[waste|garbage]] where they come into contact with humans.<ref name="link.springer.com"/><ref name="Clarkson1994"/> Polar bears may attempt to consume almost anything they can find, including hazardous substances such as [[Expanded polystyrene|styrofoam]], [[plastic]], [[car battery|car batteries]], [[ethylene glycol]], [[hydraulic fluid]], and [[motor oil]].<ref name="Clarkson1994">{{cite book |last1=Clarkson |first1=Peter L. |last2=Stirling |first2=Ian |author2-link=Ian Stirling (biologist) |year=1994 |contribution=Polar Bears |contribution-url=http://icwdm.org/handbook/carnivor/ca_c25.pdf |editor1-last=Hygnstrom |editor1-first=Scott E. |editor2-last=Timm |editor2-first=Robert M. |editor3-last=Larson |editor3-first=Gary E. |title=Prevention and Control of Wildlife Damage |place=Lincoln |publisher=University of Nebraska |pages=C–25 to C–34 |url=http://icwdm.org/handbook/index.asp |access-date=13 November 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071120204546/http://icwdm.org/handbook/index.asp |archive-date=20 November 2007 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name="Manning">{{cite journal |last=Manning |first=T. H. |date=March 1961 |title=Comments on 'Carnivorous walrus and some Arctic zoonoses' |journal=Arctic |volume=14 |issue=1 |pages=76–77 |url=http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic14-1-76.pdf |access-date=13 November 2007 |doi=10.14430/arctic3663}}</ref> The [[landfill|dump]] in [[Churchill, Manitoba|Churchill]], [[Manitoba]] was closed in 2006 to protect bears, and waste is now recycled or transported to [[Thompson, Manitoba]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lunn |first1=N. J. |last2=Stirling |first2=Ian |year=1985 |title=The significance of supplemental food to polar bears during the ice-free period of Hudson Bay |journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology |volume=63 |issue=10 |pages=2291–2297 |doi=10.1139/z85-340}}</ref><ref name="eliasson">{{cite web|url=http://www.polarbearalley.com/churchill-dump.html |title=Hudson Bay Post&nbsp;— Goodbye Churchil [sic] Dump |last=Eliasson |first=Kelsey |date=May 2004 |access-date=9 June 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080509135223/http://www.polarbearalley.com/churchill-dump.html |archive-date=9 May 2008 }}</ref>
{{Multiple image
| align = right
| direction = vertical
|image1=Встреча 2.jpg|caption1=Courting male approaching female
|image2=Ursus maritimus us fish.jpg|caption2=Polar bear cubs
|image3=Cub polar bear is nursing 2.OGG|caption3=Mother nursing her young
|image4=2007-01-24 Polar Bear Female With Cubs Along the Beaufort Sea.jpg|caption4=Female with cubs
}}
Polar bear mating takes place on the sea ice and during spring, mostly between March and May.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/><ref name=Ramsay1986>{{cite journal|last1=Ramsay|first1=M. A.|last2=Stirling|first2=I|year=1986|title=On the mating system of polar bears|journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology|volume=64|issue=10|pages=2142–2151|doi=10.1139/z86-329}}</ref><ref name=Derocher2010/>{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=105}} Males search for [[estrus]] females and often travel in twisting directions which reduces the chances of them encountering other males while still allowing them to find females. The movements of females remain linear and they travel more widely.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Laidre|first1=K. L.|last2=Born|first2=E. W.|last3=Gurarie|first3=E|last4=Wiig|first4=Ø|last5=Dietz|first5=R|last6=Stern|first6=H|year=2013|title=Females roam while males patrol: divergence in breeding season movements of pack-ice polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'')|journal=Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences|volume=280|page=20122371|doi=10.1098/rspb.2012.2371}}</ref> The mating system could be labelled as female defense [[Polygyny in animals|polygyny]], [[serial monogamy]] or [[promiscuity]].<ref name=Derocher2010>{{cite journal|last1=Derocher|first1=A. E.|last2=Anderson|first2=M|last3=Wiig|first3=Ø|last4=Aars|first4=J|year=2010|title=Sexual dimorphism and the mating ecology of polar bears (Ursus maritimus) at Svalbard (''Ursus maritimus'') at Svalbard|journal=Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology|volume=64|issue=6|pages=939–946|doi=10.1007/s00265-010-0909-0}}</ref><ref name=Zey2009/>


Upon finding a female, a male will try to isolate and guard her. Courtship can be somewhat aggressive and a male will pursue a female if she tries to run away. It can take days for the male to mate with the female which [[Induced ovulation (animals)|induces ovulation]]. After their first copulation, the couple bond. Undisturbed polar bear pairings typically last around two weeks during which they will sleep together and mate multiple times.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|pp=141, 145–147}} Competition for mates can be intense and this has led to [[sexual selection]] for bigger males. Polar bear males often have scars from fighting.<ref name=Ramsay1986/><ref name=Derocher2010/> A male and female that have already bonded will flee together when another male arrives.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|pp=145–147}} A female mates with multiple males in a season and a single litter can have more than one father.<ref name=Zey2009>{{cite journal|last1=Zeyl|first1=E|last2=Aars|first2=J|last3=Ehrich|first3=D|last4=Bachmann|first4=L|last5=Wiig|first5=Ø|year=2009|title=The mating system of polar bears: a genetic approach|journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology|volume=87|issue=12|pages=1195–1209|doi=10.1139/Z09-107}}</ref>
====Dietary flexibility====
Although seal predation is the primary and an indispensable way of life for most polar bears, when alternatives are present they are quite flexible. Polar bears consume a wide variety of other wild foods, including [[muskox]] (''Ovibos moschatus''), [[reindeer]] (''Rangifer tarandus''), birds, eggs, [[rodent]]s, [[crab]]s, other [[crustacean]]s, [[fish]]<ref name="animaldiversity.org"/> and other polar bears. They may also eat plants, including [[berry|berries]], [[root]]s, and [[kelp]];<ref name="ReferenceB">{{cite journal |last1=Russell |first1=Richard H. |title=The Food Habits of Polar Bears of James Bay and Southwest Hudson Bay in Summer and Autumn |journal=Arctic |date=1975|volume=28 |issue=2 |pages=117–129 |doi=10.14430/arctic2823|url=https://arctic.journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/arctic/index.php/arctic/article/download/2823/2800 |doi-access=free }}</ref> however, none of these have been a significant part of their diet,<ref name="Clarkson1994"/> except for beachcast [[marine mammal]] carcasses. Given the change in climate, with ice breaking up in areas such as the [[Hudson Bay]] earlier than it used to, polar bears are exploiting food resources such as [[snow goose|snow geese]] and eggs, and plants such as [[lyme grass]] in increased quantities.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Gormezano|first1=Linda J.|last2=Rockwell|first2=Robert F.|title=What to eat now? Shifts in polar bear diet during the ice-free season in western Hudson Bay|journal=Ecology and Evolution|date=2013|volume=3|issue=10|pages=3509–3523|doi=10.1002/ece3.740|pmid=24223286|pmc=3797495}}</ref>


When the mating season ends, the female will build up more fat reserves to sustain both herself and her young. Sometime between August and October, the female constructs and enters a maternity den for winter. Depending on the area, maternity dens can be found in sea ice just off the coastline or further inland, and may be dug underneath snow, earth or a combination of both.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|pp=112, 115, 120}} The inside of these shelters can be around {{convert|1.5|m|ft|abbr=on}} around with a ceiling height of {{convert|1.2|m|ft|abbr=on}} while the entrance may be {{convert|2.1|m|ft|abbr=on}} and {{convert|1.2|m|ft|abbr=on}} wide. The temperature of a den can be 18–37 degrees higher than the outside.{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=85}} Females hibernate and give birth to their cubs in the dens.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|pp=28, 155}} Hibernating bears fast and recycle bodily waste. Polar bears experience [[delayed implantation]] and the fertilized embryo does not start development until the fall, between mid-September and mid-October.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=124}} With delayed implantation, [[gestation]] in the species lasts seven to nine months but actual pregnancy is only two months.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=171}}
When stalking land animals, such as [[muskox]], [[reindeer]],<ref name="ReferenceB"/> and even [[willow ptarmigan]] (''Lagopus lagopus''), polar bears appear to make use of vegetative cover and wind direction to bring them as close to their prey as possible before attacking. Polar bears have been observed to hunt the small [[Svalbard reindeer]] (''R. t. platyrhynchus''), which weigh only {{convert|40|to|60|kg|lb|-1|abbr=on}} as adults, as well as the [[barren-ground caribou]] (''R. t. groenlandicus''), which is about twice as heavy as the former.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1007/s003000000138 |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/225349127 |title=Predation of Svalbard reindeer by polar bears |journal=Polar Biology |volume=23 |issue=10 |pages=675–678 |year=2000 |last1=Derocher |first1=A. E. |last2=Wiig |first2=Øystein |last3=Bangjord |first3=G. |s2cid=1890096 }}</ref><ref name="Brook">{{cite journal |last1=Brook |first1=R. K. |last2=Richardson |first2=E. S. |year=2002 |title=Observations of Polar Bear Predatory Behaviour toward Caribou |journal=Arctic |volume=55 |issue=2 |pages=193–196 |doi=10.14430/arctic703|doi-access=free }}</ref> Adult muskox, which can weigh {{convert|450|kg|lb|-2|abbr=on}} or more, are a more formidable quarry.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Ovsyanikov, N.G. |year=1996 |title=Interactions of polar bears with other large mammals, including man |journal=Journal of Wildlife Research |volume=1 |pages=254–259}}</ref> Although [[ungulate]]s are not typical prey, the killing of one during the summer months can greatly increase the odds of survival during that lean period. Like the brown bear, most ungulate prey of polar bears is likely to be young, sickly or injured specimens rather than healthy adults.<ref name="Brook"/> The polar bear's [[metabolism]] is specialized to require large amounts of fat from marine mammals, and it cannot derive sufficient caloric intake from terrestrial food.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Ramsay |first1=M. A. |last2=Hobson |first2=K. A. |date=May 1991 |title=Polar bears make little use of terrestrial food webs: evidence from stable-carbon isotope analysis |volume=86 |issue=4 |pages=598–600 |doi=10.1007/BF00318328 |pmid=28313343 |journal=Oecologia|bibcode=1991Oecol..86..598R |s2cid=32221744 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Best |first=R. C. |year=1985 |title=Digestibility of ringed seals by the polar bear |journal=Canadian Journal of Zoology |volume=63 |issue=5 |pages=1033–1036 |doi=10.1139/z85-155}}</ref>


Mother polar bears typically give birth to two cubs per litter. As with other bear species, newborn polar bears are tiny and [[Precociality and altriciality|altricial]].{{sfn|Stirling|2011|pp=124–125, 131}} The newborns have woolly hair and pink skin, with a weight of around {{convert|600|g|abbr=on}}.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/>{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=10}} Their eyes remain closed for a month.{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=84}} The mother's fatty milk fuels their growth, and the cubs are keep warm both by the mother's body heat and the den. The mother emerges from the den between late February and early April, and her cubs are well developed and capable of walking with her.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|pp=126–127}} At this time they weigh {{convert|10|–|15|kg}}.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/> A polar bear family stays near the dens for roughly two weeks, during this time the cubs will move and play around while the mother mostly rests. They eventually head out on the sea ice.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=128}}
In their southern range, especially near [[Hudson Bay]] and [[James Bay]], Canadian polar bears endure all summer without sea ice to hunt from.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> Here, their food ecology shows their dietary flexibility. They still manage to consume some seals, but they are food-deprived in summer as only marine mammal carcasses are an important alternative without sea ice, especially carcasses of the [[beluga whale]]. These alternatives may reduce the rate of weight loss of bears when on land.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Derocher, Andrew E.|author2=Andriashek, Dennis|author3=Stirling, Ian|first1=Arctic|title=Terrestrial Foraging by Polar Bears During the Ice-Free Period in Western Hudson Bay|date=1993|volume=46|issue=3|pages=251–254|jstor=40511413|doi=10.14430/arctic1350|journal=Arctic|citeseerx=10.1.1.555.1960}}</ref> One scientist found that 71% of the [[Hudson Bay]] bears had fed on seaweed ([[marine algae]]) and that about half were feeding on birds<ref name="link.springer.com"/> such as the [[dovekie]] and [[sea ducks]], especially the [[long-tailed duck]] (53%) and [[common eider]], by swimming underwater to catch them. They were also diving to feed on [[blue mussel]]s and other underwater food sources like the [[Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis|green sea urchin]]. 24% had eaten [[moss]] recently, 19% had consumed grass, 34% had eaten [[black crowberry]] and about half had consumed [[willow]]s.<ref name="ReferenceB"/> This study illustrates the polar bear's dietary flexibility but it does not represent its life history elsewhere. Most polar bears elsewhere will never have access to these alternatives, except for the marine mammal carcasses that are important wherever they occur.


Cubs under a year old stay close to their mother. When she hunts, they stay still and watch until she calls them back.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=173}}. Observing and imitating the mother helps the cubs hone their own hunting skills.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=186}} After their first year they become more independent and explore. At around two years old, they are capable of hunting on their own, but will return to their mother.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=184}} The young suckle their mother as she is laying on her side or sitting up.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|p=128}} A [[lactating]] female cannot conceive and give birth,{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=181}} and cubs are weaned between two and two-and-a-half years.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/> She may simply leave her weaned young or they may be chased away by a courting male.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=184}} Polar bears reach sexual maturity at around four years for females and six years for males.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|pp=128–129}} Females reach their adult size at four or five years of age while males are fully grown at twice that age.{{sfn|Derocher|2012|p=185}}
In Svalbard, polar bears were observed to kill [[white-beaked dolphin]]s during spring, when the dolphins were trapped in the sea ice. The bears then proceeded to [[hoarding (animal behavior)|cache]] the carcasses, which remained and were eaten during the ice-free summer and autumn.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Aars |first1=Jon |last2=Andersen |first2=Magnus |last3=Brenière |first3=Agnès |last4=Blanc |first4=Samuel |date=1 June 2015 |title=White-beaked dolphins trapped in the ice and eaten by polar bears |journal=Polar Research |volume=34 |page=26612 |doi=10.3402/polar.v34.26612 |doi-access=free }}</ref>


===Mortality===
===Reproduction and lifecycle===
[[File:Endangered arctic - starving polar bear edit.jpg|thumb|right|Starving polar bear]]
[[File:Ursus maritimus us fish.jpg|thumb|Cubs are born helpless and typically nurse for two and a half years]]
Polar bears can live up to 30 years.<ref name="DeMaster1981"/> The bear's long lifespan and ability to consistently produce young each year offsets cub deaths. Some cubs die in the dens or in the womb if the female is not in good condition. Nevertheless, the female has a chance to produce a surviving litter the next spring if she is able to eat better in the coming year. Cubs will eventually starve if their mothers can't kill enough prey.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|pp=204–207}} Cubs also face threats from [[wolves]]<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Richardson|first1=E. S.|last2=Andriashek|first2=D|year=2006|title=Wolf (''Canis lupus'') predation of a polar bear (''Ursus maritimus'') cub on the sea ice off northwestern Banks Island, Northwest Territories, Canada|journal=Arctic|volume=59|issue=3|pages=322–324|doi=10.14430/arctic318}}</ref> and adult male bears. Males [[infanticide (zoology)|kill cubs]] to bring their mother back into estrus, but also kill young outside the breeding season for food.<ref name=Taylor1985>{{cite journal|last1=Taylor|first1=M|last2=Larsen|first2=T|last3=Schweinsburg|first3=R. E.|year=1985|title=Observations of intraspecific aggression and cannibalism in polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'')|journal=Arctic|volume=38|issue=4|pages=303–309|doi=10.14430/arctic2149}}</ref>
Courtship and mating take place on the sea ice in April and May, when polar bears congregate in the best seal hunting areas.<ref name="reproduction"/> A male may follow the tracks of a breeding female for {{convert|100|km|-1|abbr=on}} or more, and after finding her engage in intense fighting with other males over mating rights, fights that often result in scars and broken teeth.<ref name="reproduction"/> Polar bears have a generally [[Polygyny in animals|polygynous]] mating system; recent genetic testing of mothers and cubs, however, has uncovered cases of litters in which cubs have different fathers.<ref name="carpenter">{{cite journal|last=Carpenter|first=Tom|date=November–December 2005|title=Who's Your Daddy?|journal=Canadian Geographic|pages=44–56}}</ref> Partners stay together and mate repeatedly for an entire week; the mating ritual [[Induced ovulation (animals)|induces ovulation]] in the female.<ref name="rosing42-48">[[#Rosing|Rosing]], pp. 42–48</ref>


Subadult bears, which are independent but not quite mature, have a particularly rough time as they are not as successful hunters as adults. Even when they do succeed, there is a chance their kill will be stolen by a larger bear. Hence subadults have to scavenge and are often underweight and at risk of starvation. At adulthood, polar bears have a high survival rate, though adult males suffer injuries from fights over mates.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|pp=207–208}} Polar bears are especially susceptible to ''[[Trichinella]]'', a parasitic [[roundworm]] they contract through [[cannibalism (zoology)|cannibalism]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Larsen |first1=Thor |last2=Kjos-Hanssen |first2=Bjørn |year=1983 |title=Trichinella sp. in polar bears from Svalbard, in relation to hide length and age |volume=1 |issue=1 |pages=89–96 |doi=10.1111/j.1751-8369.1983.tb00734.x |journal=Polar Research|bibcode=1983PolRe...1...89L |s2cid=208525641 }}</ref>
After mating, the fertilized egg remains in a suspended state until August or September. During these four months, the pregnant female eats prodigious amounts of food, gaining at least {{convert|200|kg|abbr=on}} and often more than doubling her body weight.<ref name="reproduction"/>


==Conservation status==
====Maternity denning and early life====
{{main article|Polar bear conservation}}
[[File:Female polar bear (Ursus maritimus) with cub, Svalbard.jpg|thumb|right|Mother and cub on [[Svalbard]], Norway]]
[[File:Polar Bear Habitat.png|thumb|right|Map from the [[U.S. Geological Survey]] shows projected changes in polar bear habitat from 2001 to 2010 and 2041 to 2050.]]
When the ice floes are at their minimum in the fall, ending the possibility of hunting, each pregnant female digs a ''maternity den'' consisting of a narrow entrance tunnel leading to one to three chambers. Most maternity dens are in snowdrifts, but may also be made underground in [[permafrost]] if it is not sufficiently cold yet for snow.<ref name="reproduction"/> In most subpopulations, maternity dens are situated on land a few kilometres from the coast, and the individuals in a subpopulation tend to reuse the same denning areas each year.<ref name="derocher2004"/> The polar bears that do not den on land make their dens on the sea ice. In the den, she enters a dormant state similar to [[hibernation]]. This hibernation-like state does not consist of continuous sleeping; however, the bear's heart rate slows from 46 to 27 beats per minute.<ref name="lockwood17-21">[[#Lockwood|Lockwood]], pp.17–21</ref> Her body temperature does not decrease during this period as it would for a typical mammal in hibernation.<ref name="stirling1988"/><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Bruce |first1=D. S. |last2=Darling |first2=N. K. |last3=Seeland |first3=K. J. |last4=Oeltgen |first4=P. R. |last5=Nilekani |first5=S. P. |last6=Amstrup |first6=S. C. |year=1990 |title=Is the polar bear (''Ursus maritimus'') a hibernator?: Continued studies on opioids and hibernation |journal=Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior |volume=35 |issue=3 |pages=705–711 |doi=10.1016/0091-3057(90)90311-5|pmid=2339159 |s2cid=37070322 }}</ref>
In 2015, the [[IUCN Red List]] categorized the polar bear as [[Vulnerable species|vulnerable]] due to "decline in area of occupancy, extent of occurrence and/or quality of habitat". It estimated the total population to be between 22,000 to 31,000, and the current population trend as unknown. Threats to polar bear populations include [[climate change]], pollution and oil/gas development.<ref name="iucn status 19 November 2021"/> Polar bears receive some legal protection in all the countries they inhabit. The species has been labeled as 'threatened' under the [[Endangered Species Act of 1973|US Endangered Species Act]] since 2008,<ref>{{cite web|title=Polar Bear Interaction Guidelines|website=U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service|accessdate=2023-07-12|url=https://www.fws.gov/pb-interaction-guidelines#:~:text=Polar%20bears%20are%20protected%20under,is%20necessary%20for%20human%20safety}}</ref> while the [[Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada]] listed it as of 'Special concern' since 1991.<ref>{{cite web|title=COSEWIC Assessment and Status Report on the Polar Bear (''Ursus maritimus'') in Canada 2018|website=Government of Canada|accessdate=2023-07-12|url=https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change/services/species-risk-public-registry/cosewic-assessments-status-reports/polar-bear-2018.html}}</ref> In 1973, the [[Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears]] was signed by all five nations with polar bear populations, Canada, Denmark (Greenland), Russia (then USSR), Norway and the US. This banned most harvesting of polar bears, allowing indigenous hunting using traditional methods, and promoted preservation of bear habitat.<ref name=International1973>{{cite journal|last1=Prestrud|first1=P|last2=Stirling|first2=I|year=1994|title=The International Polar Bear Agreement and the current status of polar bear conservation|journal=Aquatic Mammals|volume=20|issue=3|pages=113–124|url=https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Ian-Stirling-2/publication/285729154_The_International_Polar_Bear_Agreement_and_the_current_status_of_polar_bear_conservation/links/568b30d908ae051f9afa9140/The-International-Polar-Bear-Agreement-and-the-current-status-of-polar-bear-conservation.pdf}}</ref>


In 2021, the IUCN/SSC Polar Bear Specialist Group labeled four subpopulations (Barents and Chukchi Sea, Foxe Basin and Gulf of Boothia) as "likely stable", two (Kane Basin and M'Clintock Channel) as "likely increased" and three (Southern Beaufort Sea, Southern and Western Hudson Bay) as "likely decreased" over specific time periods between the 1980s and 2010s. The remaining ten did not have enough data.<ref name=statusreport>{{cite report|title=Status Report on the World’s Polar Bear Subpopulations: July 2021 Status Report|publisher=IUCN/SSC Polar Bear Specialist Group|date=July 2021|accessdate=2023-07-12|url=https://www.iucn-pbsg.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/July-2021-Status-Report-Web.pdf}}</ref> A 2016 study projected a likely decline in polar bear numbers of more than 30 percent "over three generations" due to the reduction of sea ice. The study concluded that declines of more than 50 percent are much less likely.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Regehr|first1=E. V.|last2=Laidre|first2=K. L.|last3=Akçakaya|first3=H. R.|last4=Amstrup|first4=S. C.|last5=Atwood|first5=T. C.|last6=Lunn|first6=N. J.|last7=Obbard|first7=M|last8=Stern|first8=H|last9=Thiemann|first9=G. W.|last10=Wiig|first10=Ø|year=2016|title=Conservation status of polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'') in relation to projected sea-ice declines|journal=Biology Letters|volume=12|page=20160556|doi=10.1098/rsbl.2016.0556}}</ref> A 2012 review suggested that polar bears may become regionally extinct in southern areas by 2050 if trends continue, leaving the Canadian Archipelago and northern Greenland as stongholds.<ref name=2012review>{{cite journal|last1=Stirling|first1=I|last2=Derocher|first2=A. E.|year=2012|title=Effects of climate warming on polar bears: a review of the evidence|journal=Global Change Biology|volume=18|issue=9|pages=2694–2706|doi=10.1111/j.1365-2486.2012.02753.x}}</ref>
Between November and February, cubs are born blind, covered with a light down fur, and weighing less than {{convert|0.9|kg|abbr=on}},<ref name="rosing42-48"/> but in captivity they might be delivered in the earlier months. The earliest recorded birth of polar bears in captivity was on 11 October 2011 in the [[Toronto Zoo]].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/toronto/rejected-by-their-mother-polar-cubs-now-under-intensive-care-at-toronto-zoo/article2199799/ |title=Rejected by their mother, polar cubs now under intensive care at Toronto Zoo |date=13 October 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111015225705/http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/toronto/rejected-by-their-mother-polar-cubs-now-under-intensive-care-at-toronto-zoo/article2199799/ |archive-date=15 October 2011 }}</ref> On average, each litter has two cubs. The family remains in the den until mid-February to mid-April, with the mother maintaining her fast while nursing her cubs on a fat-rich milk. By the time the mother breaks open the entrance to the den, her cubs weigh about {{convert|10|to|15|kg}}. For about 12 to 15 days, the family spends time outside the den while remaining in its vicinity, the mother grazing on vegetation while the cubs become used to walking and playing. Then they begin the long walk from the denning area to the sea ice, where the mother can once again catch seals. Depending on the timing of ice-floe breakup in the fall, she may have fasted for up to eight months.<ref name="reproduction"/> During this time, cubs playfully imitate the mother's hunting methods in preparation for later life.<ref>{{cite book |title=Ice Bear: The Arctic World of Polar Bears |last1=Kazlowski |first1=Steven |publisher=The Mountaineers Books |year=2010 |isbn=978-1-59485-486-6 |location=Seattle, WA |page=12 |last2=Stirling |first2=Ian}}</ref>


The key danger from climate change is malnutrition or starvation due to [[habitat destruction|habitat loss]]. As polar bears hunt seals on the sea ice, rising temperatures cause the ice to melt earlier in the year, driving the bears to shore before they have built sufficient fat reserves to survive the period of scarce food in the late summer and early fall. Thinner sea ice tends to break more easily, which appears to make it more difficult for polar bears to access seals. Insufficient nourishment leads to lower reproductive rates in adult females and lower survival rates in cubs and juvenile bears. Lack off access to seals also causes bears to find food on land which increases the risk of conflict with humans.<ref name="derocher2004" /><ref name=2012review/>
[[File:Cub polar bear is nursing 2.OGG|thumb|right|Cub nursing]]Female polar bears have been known to adopt other cubs. Multiple cases of adoption of wild cubs have been confirmed by genetic testing.<ref name=malen2015>{{cite journal |last1=Malenfant |first1=René M. |last2=Coltman |first2=David W.|last3=Richardson |first3=Evan S. |last4=Lunn |first4=Nicholas J. |last5=Stirling |first5=Ian |last6=Adamowicz |first6=Elizabeth |last7=Davis |first7=Corey S.|date=26 December 2015 |title=Evidence of adoption, monozygotic twinning, and low inbreeding rates in a large genetic pedigree of polar bears |biorxiv=10.1101/034009 |journal=Polar Biology |volume=39 |issue=8 |pages=1455–1465 |doi=10.1007/s00300-015-1871-0 |s2cid=14017921 |url=https://www.biorxiv.org/content/biorxiv/early/2015/12/15/034009.full.pdf }}</ref> Adult bears of either sex occasionally kill and eat polar bear cubs.<ref>{{Cite news | url=https://nationalpost.com/news/canada/toronto-zoo-struggles-to-save-rejected-polar-bear-cubs |title = Two cubs die as mother polar bear turns on her three newborns &#124; National Post|newspaper = National Post|date = 13 October 2011|last1 = Hopper|first1 = Tristin}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |author1=Derocher, AE |author2=Wiig, Ø. |url=http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic52-3-307.pdf |title=Infanticide and Cannibalism of Juvenile Polar Bears (''Ursus maritimus'') in Svalbard |journal=Arctic |volume=52 |issue=3 |pages=307–310 |year=1999 |doi=10.14430/arctic936|citeseerx=10.1.1.491.140 }}</ref> As of 2006, in Alaska, 42% of cubs were reaching 12 months of age, down from 65% in 1991.<ref name="regehr2006"/> In most areas, cubs are [[weaning|weaned]] at two and a half years of age, when the mother chases them away or abandons them. The Western Hudson Bay subpopulation is unusual in that its female polar bears sometimes wean their cubs at only one and a half years.<ref name="reproduction"/> This was the case for 40% of cubs there in the early 1980s; however by the 1990s, fewer than 20% of cubs were weaned this young.<ref name="stirling1999"/> After the mother leaves, sibling cubs sometimes travel and share food together for weeks or months.<ref name="bruemmer2533"/>
[[File:Polar bear arctic.JPG|thumb|right|Polar bear swimming. The loss of sea ice has lead to more open water and more pressure on the bears to swim great distances.]]
Reduction in sea-ice cover also forces bears to swim longer distances, which further depletes their energy stores and occasionally leads to [[drowning]]. Increased ice mobility may result in less stable site for dens or longer distances for mothers traveling to and from dens on land. Thawing of [[permafrost]] would lead to more fire-prone roofs for bears denning underground, while less snow would lead to more cave-ins or reduced insulation.<ref name="derocher2004"/><ref name=2012review/> Maximum corticosteroid-binding capacity of [[corticosteroid-binding globulin]] in polar bear serum correlates with stress in polar bears, and this has increased with climate warming.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Boonstra|first1=R|last2=Bodner|first2=K|last3=Bosson|first3=C|last4=Delehanty|first4=B|last5=Richardson|first5=E. S.|last6=Lunn|first6=N. J.|last7=Derocher|first7=A. E.|last8=Molnár|first8=P. K.|year=2020|title=The stress of Arctic warming on polar bears|journal=Blobal Change Biology|volume=26|issue=8|pages=4197–4214|doi=10.1111/gcb.15142}}</ref> Disease-causing [[bacteria]] and [[parasite]]s would flourish more readily in a warmer climate.<ref name=2012review/>


Oil and gas development also affects polar bear habitat. The Chukchi Sea Planning Area of northwestern Alaska, which has had many drilling leases, was found to be an important site for non-denning female bears.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Wilson|first1=R. R.|last2=Horne|first2=J. S.|last3=Rode|first3=K. D.|last4=Regher|first4=E. V.|last5=Durner|first5=G. M.|year=2014|title=Identifying polar bear resource selection patterns to inform offshore development in a dynamic and changing Arctic|journal=Ecosphere|volume=5|issue=10|pages=1–24|doi=10.1890/ES14-00193.1}}</ref> [[Oil spill]]s are also a risk. A 2018 study found that ten percent or less of prime bear habitat in the Chukchi Sea is vulnerable to a potential spill, but could harm nearly 40 percent of the polar bear population at full reach.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Wilson|first1=R. R.|last2=Perham|first2=C|last3=French-McCay|first3=D. P.|last4=Balouskus|first4=R|year=2018|title=Potential impacts of offshore oil spills on polar bears in the Chukchi Sea|journal=Environmental Pollution|volume=235|pages=652–659|doi=10.1016/j.envpol.2017.12.057}}</ref> Polar bears [[bioaccumulation|accumulate]] high levels of [[persistent organic pollutant]]s such as [[polychlorinated biphenyl]] (PCBs) and chlorinated [[pesticides]], due to their position at the top of the [[ecological pyramid]]. Many chemicals, such as PCBs and [[DDT]], have been internationally banned due to the recognition of their harm on the environment. Traces of these chemicals have slowly dwindled in polar bears but still persist and have even increased in some populations.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Routti|first1=H|last2=Atwood|first2=T|last3=Bechshoft|first3=Boltunov|first3=A|last4=Ciesielski|first4=T. M.|last5=Desforges|first5=J-P|last6=Dietz|first6=R|last7=Gabrielsen|first7=G. W.|last8=Jenssen|first8=B. M.|last9=Letcher|first9=R. J.|last10=McKinney|first10=M. A.|last11=Morris|first11=A. D.|last12=Rigét|first12=F. F.|last13=Sonne|first13=C|last14=Styrishave|first14=B|last15=Tartu|first15=S|year=2019|title=State of knowledge on current exposure, fate and potential health effects of contaminants in polar bears from the circumpolar Arctic|journal=Science of the Total Environment|volume=664|pages=1063–1083|doi=10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.02.030}}</ref>
====Later life====
Females begin to breed at the age of four years in most areas, and five years in the area of the Beaufort Sea. Males usually reach sexual maturity at six years; however, as competition for females is fierce, many do not breed until the age of eight or ten.<ref name="reproduction">{{cite book |last=Stirling |first=Ian |year=1988 |title=Polar Bears |location=Ann Arbor |publisher=University of Michigan Press |isbn=978-0-472-10100-9 |chapter=Reproduction |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/polarbears00stir }}</ref> A study in Hudson Bay indicated that both the reproductive success and the maternal weight of females peaked in their mid-teens. Maternal success appeared to decline after this point, possibly because of an age-related impairment in the ability to store the fat necessary to rear cubs.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Derocher |first=A.E. |author2=Stirling, I. |year=1994 |title=Age-specific reproductive performance of female polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'') |journal=Journal of Zoology |volume=234 |issue=4 |pages=527–536 |doi=10.1111/j.1469-7998.1994.tb04863.x }}</ref>


==Relationship with humans==
Polar bears appear to be less affected by infectious diseases and parasites than most terrestrial mammals.<ref name="pbi_survival"/> Polar bears are especially susceptible to ''[[Trichinella]]'', a parasitic roundworm they contract through [[cannibalism (zoology)|cannibalism]],<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Larsen |first1=Thor |last2=Kjos-Hanssen |first2=Bjørn |year=1983 |title=Trichinella sp. in polar bears from Svalbard, in relation to hide length and age |volume=1 |issue=1 |pages=89–96 |doi=10.1111/j.1751-8369.1983.tb00734.x |journal=Polar Research|bibcode=1983PolRe...1...89L |s2cid=208525641 }}</ref> although infections are usually not fatal. Only one case of a polar bear with [[rabies]] has been documented, even though polar bears frequently interact with [[Arctic fox]]es, which often carry rabies.<ref name="pbi_survival"/> Bacterial [[leptospirosis]] and ''[[Morbillivirus]]'' have been recorded. Polar bears sometimes have problems with various [[skin disease]]s that may be caused by [[mite]]s or other parasites.{{citation needed|date=April 2022}}
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| image1 = Polar bear, Gerrit de Veer (1596).jpg|caption1=1598 engraving of men shooting at raiding polar bears during the [[Willem Barentsz]] expedition.
|image2=Richard Westall (1765-1836) - Nelson and the Bear - BHC2907 - Royal Museums Greenwich.jpg|caption2=''Nelson and the bear'', by [[Richard Westall]] (1773)}}
Polar bears have coexisted and interacted with [[circumpolar peoples]] for millennia.{{sfn|Fee|2019|pp=25–26}} "White bears" are mentioned as commercial items in the Japanese writing ''[[Nihon Shoki]]'' in the seventh century. It is not clear if these were polar bears or white-coloured brown bears.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|p=30}} During the [[Middle Ages]], Europeans considered white bears to be a novelty and were more familiar with brown and black-coloured bears.{{sfn|Ellis|2009|pp=13}} An early written account of the polar bear in its natural environment is found in the 13th century [[anonymous work|anonymous]] Norwegian text ''[[Konungs skuggsjá]]'', which mentions that "...the white bear of Greenland wanders most of the time on the ice of the sea, hunting seals and whales and feeding on them" and says the bear is "...as skillful a swimmer as any seal or whale.".{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|p=53}}


Over the next centuries, several European explorers would mention polar bears and describe their habits.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=53-66}}{{sfn|Ellis|2009|pp=14–23}} Such accounts became more accurate since the [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]], and both living and dead specimens were brought back. Nevertheless, some fanciful reports continued, including the idea that polar bears cover their noses during hunts. A relatively accurate drawing of a polar bear is found in [[Henry Ellis (governor)|Henry Ellis]]' work ''A voyage to Hudson's Bay'' (1748).{{sfn|Ellis|2009|pp=49, 51–52}}
====Life expectancy====
Polar bears rarely live beyond 25 years.<ref name="hemstock29-35">[[#Hemstock|Hemstock]], pp. 29–35</ref> The oldest wild bears on record died at age 32, whereas the oldest captive was a female who died in 1991, age 43.<ref name="wrigley">{{cite web|url=http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/rsrc/files/pbispring08.pdf|title=The Oldest Living Polar Bear|last=Wrigley|first=Robert E.|date=Spring 2008|website=Polar Bears International Newsletter|publisher=Polar Bears International|access-date=9 June 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080626110834/http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/rsrc/files/pbispring08.pdf |archive-date=26 June 2008}}</ref> The causes of death in wild adult polar bears are poorly understood, as carcasses are rarely found in the species's frigid habitat. In the wild, old polar bears eventually become too weak to catch food, and gradually starve to death. Polar bears injured in fights or accidents may either die from their injuries, or become unable to hunt effectively, leading to starvation.<ref name="pbi_survival">{{cite web|url=http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/polar-bears-in-depth/survival/page1/|title=Polar bears in depth: Survival|publisher=Polar Bears International|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091208231221/http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/polar-bears-in-depth/survival/page3 |page=3 |archive-date=8 December 2009}}</ref>


Polar bears were formally classified as a species on the [[Linnaean taxonomy|Linnean system]] by Constantine Phipps after this 1773 voyage to in Arctic. Accompanying him was a young [[Horatio Nelson]], who was said to have wanted to get a polar bear coat for his father but failed to at a hunt.{{sfn|Fee|2019|p=41}} In his 1785 edition of ''[[Histoire Naturelle]]'', [[Georges-Louis Leclerc de Buffon|Comte de Buffon]] mentions and depicts a "sea bear", clearly a polar bear, and "land bears", likely brown and black bears. This helped promote ideas about [[speciation]]. Buffon also mentioned a "white bear of the forest", possibly a [[Kermode bear]].{{sfn|Ellis|2009|p=50}}
===Ecological role===
The polar bear is the [[apex predator]] within its range, and is a [[keystone species]] for the Arctic.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://pbsg.npolar.no/en/issues/threats/climate-change.html|title=Climate impacts on polar bears|website=pbsg.npolar.no|access-date=29 December 2015|archive-date=5 January 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160105091417/http://pbsg.npolar.no/en/issues/threats/climate-change.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> Several animal species, particularly Arctic foxes (''Vulpes lagopus'') and [[glaucous gull]]s (''Larus hyperboreus''), routinely scavenge polar bear kills.<ref name="behavior"/>


===Harvesting===
The relationship between ringed seals and polar bears is so close that the abundance of ringed seals in some areas appears to regulate the density of polar bears, while polar bear predation in turn regulates density and reproductive success of ringed seals.<ref name="amstrup2007"/> The [[evolutionary pressure]] of polar bear predation on seals probably accounts for some significant differences between Arctic and Antarctic seals. Compared to the [[Antarctica|Antarctic]], where there is no major surface predator, Arctic seals use more breathing holes per individual, appear more restless when hauled out on the ice, and rarely defecate on the ice. The baby fur of most Arctic seal species is white, presumably to provide camouflage from predators, whereas Antarctic seals all have dark fur at birth.<ref name="behavior"/>
{{main article|Polar bear harvesting}}
{{further information|Bear hunting}}
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| image1=Eskimo hunter and polar bear slain with bow and arrow LCCN2005691848 (cropped).jpg|caption1=[[Eskimo]] hunter with polar bear slain with bow and arrow (1924)
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Polar bears were hunted as early as 8,000 years ago, as indicated by archeological remains at [[Zhokhov Island]]. The oldest graphic depiction of a polar bear shows it being hunted by a man with three dogs. This [[rock art]] was among several polygraphs found at [[Pegtymel]] and date to the fifth to eighth centuries. Prior to access to firearms, native people used lances, [[bow and arrow]]s, and hunted in groups accompanied by dogs. Though hunting typically took place on foot, some people as killed bears in the water, on boats with a harpoon. Polar bears were sometimes killed in their dens. Killing a polar bear was traditionally considered to be a [[rite of passage]] for boys in some cultures. Native people respected the animal and hunts were subject to strict rituals.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=122–124, 130, 133}} Bears were harvested for the fur, meat, fat, tendons, bones and teeth.{{sfn|Fee|2019|p=28}}{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|p=128}} The fur was worn and slept on, while the bones and teeth were made into tools. For the Netslik, the individual who finally killed the bear had the right to its fur while the meat was passed to all in the party. Some people kept the cubs of slain bears.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=127–128, 132}}


[[Norsemen]] in Greenland traded polar bear furs in the Middle Ages.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=34–35}} In Russia, [[Novaya Zemlya]] and [[Franz Josef Land]] were important commercial centers for polar bear products, the former starting all the way back in 1556. Large scale hunting of bears at Svaland occurred since at least the 18th century, when no less than 150 bears were killed each year by Russian explorers. In the next century, harvesting by Russian declined in favour of Norwegians. From the 1870s to the 1970s, around 22,000 of the animals were hunted. Over 150,000 polar bears in total were either killed or captured in both Russia and Svaland, from the 18th to the 20th century. In the Canadian Arctic, bears were harvested by commercial whalers especially if they could not get enough whales. The [[Hudson's Bay Company]] is estimated to have sold 15,000 polar bear coats between the late 19 century and early 20th century.{{sfn|Stirling|2011|pp=246–249}} In the mid 20th century, countries begin to regulate polar bear harvesting, culminating in the 1973 agreement.<ref name=International1973/>
Brown bears tend to dominate polar bears in disputes over carcasses,<ref>O'Harra, Dough (24 April 2005) [https://web.archive.org/web/20080401001816/http://dwb.adn.com/front/story/6415667p-6294323c.html Polar bears, grizzlies increasingly gather on North Slope]. Anchorage Daily News.</ref> and dead polar bear cubs have been found in brown bear dens.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://abcnews.go.com/Technology/DyeHard/Story?id=582243&page=3 |title=ABC News: Grizzlies encroaching on polar bear Country |publisher=ABC News |access-date=10 October 2009}}</ref> [[Gray wolf|Wolves]] are rarely encountered by polar bears, though there are two records of [[Arctic wolf]] (''Canis lupus arctos'') packs killing polar bear cubs.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Richardson |first1=E.S. |last2=Andriashek |first2=D. |year=2006 |title=Wolf (''Canis lupus'') Predation of a Polar Bear (''Ursus maritimus'') Cub on the Sea Ice off Northwestern Banks Island, Northwest Territories, Canada |journal=Arctic |volume=59 |issue=3 |pages=322–324 |doi=10.14430/arctic318 |doi-access=free }}</ref> Adult polar bears are occasionally vulnerable to predation by [[orca]]s (''Orcinus orca'') while swimming, but they are rarely reported as taken and bears are likely to avoid entering the water if possible if they detect an orca pod in the area. The melting sea ice in the Arctic may be causing an increase of orcas in the Arctic sea, which may increase the risk of predation on polar bears but also may benefit the bears by providing more whale carcasses that they can scavenge.<ref>Peacock, E., Derocher, A. E., Thiemann, G. W., & Stirling, I. (2011). ''Conservation and management of Canada’s polar bears (Ursus maritimus) in a changing Arctic 1 1 This review is part of the virtual symposium “Flagship Species–Flagship Problems” that deals with ecology, biodiversity and management issues, and climate impacts on species at risk and of Canadian importance, including the polar bear (Ursus maritimus), Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua), Piping Plover (Charadrius melodus), and caribou (Rangifer tarandus)''. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 89(5), 371-385.</ref><ref>Ferguson, S. H., Higdon, J. W., & Westdal, K. H. (2012). ''Prey items and predation behavior of killer whales (Orcinus orca) in Nunavut, Canada based on Inuit hunter interviews''. Aquatic biosystems, 8(1), 3.</ref> The remains of polar bears have been found in the stomachs of large [[Greenland shark]]s (''Somniosus microcephalus''), although it certainly cannot be ruled out that the bears were merely scavenged by this slow-moving, unusual shark.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/environment/nature/clash-of-the-fiercest-predators-as-shark-eats-polar-bear-891512.html |title=Clash of the fiercest predators as shark eats polar bear |work=The Independent |first=Daniel |last=Howden |date=12 August 2008 |access-date=26 June 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |first1=Dane |last1=Eagle |title=Greenland shark |url=http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Gallery/Descript/GreenlandShark/GreenlandShark.html |publisher=Florida Museum of Natural History |access-date=26 June 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130321092816/http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/gallery/descript/greenlandshark/greenlandshark.html |archive-date=21 March 2013 |url-status=dead }}</ref> A rather unlikely killer of a grown polar bear has reportedly included a [[wolverine]] (''Gulo gulo''), anecdotally reported to have suffocated a bear in a zoo with a bite to the throat during a conflict. This report may well be dubious, however.<ref>{{cite book |title=Wolverine – A Look Into the Devils Eyes |author=Allardyce, Mark |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=27ULgtTrfs4C&q=polar%20bear%20&pg=PA20 |pages=20, 165 |isbn=978-1-905361-00-7 |date=2000}}</ref> Polar bears are sometimes the host of arctic mites such as ''[[Alaskozetes antarcticus]]''.<ref name="behavior"/>


Polar bear meat was commonly eaten as rations by explorers and sailors in the Arctic. Its taste and texture has been described both positively and negatively. Some have called it too coarse with a powerful smell, while others praised it as a "royal dish". Polar bear fat was also used for lamps when they ran out of fuel.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|p=141}} Polar bears rugs were historically popular and by the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, they were almost ubiquitous on the floors of Norwegian churches. In more modern times, Hollywood actors would pose on bearskin rugs, notably [[Marilyn Monroe]]. Such images often had sexual connotations.{{sfn|Fee|2019|p=13–14, 32, 132–133}}
===Long-distance swimming and diving===
Researchers tracked 52 sows in the southern Beaufort Sea off Alaska with GPS system collars; no boars were involved in the study due to males' necks being too thick for the GPS-equipped collars. Fifty long-distance swims were recorded; the longest at {{convert|354|km}}, with an average of {{convert|155|km}}. The length of these swims ranged from most of a day to ten days. Ten of the sows had a cub swim with them and after a year, six cubs survived. The study did not determine if the others lost their cubs before, during, or some time after their long swims. Researchers do not know whether or not this is a new behaviour; before polar ice shrinkage, they opined that there was probably neither the need nor opportunity to swim such long distances.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-polarbears-idUSBRE84100W20120502 |title=Polar bears can swim vast distances, study finds |first=Yereth |last=Rosen |work=Reuters |date=1 May 2012 |access-date=8 May 2012 |archive-date=6 May 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120506121850/http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/05/02/us-usa-polarbears-idUSBRE84100W20120502 |url-status=live }}</ref> As noted above, there have been 600 recorded instances of polar bears in Iceland since the 9th century. These presumably swam from Greenland, about {{convert|300|km}}.


===Conflicts===
The polar bear may swim underwater for up to three minutes to approach seals on shore or on ice floes.<ref name="Stirling & van Meurs 2015">{{cite journal|last1=Stirling|first1=Ian|last2=van Meurs|first2=Rinie|title=Longest recorded underwater dive by a polar bear|journal=Polar Biology|volume=38|issue=8|date=2015|pages=1301–1304|doi=10.1007/s00300-015-1684-1|s2cid=6385494}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Hogenboom |first=Melissa |url=http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20150723-polar-bear-breaks-diving-record |title=Polar Bear Breaks Diving Record |work=BBC News |date=May 2015 |access-date=23 July 2015 }}</ref>
{{further information|Bear danger|Bear attack}}
[[File:Bear jail (6360643033).jpg|thumb|right|A polar bear holding facility or "jail" in Churchill]]
When the sea ice melts, polar bears, particularly subadults, conflict with humans over natural resources on land.<ref name=Heenskerk2020>{{cite journal|last1=Heemskerk|first1=S|last2=Johnson|first2=A. C.|last3=Hedman|first3=D|last4=Trim|first4=V|last5=Lunn|first5=N. J.|last6=McGeachy|first6=D|last7=Derocher|first7=A. E.|year=2020|title=Temporal dynamics of human-polar bear conflicts in Churchill, Manitoba|journal=Global Ecology and Conservation|volume=24|page=e01320|doi=10.1016/j.gecco.2020.e01320}}</ref> They are attracted to the smell of human-made foods, particularly at garbage dumps and may be shot when they encroach on private property.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Clark|first1=D. A.|last2=van Beest|first2=F. M.|last3=Brook|first3=R. K.|year=2012|title=Polar Bear-human conflicts: state of knowledge and research needs|journal=Canadian Wildlife Biology and Management|volume=1|issue=1|pages=21–29|url=https://cwbm.ca/polar-bear-human-conflicts-state-of-knowledge-and-research-needs/}}</ref> In [[Churchill, Manitoba]], local authorities maintain a "[[polar bear jail]]" where nuisance bears are held until the sea ice freezes again.<ref>{{cite web |title=Inside Canada's Polar Bear Jail |date=2 Mar 2023 |first=Lina |last=Zeldovich |website=Atlas Obscura |url=https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/churchill-polar-bear-jail|accessdate=3 March 2023}}</ref> Climate change has increased conflicts between the two species.<ref name=Heenskerk2020/>


From 1870 to 2014, there were an estimated 73 polar bear attacks on humans, which led to 20 deaths. The majority of attacks were by hungry males, typically subadults, while female attacks were usually in defense of young. In comparison to brown and American black bears, attacks by polar bears were more often near and around were humans lived. This may be due to the bears being more desperate for food and thus more likely to seek out human settlements. Like with the other two species, polar bear are more likely to target no more than two people at once. Despite its reputation, the polar bear is generally not more aggressive than other bears.<ref name=Wilder2017>{{cite journal|last1=Wilder|first1=J. M.|last2=Vongraven|first2=D|last3=Atwood|first3=T|last4=Hansen|first4=B|last5=Jessen|first5=A|last6=Kochnev|first6=A|last7=York|first7=G|last8=Vallender|first8=R|last9=Hedman|first9=D|last10=Gibbons|first10=M|year=2017|title=Polar bear attacks on humans: Implications of a changing climate|journal=Wildlife Society Bulletin|volume=41|issue=3|pages=537−547|doi=10.1002/wsb.783}}</ref>
==Hunting==


===Indigenous people===
===Captivity===
The polar bear was a particularly sought after species for exotic animal collectors due to being relatively rare and remotely living, and its reputation as a fericous beast.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=96}} They were originally kept only by royals and elites. In 1609, [[James VI and I|James I]] was given two polar bear cubs by sailor [[Jonas Poole]], who got them during a trip to Svalbard.{{sfn|Fee|2019|pp=203, 205}} At the end of the century, [[Frederick I of Prussia]] housed them in [[menagerie]]s with other wild animals. He had them declawed and defanged to preform mock fights. Around 1726, [[Catherine I of Russia]] gifted two polar bears to [[Augustus II the Strong]], who desired them for his animal collection.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=96}} Over time, polar bears were being displayed to the public in [[zoo]]s and [[circus]]es.{{sfn|Fee|2019|pp=203, 208}} In the early 19th century, the species would be exhibited at the [[Tower of London]] and the [[Exeter Exchange]] and a menagerie in Vienna.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=96–98}}
[[File:Greenland-polarbear-skin hg.jpg|thumb|Skins of hunted bears]]
{{Multiple image
Polar bears have long provided important raw materials for Arctic peoples, including the Inuit, [[Yupik peoples|Yupik]], [[Chukchi people|Chukchi]], [[Nenets people|Nenets]], Russian [[Pomors]] and others. Hunters commonly used teams of dogs to distract the bear, allowing the hunter to spear the bear or shoot it with arrows at closer range.<ref name="original"/> Almost all parts of captured animals had a use.<ref name="lw6-9"/> The fur was used in particular to make trousers and, by the Nenets, to make galoshes-like outer footwear called {{transliteration|mis|tobok}}; the [[meat]] is edible, despite some risk of [[trichinosis]]; the fat was used in food and as a fuel for lighting homes, alongside seal and whale blubber; [[Tendon|sinews]] were used as thread for sewing clothes; the [[gallbladder]] and sometimes [[Myocardium|heart]] were dried and powdered for medicinal purposes; the large canine teeth were highly valued as [[Amulet|talismans]].<ref name="Uspensky"/> Only the [[liver]] was not used, as its high concentration of [[Retinol|vitamin A]] is poisonous. As a carnivore, which feeds largely upon [[fish]]-eating carnivores, the polar bear ingests large amounts of [[Retinol|vitamin A]] that is stored in their [[liver]]s. The resulting high concentrations cause [[hypervitaminosis A]],<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Rodahl |first1=K. |last2=Moore |first2=T. |year=1943 |title=The vitamin A content and toxicity of bear and seal liver |journal=The Biochemical Journal |volume=37 |issue=2 |pages=166–168 |pmc=1257872 |pmid=16747610 |doi=10.1042/bj0370166}}</ref> Hunters make sure to either toss the liver into the sea or bury it to prevent their dogs from being poisoned.<ref name="Uspensky">{{cite book |title=Белый Медведь (tr: Belyi Medved')&nbsp;— (in Russian)|last=Uspensky|first=Savva Mikhailovich|year=1977 |publisher=Nauka|location=Moscow}}</ref> Traditional subsistence hunting was on a small enough scale to not significantly affect polar bear populations, mostly because of the sparseness of the human population in polar bear habitat.<ref name="lw31-36"/>
| align = right
| direction = vertical
| width = 200px
|image1=Polar Bear at DZ.jpg|caption1=Visitors observing polar bears underneath a glass tunnel at the Detroit Zoo
|image2=Repetitie Nationaal Songfestival in Carré, Sylvia de Leur dresseert beren, Bestanddeelnr 926-2489.jpg|caption2=Performing polar bear at the 1973 ''[[Nationaal Songfestival]]''
|image3=KnutVideo2.ogg|caption3=Knut the polar bear on 31 October 2007, six months after his debut.
}}
Polar bear exhibits were innovated by [[Carl Hagenbeck]], who replaced cages and pits with settings that mimic the animal's natural environment. In 1907, he revealed complex panorama structure at the [[Tierpark Hagenbeck]] zoo. It consisted of exhibits made of artificial snow and ice separated by moats. Different polar animals were displayed on each platform, giving the illusion of them living together. Starting in 1975, [[Hellabrunn Zoo]] housed its polar bears in an exhibit which consisted of a glass barrier, a house, concrete platforms mimicking ice floes and a large pool. Inside the house were maternity dens, and rooms for the staff to prepare and store the food. The exhibit was connected to an outdoor yard for extra room.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|p=101, 105}} In 2001, the [[Detroit Zoo]] opened its "Arctic Ring of Life" exhibit, which cost $15 million dollars to build.{{sfn|Fee|2019|pp=119–120}} The exhibit has a plexiglass tunnel underneath the water allowing for a more immersive experience for the guests.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|p=7}} Many zoos in Europe and North America have stopped keeping polar bears due to the costs of their exhibits.{{sfn|Fee|2019|pp=120–121}}


Polar bears have historically been trained to perform in circuses. Bears in general were popular in circuses as they were large, strong, easy to train and had human-like characteristics, and the white coat of polar bears made them particularly attractive. Preforming polar bears were being used in 1888 by [[Circus Krone]] in Germany and later in 1904 by the [[Frank C. Bostock|Bostock and Wombwell Menagerie]] in England. Circus director [[Wilhelm Hagenbeck]] trained up to 75 polar bears to slide into a large tank though a chute. He began preforming with them in 1908 and they had a particularly well-received show at the [[Hippodrome, London|Hippodrome in London]]. Other circus tricks performed by polar bears included tightrope walking, ball bouncing, roller-skating and motorcycle riding. One of the most famous polar bear trainers post-WWII was East German [[Ursula Böttcher]], whose small stature contrasted with that of the large bears. Starting in the late 20th century, polar bear acts were being retired and the use of these bears for the circus is now prohibited in the US.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=109–111, 117–119}}
===History of commercial harvest===
In Russia, polar bear furs were already being commercially traded in the 14th century, though it was of low value compared to Arctic fox or even reindeer fur.<ref name="Uspensky"/> The growth of the human population in the Eurasian Arctic in the 16th and 17th century, together with the advent of firearms and increasing trade, dramatically increased the harvest of polar bears.<ref name="stirling1988"/><ref name="nwt">{{cite web |url=http://wildlife.enr.gov.nt.ca/NWTWildlife/bears/PolarBear/management.htm |title=Polar Bear Management |publisher=Government of the Northwest Territories |access-date=14 March 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080504105354/http://wildlife.enr.gov.nt.ca/NWTWildlife/bears/PolarBear/management.htm |archive-date=4 May 2008}}</ref> However, since polar bear fur has always played a marginal commercial role, data on the historical harvest is fragmentary. It is known, for example, that already in the winter of 1784/1785 Russian Pomors on [[Spitsbergen]] harvested 150 polar bears in [[Magdalenefjorden]]. In the early 20th century, Norwegian hunters were harvesting 300 bears per year at the same location. Estimates of total historical harvest suggest that from the beginning of the 18th century, roughly 400 to 500 animals were being harvested annually in northern Eurasia, reaching a peak of 1,300 to 1,500 animals in the early 20th century, and falling off as the numbers began dwindling.<ref name="Uspensky"/>


Several captive polar bears were given celebrity status, notably [[Knut (polar bear)|Knut]] (2006–2011) of the [[Berlin Zoological Garden]], who was rejected by his mother and had to be hand-reared by zookeepers. Another bear, [[Binky (polar bear)|Binky]] (1975–1995) of the [[Alaska Zoo]] in Anchorage, became famous for attacking two visitors who got too close.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=21–24, 105}} Captive polar bears may pace back and forth, a [[Stereotypy (non-human)|stereotypical behaviour]]. In one sample, zoo polar bears were found spent 14 percent of their days pacing.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Shepherdson|first1=D|last2=Lewis|first2=K. D.|last3=Carlstead|first3=K|last4=Bauman|first4=J|last5=Perrin|first5=N|year=2013|title=Individual and environmental factors associated with stereotypic behavior and fecal glucocorticoid metabolite levels in zoo housed polar bears|journal=Applied Animal Behaviour Science|volume=147|issue=3–4|pages=268–277|doi=10.1016/j.applanim.2013.01.001}}</ref> [[Gus (bear)|Gus]] (1985–2013) of the [[Central Park Zoo]] was proscribed [[Prozac]] by a therapist for constantly swimming in his pool.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|p=24}} To reduce stereotypical behaviours, zookeepers provide the bears with enrichment items to trigger their play behaviour.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Canino|first1=W|last2=Powell|first2=D|year=2010|title=Formal behavioral evaluation of enrichment programs on a zookeeper's schedule: a case study with a polar bear (Ursus Maritimus) at the Bronx Zoo|journal=Zoo Biology|volume=29|issue=4|pages=503–508|doi=10.1002/zoo.20247}}</ref> Zoo polar bears may appear green due to algae concentrations.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Lewin|first1=R. A.|last2=Farnsworth|first2=P. A.|last3=Yamanaka|first3=G|year=1981|title=The algae of green polar bears|journal=Phycologia|volume=20|pages=303–314|doi=10.2216/i0031-8884-20-3-303.1}}</ref>
In the first half of the 20th century, mechanized and overpoweringly efficient methods of hunting and trapping came into use in North America as well. Polar bears were chased from [[snowmobile]]s, [[icebreaker]]s, and airplanes, the latter practice described in a 1965 ''New York Times'' editorial as being "about as sporting as machine gunning a cow."<ref name="bruemmer93-111">[[#Bruemmer|Bruemmer]], pp. 93–111</ref> Norwegians used "self-killing guns", comprising a loaded rifle in a baited box that was placed at the level of a bear's head, and which fired when the string attached to the bait was pulled.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aouJPNt1P4gC&pg=PT221|title=Polar Bears: A Complete Guide to Their Biology and Behavior|first=Andrew E.|last=Derocher|date=8 March 2012|publisher=JHU Press|via=Google Books|isbn=9781421403052}}</ref> The numbers taken grew rapidly in the 1960s, peaking around 1968 with a global total of 1,250 bears that year.<ref name="PBSG2">{{cite conference |date=February 1970 |conference=Polar Bears |conference-url=http://pbsg.npolar.no/ |title=Proceedings of the 2nd Working Meeting of Polar Bear Specialists |publisher=[[IUCN]] |location=Morges, Switzerland |url=http://pbsg.npolar.no/Meetings/PressReleases/02-Morges.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080504190729/http://pbsg.npolar.no/Meetings/PressReleases/02-Morges.htm |archive-date=4 May 2008 |access-date=24 October 2007}}</ref>


===Contemporary regulations===
===Cultural significance===
{{see also|Cultural depictions of bears}}
[[File:Polar-Bear-Warning-Longyearbyen.jpg|thumb|right|Road sign warning about the presence of bears. The Norwegian text translates into "Applies to all of Svalbard".]]
{{Multiple image
Concerns over the future survival of the species led to the development of national regulations on polar bear hunting, beginning in the mid-1950s. The Soviet Union banned all hunting in 1956. Canada began imposing hunting quotas in 1968. Norway passed a series of increasingly strict regulations from 1965 to 1973, and has completely banned hunting since then. The United States began regulating hunting in 1971 and adopted the [[Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972|Marine Mammal Protection Act]] in 1972. In 1973, the [[International Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears]] was signed by all five nations whose territory is inhabited by polar bears: Canada, Denmark, Norway, the [[Soviet Union]], and the United States. Member countries agreed to place restrictions on recreational and commercial hunting, ban hunting from aircraft and icebreakers, and conduct further research.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20030409113042/http://pbsg.npolar.no/ConvAgree/agreement.htm International Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears], 15 November 1973, Oslo</ref> The treaty allows hunting "by local people using traditional methods". Norway is the only country of the five in which all harvest of polar bears is banned. The agreement was a rare case of international cooperation during the [[Cold War]]. Biologist [[Ian Stirling (biologist)|Ian Stirling]] commented, "For many years, the conservation of polar bears was the only subject in the entire Arctic that nations from both sides of the Iron Curtain could agree upon sufficiently to sign an agreement. Such was the intensity of human fascination with this magnificent predator, the only marine bear."<ref>[[Ian Stirling (biologist)|Stirling, Ian]] ''Foreword'' in {{cite book |title=The World of the Polar Bear|last=Rosing |first=Norbert |year=1996 |publisher=Firefly Books Ltd. |location=Willowdale, ON |isbn=978-1-55209-068-8}}</ref>

Agreements have been made between countries to co-manage their shared polar bear subpopulations. After several years of negotiations, Russia and the United States signed an agreement in October 2000 to jointly set quotas for indigenous subsistence hunting in Alaska and [[Chukotka Autonomous Okrug|Chukotka]].<ref>{{cite news |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=980DE3DD1F3FF934A25753C1A9669C8B63|title=U.S. and Russia sign pact to protect the polar bear |work=The New York Times|access-date=12 April 2008|date=17 October 2000}}</ref> The treaty was ratified in October 2007.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/10/071014202952.htm|title=US-Russia Polar Bear Treaty Ratified|date=18 October 2007|work=ScienceDaily|access-date=12 April 2008}}</ref> In September 2015, the polar bear range states agreed upon a "circumpolar action plan" describing their conservation strategy for polar bears.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://naalakkersuisut.gl/~/media/Nanoq/Files/Attached%20Files/Fiskeri_Fangst_Landbrug/Polarbear%202015/CAP/CAP%20Book.pdf|title=Circumpolar Action Plan: Conservation Strategy for Polar Bears|access-date=30 December 2015|archive-date=1 January 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160101110308/http://naalakkersuisut.gl/~/media/Nanoq/Files/Attached%20Files/Fiskeri_Fangst_Landbrug/Polarbear%202015/CAP/CAP%20Book.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref>

The species is listed in Appendix II of the [[Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species]] (CITES) meaning international trade, including in parts or derivatives, is controlled by the CITES system of permits and certificates.<ref name="CITES"/> The United States government has proposed that polar bears be transferred to Appendix I of [[CITES]] which would ban all commercial international trade in polar bear parts.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://voices.nationalgeographic.com/2013/03/29/did-polar-bears-really-lose-at-cites/|title=Did Polar Bears Really Lose at CITES? – National Geographic Blog|website=voices.nationalgeographic.com|date=19 May 2023 }}</ref> The decision to leave the species listed under Appendix II was endorsed by the IUCN and [[TRAFFIC]], who determined that such an uplisting was unlikely to confer a conservation benefit.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://pbsg.npolar.no/en/news/archive/2013/CITES-PBSG-2013.html|title=PBSG statement on proposed transfer of polar bear to CITES Appendix I|website=pbsg.npolar.no|access-date=27 December 2015|archive-date=4 March 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304190009/http://pbsg.npolar.no/en/news/archive/2013/CITES-PBSG-2013.html|url-status=dead}}</ref>

====Canada====
[[File:Dogsledquebec.jpg|thumb|[[Dogsled]]s are used for recreational hunting of polar bears in [[Canada]]]]
Polar bears were designated "Not at Risk" in April 1986 and uplisted to "Special Concern" in April 1991. This status was re-evaluated and confirmed in April 1999, November 2002, and April 2008. Polar bears continue to be listed as a species of special concern in Canada because of their sensitivity to overharvest and because of an expected range contraction caused by loss of Arctic sea ice.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sararegistry.gc.ca/virtual_sara/files/cosewic/as_polar_bear_0808_e.pdf|title=COSEWIC Assessment - Polar Bear}}</ref>

More than 600 bears are killed per year by humans across Canada,<ref name="pbsg2017"/> a rate calculated by scientists to be unsustainable for some areas, notably [[Baffin Bay]].<ref name="PBI"/> Canada has allowed sport hunters accompanied by local guides and dog-sled teams since 1970,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Freeman |first1=M.M.R. |last2=Wenzel |first2=G.W. |date=March 2006 |title=The nature and significance of polar bear conservation hunting in the Canadian Arctic |journal=Arctic |volume=59 |issue=1 |pages=21–30|doi=10.14430/arctic360 }}</ref> but the practice was not common until the 1980s.<ref name="wenzel2005"/> The guiding of sport hunters provides meaningful employment and an important source of income for northern communities in which economic opportunities are few.<ref name="campbell"/> Sport hunting can bring CDN$20,000 to $35,000 per bear into northern communities, which until recently has been mostly from American hunters.<ref name="nunavut">{{cite news |title=Nunavut hunters can kill more polar bears this year |publisher=CBC News |date=10 January 2005 |url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nunavut-hunters-can-kill-more-polar-bears-this-year-1.535153 }}</ref>

The territory of [[Nunavut]] accounts for the location 80% of annual kills in Canada. In 2005, the government of Nunavut increased the quota from 400 to 518 bears,<ref name="nunavut"/> despite protests from the IUCN Polar Bear Specialist Group.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/rethink-polar-bear-hunt-quotas-scientists-tell-nunavut-hunters-1.562255|title=Rethink polar bear hunt quotas, scientists tell Nunavut hunters|publisher=CBC News |date=4 July 2005 |access-date=20 March 2011}}</ref> In two areas where harvest levels have been increased based on increased sightings, science-based studies have indicated declining populations, and a third area is considered data-deficient.<ref name="sd2007">{{cite journal|last1=Stirling|first1=Ian|author-link=Ian Stirling (biologist)|last2=Derocher|first2=Andrew E.|title=Melting Under Pressure: The Real Scoop on Climate Warming and Polar Bears|url=http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/sites/default/files/scientists/stirling_derocher_climate_wildlife_professional_2007.pdf|url-status=dead|journal=The Wildlife Professional|date=Autumn 2007|volume=1|issue=3|pages=24–27, 43|doi=10.4004/1933-2866(2007)1[24:MUP]2.0.CO;2 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111015224417/http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/sites/default/files/scientists/stirling_derocher_climate_wildlife_professional_2007.pdf|archive-date=15 October 2011|access-date=17 November 2007}}</ref> While most of that quota is hunted by the indigenous Inuit, a growing share is sold to recreational hunters. (0.8% in the 1970s, 7.1% in the 1980s, and 14.6% in the 1990s)<ref name="wenzel2005">{{cite web |last1=Wenzel |first1=George W. |date=September 2004 |title=Polar bear as a resource: An overview |publisher=3rd NRF Open Meeting |location=Yellowknife |url=http://www.nrf.is/Open%20Meetings/Yellowknife_2004/Wenzel.pdf |access-date=3 December 2007}}</ref> Nunavut polar bear biologist, [[Mitchell Taylor]], who was formerly responsible for polar bear conservation in the territory, has insisted that bear numbers are being sustained under current hunting limits.<ref name="Taylor">{{cite journal|author=Taylor, Mitchell K. |title=Review of CBD Petition |journal=Letter to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service |date=6 April 2006 |url=http://www.ff.org/centers/csspp/pdf/200701_taylor.pdf |access-date=8 September 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070221153221/http://ff.org/centers/csspp/pdf/200701_taylor.pdf |archive-date=21 February 2007 }}</ref> In 2010, the 2005 increase was partially reversed. Government of Nunavut officials announced that the polar bear quota for the Baffin Bay region would be gradually reduced from 105 per year to 65 by 2013.<ref name="nunatsiaq">{{cite web |last1=George |first1=Jane |date=April 2010 |title=Nunavut hunters still enraged over bear quotas |location=Iqaluit |url=http://www.nunatsiaqonline.ca/stories/article/8976_nunavut_hunters_still_enraged_over_bear_quotas/ |access-date=4 April 2010 |archive-date=11 April 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100411011134/http://www.nunatsiaqonline.ca/stories/article/8976_nunavut_hunters_still_enraged_over_bear_quotas/ |url-status=dead }}</ref> The Government of the [[Northwest Territories]] maintain their own quota of 72 to 103 bears within the [[Inuvialuit]] communities of which some are set aside for sports hunters.{{Citation needed|date=August 2011}} [[Environment Canada]] also banned the export from Canada of fur, claws, skulls and other products from polar bears harvested in Baffin Bay as of 1 January 2010.<ref name="nunatsiaq"/>

Because of the way polar bear hunting quotas are managed in Canada, attempts to discourage sport hunting would actually increase the number of bears killed in the short term. Canada allocates a certain number of permits each year to sport and subsistence hunting, and those that are not used for sport hunting are re-allocated to indigenous subsistence hunting. Whereas northern communities kill all the polar bears they are permitted to take each year, only half of sport hunters with permits actually manage to kill a polar bear. If a sport hunter does not kill a polar bear before his or her permit expires, the permit cannot be transferred to another hunter.<ref name="campbell"/>

In August 2011, [[Environment Canada]] published a national polar bear conservation strategy.<ref>[http://www.ec.gc.ca/nature/default.asp?Lang=En&n=60D0FDBD-1 National Polar Bear Conservation Strategy for Canada] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160101110307/http://www.ec.gc.ca/nature/default.asp?Lang=En&n=60D0FDBD-1 |date=1 January 2016 }}</ref>

====Greenland====
In Greenland, hunting restrictions were first introduced in 1994 and expanded by executive order in 2005.<ref name="PBSG14"/> Until 2005 Greenland placed no limit on hunting by indigenous people. However, in 2006 it imposed a limit of 150, while also allowed recreational hunting for the first time.<ref>Rose, Naomi A. (16 February 2006) [https://web.archive.org/web/20120321162633/http://www.hsi.org/news/news/2006/Hitting_polar_bears_when_down_021606.html Hitting Polar Bears When They Are Down]. The Humane Society of the United States.</ref> Other provisions included year-round protection of cubs and mothers, restrictions on weapons used and various administrative requirements to catalogue kills.<ref name="PBSG14"/>

====Norway====
Polar bears were hunted heavily in Svalbard, Norway throughout the 19th century and to as recently as 1973, when the conservation treaty was signed. 900 bears a year were harvested in the 1920s and after World War II, there were as many as 400–500 harvested annually. Some regulations of hunting did exist. In 1927, poisoning was outlawed while in 1939, certain denning sights were declared off limits. The killing of females and cubs was made illegal in 1965. Killing of polar bears decreased somewhat 25–30 years before the treaty. Despite this, the polar bear population continued to decline and by 1973, only around 1000 bears were left in Svalbard. Only with the passage of the treaty did they begin to recover.<ref>{{cite web|author=Aars, J.|author2=Andersen, M.|author3=Kovac, K. M.|date=January 2005|title=Polar Bears in Svalbard|publisher=Norwegian Polar Institute|url=http://kho.unis.no/doc/Polar_bears_Svalbard.pdf|access-date=31 December 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170115233212/http://kho.unis.no/doc/Polar_bears_Svalbard.pdf|archive-date=15 January 2017|url-status=dead}}</ref>

====Russia====
The Soviet Union banned the harvest of polar bears in 1956; however, [[poaching]] continued, and is estimated to pose a serious threat to the polar bear population.<ref name="PBSG14"/> In recent years, polar bears have approached coastal villages in Chukotka more frequently due to the shrinking of the sea ice, endangering humans and raising concerns that illegal hunting would become even more prevalent. In 2007, the Russian government made subsistence hunting legal for indigenous Chukotkan peoples only, a move supported by Russia's most prominent bear researchers and the [[World Wide Fund for Nature]] as a means to curb poaching.<ref name="myers">{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/16/world/europe/16polar.html?_r=1&oref=slogin |title=Russia tries to save polar bears with legal hunt |author=Myers, Steven Lee |work=The New York Times|access-date=12 April 2008|date=16 April 2007}}</ref>

Polar bears are currently listed as "Rare", of "Uncertain Status", or "Rehabilitated and rehabilitating" in the [[Red Data Book of Russia]], depending on population.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://2mn.org/engl/mammals_e.htm#%D1%85%D0%B8%D1%89%D0%BD|title=Red Data Book of Russia: Marine Mammals: Carnivores}}</ref> In 2010, the [[Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (Russia)|Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment]] published a strategy for polar bear conservation in Russia.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wwf.ru/data/pub/species/pb_strategy_eng.pdf|title=Strategy for Polar Bear Conservation in the Russian Federation|access-date=9 December 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171209082946/http://www.wwf.ru/data/pub/species/pb_strategy_eng.pdf|archive-date=9 December 2017|url-status=dead}}</ref>

====United States====
The [[Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972]] afforded polar bears some protection in the United States. It banned hunting (except by indigenous subsistence hunters), banned importing of polar bear parts (except polar bear pelts taken legally in Canada), and banned the harassment of polar bears. On 15 May 2008, the [[United States Department of the Interior]] listed the polar bear as a threatened species under the [[Endangered Species Act]], citing the melting of Arctic sea ice as the primary threat to the polar bear.<ref name="ecos.fws.gov">{{cite web|author=US Fish and Wildlife Service|title=Environmental Conservation Online System|url=http://ecos.fws.gov/speciesProfile/profile/speciesProfile.action?spcode=A0IJ|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150217033654/http://ecos.fws.gov/speciesProfile/profile/speciesProfile.action?spcode=A0IJ|archive-date=17 February 2015}}</ref> It banned all importing of polar bear trophies. Importing products made from polar bears had been prohibited from 1972 to 1994 under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, and restricted between 1994 and 2008. Under those restrictions, permits from the [[United States Fish and Wildlife Service]] were required to import sport-hunted polar bear trophies taken in hunting expeditions in Canada. The permit process required that the bear be taken from an area with quotas based on sound management principles.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/bear-facts/hunting/ |title=Bear Facts: Harvesting/Hunting |publisher=Polar Bears International |access-date=14 March 2008 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080327111143/http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/bear-facts/hunting/ |archive-date=27 March 2008 }}</ref> Since 1994, hundreds of sport-hunted polar bear trophies have been imported into the U.S.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20081126220037/https://community.hsus.org/campaign/FED_2007_polar_bear_trophy2 "Support the Polar Bear Protection Act"]. The Humane Society of the United States</ref> In 2015, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service published a draft conservation management plan for polar bears to improve their status under the Endangered Species Act and the Marine Mammal Protection Act.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.fws.gov/alaska/PDFs/PBRT%20Recovery%20Plan%20Book.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181010080624/http://www.fws.gov/alaska/PDFs/PBRT%20Recovery%20Plan%20Book.pdf |archive-date=10 October 2018 |publisher=U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service |title=Polar Bear Draft Conservation Management Plan |year=2015 |url-status=dead }} Draft.</ref>
[[File:Polar bear in Denver Zoo.jpg|thumb|Polar bear in Denver Zoo.]]

==Conservation status, threats, and controversies==
[[File:Polar Bear Habitat.png|thumb|upright=1.5|Map from the [[U.S. Geological Survey]] shows projected changes in polar bear habitat from 2001 to 2010 and 2041 to 2050. Red areas indicate loss of optimal polar bear habitat; blue areas indicate gain.]]

Polar bear population sizes and trends are difficult to estimate accurately because they occupy remote home ranges and exist at low population densities. Polar bear fieldwork can also be hazardous to researchers.<ref>{{cite web| url = http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic53-3-332.pdf| title = Malcolm Alexander Ramsay (1949 – 2000)}}</ref> As of 2015, the [[International Union for Conservation of Nature]] (IUCN) reports that the global population of polar bears is 22,000 to 31,000, and the current population trend is unknown. Nevertheless, polar bears are listed as "Vulnerable" under criterion A3c, which indicates an expected population decrease of ≥30% over the next three generations (~34.5 years) due to "decline in area of occupancy, extent of occurrence and/or quality of habitat". Risks to the polar bear include [[climate change]], [[pollution]] in the form of [[toxic]] contaminants, conflicts with shipping, oil and gas exploration and development, and human-bear interactions including harvesting and possible stresses from recreational polar-bear watching.<ref name="iucn status 19 November 2021" />

According to the [[World Wildlife Fund]], the polar bear is important as an [[indicator species|indicator]] of Arctic [[ecosystem health]]. Polar bears are studied to gain understanding of what is happening throughout the Arctic, because at-risk polar bears are often a sign of something wrong with the Arctic [[marine ecosystem]].<ref>[http://www.worldwildlife.org/species/finder/polarbear/polarbear.html# WWF: A Leader in Polar Bear Conservation]. Retrieved: 1 August 2015.</ref>

===Climate change===
{{Further|Climate change in the Arctic}}
<!-- The first paragraph of this section is transcribed to [[effects of climate change on oceans]] -->
The key danger for polar bears posed by the [[effects of climate change]] is malnutrition or starvation due to [[habitat destruction|habitat loss]]. Polar bears hunt seals from a platform of sea ice. Rising temperatures cause the sea ice to melt earlier in the year, driving the bears to shore before they have built sufficient fat reserves to survive the period of scarce food in the late summer and early fall.<ref name="stirling1999">{{cite journal |last1=Stirling |first1=Ian |last2=Lunn |first2=N. J. |last3=Iacozza |first3=J. |author1-link=Ian Stirling (biologist) |date=September 1999 |title=Long-term trends in the population ecology of polar bears in Western Hudson Bay in relation to climatic change |journal=Arctic |volume=52 |issue=3 |pages=294–306 |url=http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic52-3-294.pdf |access-date=11 November 2007 |doi=10.14430/arctic935}}</ref> Reduction in sea-ice cover also forces bears to swim longer distances, which further depletes their energy stores and occasionally leads to [[drowning]].<ref name="monnett2006" /> Thinner sea ice tends to deform more easily, which appears to make it more difficult for polar bears to access seals.<ref name="amstrup2007" /> Insufficient nourishment leads to lower reproductive rates in adult females and lower survival rates in cubs and juvenile bears, in addition to poorer body condition in bears of all ages.<ref name="derocher2004" />

The [[International Union for Conservation of Nature]], [[Arctic Climate Impact Assessment]], [[United States Geological Survey]] and many leading polar bear biologists have expressed grave concerns about the impact of climate change, with some predicting extinction by 2100.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2020-07-20 |title=Climate change: Polar bears could be lost by 2100 |work=BBC News |url=https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-53474445 |access-date=2021-03-26}}</ref>

[[File:Ursus maritimus Polar bear with cub 2.jpg|thumb|left|Mothers and cubs have high nutritional requirements, which are not met if the seal-hunting season is too short]]
In addition to creating nutritional stress, a warming climate is expected to affect various other aspects of polar bear life: changes in sea ice affect the ability of pregnant females to build suitable maternity dens.<ref name="Schliebe 2006"/> As the distance increases between the pack ice and the coast, females must swim longer distances to reach favoured denning areas on land. Thawing of permafrost would affect the bears who traditionally den underground, and warm winters could result in den roofs collapsing or having reduced insulative value. For the polar bears that currently den on multi-year ice, increased ice mobility may result in longer distances for mothers and young cubs to walk when they return to seal-hunting areas in the spring.<ref name="derocher2004"/> Disease-causing [[bacteria]] and [[parasite]]s would flourish more readily in a warmer climate.<ref name="amstrup2007"/>

Problematic interactions between polar bears and humans, such as foraging by bears in garbage dumps, have historically been more prevalent in years when ice-floe breakup occurred early and local polar bears were relatively thin. Increased human-bear interactions, including fatal attacks on humans, are likely to increase as the sea ice shrinks and hungry bears try to find food on land.<ref name="stirling2006">{{cite journal|last1=Stirling|first1=Ian|author-link=Ian Stirling (biologist)|last2=Parkinson|first2=Claire L.|date=September 2006|title=Possible effects of climate warming on selected populations of polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'') in the Canadian Arctic|url=http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/157360main_StirlingParkinson2006_Arctic59-3-261.pdf|journal=Arctic|volume=59|issue=3|pages=261–275|doi=10.14430/arctic312|issn=0004-0843|access-date=15 September 2007|hdl=2060/20060020227|s2cid=38022814 |hdl-access=free}}</ref>

[[File:Endangered arctic - starving polar bear.jpg|right|thumb|Starving bear near Svalbard]]
The [[effects of climate change]] are most profound in the southern part of the polar bear's range, and this is indeed where significant degradation of local populations has been observed.<ref name="acia">{{cite book|author=Arctic Climate Impact Assessment|url=https://archive.org/details/impactsofwarming0000hass|title=Impact of a Warming Arctic: Arctic Impact Climate Assessment: Key Finding 4|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2004|isbn=978-0-521-61778-9|place=Cambridge|oclc=56942125|author-link=Arctic Climate Impact Assessment|url-access=registration}}.</ref> The Western Hudson Bay subpopulation, in a southern part of the range, also happens to be one of the best-studied polar bear subpopulations. This subpopulation feeds heavily on ringed seals in late spring, when newly weaned and easily hunted seal pups are abundant. The late spring hunting season ends for polar bears when the ice begins to melt and break up, and they fast or eat little during the summer until the sea freezes again.<ref name="sd2007"/>

Due to warming air temperatures, ice-floe breakup in western Hudson Bay is currently occurring three weeks earlier than it did 30 years ago, reducing the duration of the polar bear feeding season. The body condition of polar bears has declined during this period; the average weight of lone (and likely pregnant) female polar bears was approximately {{convert|290|kg|abbr=on}} in 1980 and {{convert|230|kg|abbr=on}} in 2004.<ref name="sd2007"/> Between 1987 and 2004, the Western Hudson Bay population declined by 22%,<ref name="regehr2007">{{cite journal|last1=Regehr|first1=Eric V.|last2=Lunn|first2=Nicholas J.|last3=Amstrup|first3=Steven C.|author-link3=Steven Amstrup|last4=Stirling|first4=Ian|author-link4=Ian Stirling (biologist)|year=2007|title=Effects of earlier sea ice breakup on survival and population size of polar bears in western Hudson Bay|journal=[[Journal of Wildlife Management]]|volume=71|issue=8|pages=2673–2683|doi=10.2193/2006-180|s2cid=86061349}}</ref> although the population was listed as "stable" as of 2017.<ref name="pbsg2017"/> As the climate change melts sea ice, the U.S. Geological Survey projects that two-thirds of polar bears will disappear by 2050.<ref name="WWF 2016">{{Cite news|url=http://www.nwf.org/Wildlife/Threats-to-Wildlife/Global-Warming/Effects-on-Wildlife-and-Habitat/Polar-Bears.aspx|title=Global Warming and Polar Bears|access-date=29 November 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130417052758/http://www.nwf.org/Wildlife/Threats-to-Wildlife/Global-Warming/Effects-on-Wildlife-and-Habitat/Polar-Bears.aspx|archive-date=17 April 2013|url-status=dead|publisher=[[National Wildlife Federation]]}}</ref>

In Alaska, the effects of [[Arctic shrinkage|sea ice shrinkage]] have contributed to higher mortality rates in polar bear cubs, and have led to changes in the denning locations of pregnant females.<ref name="regehr2006">{{cite book|url=http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2006/1337/pdf/ofr20061337.pdf|title=Polar bear population status in the Southern Beaufort Sea|last1=Regehr|first1=Eric V.|last2=Amstrup|first2=Steven C.|last3=Stirling|first3=Ian|publisher=U.S. Geological Survey|year=2006|place=Anchorage, Alaska|publication-place=Reston, Virginia|id=Open-File Report 2006-1337|author-link2=Steven Amstrup|author3-link=Ian Stirling (biologist)|access-date=15 September 2007}}</ref> The proportion of maternity dens on sea ice has changed from 62% between the years 1985 through 1994, to 37% over the years 1998 through 2004. Thus, now the Alaskan population more resembles the world population in that it is more likely to den on land.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Fischbach|first1=A. S.|last2=Amstrup|first2=S. C.|author-link2=Steven Amstrup|last3=Douglas|first3=D. C.|year=2007|title=Landward and eastward shift of Alaskan polar bear denning associated with recent sea ice changes|journal=[[Polar Biology]]|volume=30|issue=11|pages=1395–1405|doi=10.1007/s00300-007-0300-4|s2cid=36438494}}</ref> In recent years, polar bears in the Arctic have undertaken longer than usual swims to find prey, possibly resulting in four recorded drownings in the unusually large ice pack regression of 2005.<ref name="monnett2006">{{cite journal|last1=Monnett|first1=Charles|author-link=Charles Monnett|last2=Gleason|first2=Jeffrey S.|date=July 2006|title=Observations of mortality associated with extended open-water swimming by polar bears in the Alaskan Beaufort Sea|url=https://web.chem.ucsb.edu/~devries/ES/polar%20bears%20Charles%20Monnett.pdf|url-status=live|journal=[[Polar Biology]]|volume=29|issue=8|pages=681–687|doi=10.1007/s00300-005-0105-2|s2cid=24270374|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170810160133/https://web.chem.ucsb.edu/~devries/ES/polar%20bears%20Charles%20Monnett.pdf|archive-date=10 August 2017}}</ref>

A new development is that polar bears have begun ranging to new territory. While not unheard of but still uncommon, polar bears have been sighted increasingly in larger numbers ashore, staying on the mainland for longer periods of time during the summer months, particularly in North Canada, traveling farther inland.<ref name="harvey">{{Cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2015/11/18/polar-bears-are-spending-more-time-on-land-where-they-can-encounter-humans/|title=Next up from climate change: More polar bears on land, potentially running into humans|last=Harvey|first=Chelsea|date=18 November 2015|newspaper=[[The Washington Post]]|access-date=9 December 2015}}</ref> This may cause an increased reliance on terrestrial diets, such as [[goose]] eggs, waterfowl and caribou,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/07/140717-polar-bears-goose-eggs-global-warming-arctic-environment/|title=As Sea Ice Shrinks, Can Polar Bears Survive on Land?|last=Marris|first=Emma|date=19 July 2014|website=[[National Geographic]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180108234720/https://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/07/140717-polar-bears-goose-eggs-global-warming-arctic-environment/|archive-date=8 January 2018|url-status=live|access-date=9 December 2015}}</ref> as well as increased human–bear conflict.<ref name="harvey"/>

===Pollution===
Polar bears [[bioaccumulation|accumulate]] high levels of [[persistent organic pollutant]]s such as [[polychlorinated biphenyl]] (PCBs) and chlorinated [[pesticides]]. Due to their position at the top of the [[ecological pyramid]], with a diet heavy in [[blubber]] in which halocarbons concentrate, their bodies are among the most contaminated of Arctic mammals.<ref name="ec_bulletin">{{cite web| url=http://www.arctic.uoguelph.ca/cpl/arcticnews/articles/PolarBears/PolarBear.htm| title=Polar Bears at the Top of POPs| date=May–June 2000| website=The Science and the Environment Bulletin| publisher=Environment Canada| access-date=20 October 2008| archive-date=10 August 2011| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110810143305/http://www.arctic.uoguelph.ca/cpl/arcticnews/articles/PolarBears/PolarBear.htm| url-status=dead}}</ref> Halocarbons (also known as organohalogens) are known to be toxic to other animals, because they mimic [[hormone]] chemistry, and [[biomarker]]s such as [[immunoglobulin G]] and retinol suggest similar effects on polar bears. PCBs have received the most study, and they have been associated with birth defects and immune system deficiency.<ref>{{cite journal |doi=10.1016/S0300-483X(02)00280-9 |pmid=12505309 |url=http://www.biology.ualberta.ca/faculty/andrew_derocher/uploads/abstracts/Skaare_et_al_2002.pdf |title=Ecological risk assessment of persistent organic pollutants in the arctic |journal=Toxicology |volume=181–182 |pages=193–197 |year=2002 |last1=Skaare |first1=J. U. |last2=Larsen |first2=H. J. R. |last3=Lie |first3=E. |last4=Bernhoft |first4=A. |last5=Derocher |first5=A. E. |last6=Norstrom |first6=R. |last7=Ropstad |first7=E. |last8=Lunn |first8=N. F. |last9=Wiig |first9=Ø. |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101203075622/http://www.biology.ualberta.ca/faculty/andrew_derocher/uploads/abstracts/Skaare_et_al_2002.pdf |archive-date=3 December 2010}}</ref>

Many chemicals, such as PCBs and [[DDT]], have been internationally banned due to the recognition of their harm on the environment. Their concentrations in polar bear tissues continued to rise for decades after being banned, as these chemicals spread through the food chain. Since then, the trend seems to have abated, with tissue concentrations of PCBs declining between studies performed from 1989 to 1993 and studies performed from 1996 to 2002. During the same time periods, DDT was found to be notably lower in the Western Hudson Bay population only.<ref name='Verreault 2005'>{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/j.scitotenv.2004.10.031 |url=http://www.biology.ualberta.ca/faculty/andrew_derocher/uploads/abstracts/Verreault%20et%20al%20STOTEN%202005.pdf |pmid=16115663 |title=Chlorinated hydrocarbon contaminants and metabolites in polar bears (''Ursus maritimus'') from Alaska, Canada, East Greenland, and Svalbard: 1996−2002 |journal=Science of the Total Environment |volume=351–352 |pages=369–390 |year=2005 |last1=Verreault |first1=J. |last2=Muir |first2=D. C. G. |last3=Norstrom |first3=R. J. |last4=Stirling |first4=I. |last5=Fisk |first5=A. T. |last6=Gabrielsen |first6=G. W. |last7=Derocher |first7=A. E. |last8=Evans |first8=T. J. |last9=Dietz |first9=R. |last10=Sonne |first10=C. |last11=Sandala |first11=G. M. |last12=Gebbink |first12=W. |last13=Riget |first13=F. F. |last14=Born |first14=E. W. |last15=Taylor |first15=M. K. |last16=Nagy |first16=J. |last17=Letcher |first17=R. J. |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101203075444/http://www.biology.ualberta.ca/faculty/andrew_derocher/uploads/abstracts/Verreault%20et%20al%20STOTEN%202005.pdf |archive-date=3 December 2010 |bibcode=2005ScTEn.351..369V |hdl=11250/174178 |hdl-access=free }}</ref>

===Oil and gas development===
Oil and gas development in polar bear habitat can affect the bears in a variety of ways. An [[oil spill]] in the Arctic would most likely concentrate in the areas where polar bears and their prey are also concentrated, such as sea ice leads.<ref name="iucn status 19 November 2021" /> Because polar bears rely partly on their fur for insulation and soiling of the fur by oil reduces its insulative value, oil spills put bears at risk of dying from [[hypothermia]]. Polar bears exposed to oil spill conditions have been observed to lick the oil from their fur, leading to fatal kidney failure.<ref name="tick">{{cite book |last=Stirling |first=Ian |year=1988 |title=Polar Bears |location=Ann Arbor |author-link=Ian Stirling (biologist) |publisher=University of Michigan Press |isbn=978-0-472-10100-9 |chapter=What Makes a Polar Bear Tick? |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/polarbears00stir }}</ref> Maternity dens, used by pregnant females and by females with infants, can also be disturbed by nearby oil exploration and development. Disturbance of these sensitive sites may trigger the mother to abandon her den prematurely, or abandon her litter altogether.<ref name="iucn status 19 November 2021" />

===Predictions===
[[Steven Amstrup]] and other [[U.S. Geological Survey]] scientists have predicted two-thirds of the world's polar bears may disappear by 2050, based on moderate projections for the shrinking of summer sea ice caused by climate change,<ref name="amstrup2007">{{cite book|url=http://www.usgs.gov/newsroom/special/polar_bears/docs/USGS_PolarBear_Amstrup_Forecast_lowres.pdf|title=Forecasting the range-wide status of polar bears at selected times in the 21st Century|last1=Amstrup|first1=Steven C.|last2=Marcot|first2=Bruce G.|last3=Douglas|first3=David C.|publisher=U.S. Geological Survey|year=2007|location=Reston, Virginia|author-link=Steven Amstrup|access-date=29 September 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071025220330/http://www.usgs.gov/newsroom/special/polar_bears/docs/USGS_PolarBear_Amstrup_Forecast_lowres.pdf|archive-date=25 October 2007}}</ref><ref name='WWF 2016'/> though the validity of this study has been debated.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Armstrong|first1=J. Scott|last2=Green|first2=Kesten C.|last3=Soon|first3=Willie|title=Polar Bear Population Forecasts: A Public Policy Forecasting Audit|journal=Interfaces|date=2008|volume=38|issue=5|pages=382–405|doi=10.1287/inte.1080.0383|citeseerx=10.1.1.372.4617}}</ref><ref name="Amstrup et al. 2009.">{{cite journal|last1=Amstrup|first1=Steven C.|last2=Caswell|first2=Hal|last3=DeWeaver|first3=Eric|last4=Stirling|first4=Ian|last5=Douglas|first5=David C.|last6=Marcot|first6=Bruce G.|last7=Hunter|first7=Christine M.|title=Rebuttal of "Polar Bear Population Forecasts: A Public-Policy Forecasting Audit"|journal=Interfaces|date=2009|volume=39|issue=4|pages=353–369|doi=10.1287/inte.1090.0444|doi-access=free}}</ref> The bears could disappear from Europe, Asia, and Alaska, and be depleted from the [[Canadian Arctic Archipelago]] and areas off the northern Greenland coast. By 2080, they could disappear from Greenland entirely and from the northern Canadian coast, leaving only dwindling numbers in the interior Arctic Archipelago.<ref name="amstrup2007"/> However, in the short term, some polar bear populations in historically colder regions of the Arctic may temporarily benefit from a milder climate, as multiyear ice that is too thick for seals to create breathing holes is replaced by thinner annual ice.<ref name="Amstrup 2011">{{cite book|last1=Amstrup|first1=Steven C.|chapter=Polar Bears and climate change: Certainties, uncertainties, and hope in a warming world|editor=R. T. Watson |editor2=T. J. Cade |editor3=M. Fuller |editor4=G. Hunt |editor5=E. Potapov |title=Gyrfalcons and Ptarmigan in a Changing World|volume=I|date=2011|publisher=The Peregrine Fund, Boise, Idaho, USA.|doi=10.4080/gpcw.2011.0100|pages=11–20|isbn=978-1461129073}}</ref>

Polar bears diverged from brown bears 400,000–600,000 years ago and have survived past periods of climate fluctuation. It has been claimed that polar bears will be able to adapt to terrestrial food sources as the sea ice they use to hunt seals disappears.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Gormezano|first1=Linda J.|last2=Rockwell|first2=Robert F.|last3=Dias|first3=João Miguel|title=The Energetic Value of Land-Based Foods in Western Hudson Bay and Their Potential to Alleviate Energy Deficits of Starving Adult Male Polar Bears|journal=[[PLOS One]]|date=10 June 2015|volume=10|issue=6|page=e0128520|doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0128520|pmid=26061693|pmc=4489586|bibcode=2015PLoSO..1028520G|doi-access=free}}</ref> However, most polar bear biologists think that polar bears will be unable to completely offset the loss of calorie-rich seal blubber with terrestrial foods, and that they will be outcompeted by brown bears in this terrestrial niche, ultimately leading to a population decline.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Rode|first1=Karyn D.|last2=Robbins|first2=Charles T.|last3=Nelson|first3=Lynne|last4=Amstrup|first4=Steven C.|title=Can polar bears use terrestrial foods to offset lost ice-based hunting opportunities?|journal=Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment|date=April 2015|volume=13|issue=3|pages=138–145|doi=10.1890/140202|url=https://zenodo.org/record/1236393|doi-access=free}}</ref>

===Controversy over species protection===
[[File:Polar bear arctic.JPG|thumb|Swimming]]{{Update section|date=December 2019}}
Warnings about the future of the polar bear are often contrasted with the fact that worldwide population estimates have increased over the past 50 years and are relatively stable today.<ref name="usfwsa">{{cite web|url=http://alaska.fws.gov/fisheries/mmm/polarbear/pbmain.htm|title=Marine Mammals Management: Polar Bear|publisher=U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Alaska|access-date=9 June 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080515103458/http://alaska.fws.gov/fisheries/mmm/polarbear/pbmain.htm|archive-date=15 May 2008|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref name="WWF">{{cite web |url=http://wwf.panda.org/what_we_do/where_we_work/arctic/wildlife/polar_bear/population/ |title=WWF&nbsp;— Polar bear status, distribution & population|access-date=22 March 2010 |publisher=World Wildlife Foundation}}</ref> Some estimates of the global population are around 5,000 to 10,000 in the early 1970s;<ref name="NYT">{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/27/world/americas/27bears.html |title=Bear hunting caught in global warming debate |access-date=11 March 2008 |last=Krauss |first=Clifford|work=The New York Times |date=27 May 2006}}</ref> other estimates were 20,000 to 40,000 during the 1980s.<ref name="distribution"/><ref name="stirling1988">{{cite book |last=Stirling |first=Ian |author-link=Ian Stirling (biologist) |year=1988 |title=Polar Bears |place=Ann Arbor |publisher=University of Michigan Press |isbn=978-0-472-10100-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/polarbears00stir }}</ref> Current estimates put the global population at between 20,000 and 25,000<ref name="PBSG14"/> or 22,000 and 31,000.<ref name="iucn status 19 November 2021" /> Despite the encouraging rebound of some populations, there is little evidence to suggest polar bears are thriving overall.<ref>{{Cite news|title=How Many Polar Bears Are There?|url=https://www.treehugger.com/polar-bear-population-4859409|access-date=2021-09-15|website=Treehugger|language=en}}</ref>

There are several reasons for the apparent discordance between past and projected population trends: estimates from the 1950s and 1960s were based on stories from explorers and hunters rather than on scientific surveys.<ref name="increasing">{{cite web|url=http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/ask-the-experts/population/|title=Ask the experts: Are polar bear populations increasing?|author=Derocher, Andrew|website=[[Polar Bears International]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080229080530/http://www.polarbearsinternational.org/ask-the-experts/population/|archive-date=29 February 2008|url-status=dead|access-date=9 March 2008}}</ref><ref>[[#Bruemmer|Bruemmer]], p. 101. In a meeting of the five circumpolar nations on 6 September 1965, estimates of the worldwide population ranged from 5,000 to 19,000. "The truth was, no one knew... Scientific research had been sketchy and knowledge of the polar bear was based largely on stories brought back by explorers and hunters."</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://polarbearsinternational.org/research/research-qa/are-polar-bear-populations-increasing-in-fact-booming/|title=Are polar bear populations increasing: in fact, booming?|last=Amstrup|first=Steven C.|author-link=Steven Amstrup|website=[[Polar Bears International]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180620084937/https://polarbearsinternational.org/research/research-qa/are-polar-bear-populations-increasing-in-fact-booming/|archive-date=20 June 2018|url-status=live|access-date=20 March 2019}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.sej.org/publications/alaska-and-hawaii/magic-number-a-sketchy-fact-about-polar-bears-keeps-goingand-going-an|title=Magic Number: a Sketchy "Fact" About Polar Bears Keeps Going...And Going... And Going|last=Dykstra|first=Peter|date=15 August 2008|website=[[Society of Environmental Journalists]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180217192125/https://www.sej.org/publications/alaska-and-hawaii/magic-number-a-sketchy-fact-about-polar-bears-keeps-goingand-going-an|archive-date=17 February 2018|url-status=live|access-date=20 March 2019}}</ref> Second, controls of harvesting were introduced that allowed this previously overhunted species to recover. Third, the recent effects of climate change have affected sea ice abundance in different areas to varying degrees.<ref name="increasing"/>

Debate over the listing of the polar bear under endangered species legislation has put conservation groups and Canada's [[Inuit]] at opposing positions;<ref name="campbell"/> the [[Nunavut]] government and many northern residents have condemned the U.S. initiative to list the polar bear under the Endangered Species Act.<ref>{{cite news|title=Nunavut MLAs condemn U.S. proposal to make polar bears threatened species |publisher=CBC News |date=4 June 2007 |url=http://www.cbc.ca/canada/north/story/2007/06/04/nu-pbear.html |access-date=15 September 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071013193837/http://cbc.ca/canada/north/story/2007/06/04/nu-pbear.html |archive-date=13 October 2007 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Inuit reject U.S. polar bear proposal |publisher=CBC News |date=21 June 2007 |url=http://www.cbc.ca/canada/north/story/2007/06/21/polar-bears.html |access-date=15 September 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070708001444/http://www.cbc.ca/canada/north/story/2007/06/21/polar-bears.html |archive-date=8 July 2007 }}</ref> Many Inuit believe the polar bear population is increasing, and restrictions on commercial sport-hunting are likely to lead to a loss of income to their communities.<ref name="campbell"/><ref name="nrf_wenzel">Northern Research Forum. ''[http://www.nrf.is/Open%20Meetings/Yellowknife_2004/Wenzel.pdf Polar bear as a resource].'' A position paper presented for the 3rd NRF Open Meeting in Yellowknife and Rae Edzo, Canada. 15–18 September 2004</ref>

==In culture==
[[File:PolarBearWalrusTuskCarving.jpg|thumb|Engraving, made by [[Chukchi people|Chukchi]] carvers in the 1940s on a [[walrus]] tusk, depicts polar bears hunting walrus]]

===Indigenous folklore===
For the indigenous peoples of the Arctic, polar bears have long played an important cultural and material role.<ref name="lw6-9">[[#Lockwood|Lockwood]], pp. 6–9</ref><ref name="Uspensky"/> Polar bear remains have been found at hunting sites dating to 2,500 to 3,000 years ago<ref name="lw31-36">[[#Lockwood|Lockwood]], pp. 31–36</ref> and 1,500-year-old [[cave painting]]s of polar bears have been found in the [[Chukchi Peninsula]]. Indeed, it has been suggested that Arctic peoples' skills in seal hunting and [[igloo]] construction has been in part acquired from the polar bears themselves.<ref name="Uspensky"/>

The [[Inuit]] and [[Alaska Natives]] have many [[Folklore|folk tales]] featuring the bears including legends in which bears are humans when inside their own houses and put on bear hides when going outside, and stories of how the [[constellation]] that is said to resemble a great bear surrounded by dogs came into being. These legends reveal a deep respect for the polar bear, which is portrayed as both spiritually powerful and closely akin to humans. The human-like posture of bears when standing and sitting, and the resemblance of a skinned bear carcass to the human body, have probably contributed to the belief that the spirits of humans and bears were interchangeable.<ref name="original">{{cite book |last=Stirling |first=Ian |year=1988 |title=Polar Bears |location=Ann Arbor |publisher=University of Michigan Press |isbn=978-0-472-10100-9 |chapter=The Original Polar Bear Watchers |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/polarbears00stir }}</ref>

Among the [[Chukchi people|Chukchi]] and [[Siberian Yupik|Yupik]] of eastern [[Siberia]], there was [[Shamanism among Eskimo peoples|a longstanding shamanistic ritual]] of "thanksgiving" to the hunted polar bear. After killing the animal, its head and skin were removed and cleaned and brought into the home, and a feast was held in the hunting camp in its honor. To appease the spirit of the bear, traditional song and drum music was played, and the skull was ceremonially fed and offered a pipe.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Kochnev AA, Etylin VM, Kavry VI, Siv-Siv EB, Tanko IV |title=Ritual Rites and Customs of the Natives of Chukotka connected with the Polar Bear|pages=1–3|journal=Preliminary Report Submitted for the Meeting of the Alaska Nanuuq Commission (Nome, Alaska, USA) |date=17–19 December 2002}}</ref> Only once the spirit was appeased was the skull be separated from the skin, taken beyond the bounds of the homestead, and placed in the ground, facing north.<ref name="Uspensky"/>

The [[Nenet]]s of north-central Siberia placed particular value on the talismanic power of the prominent [[canine teeth]]. These were traded in the villages of the lower [[Yenisei River|Yenisei]] and [[Khatanga River|Khatanga]] rivers to the forest-dwelling peoples further south, who would sew them into their hats as protection against [[brown bear]]s. It was believed that the "little nephew" (the brown bear) would not dare to attack a man wearing the tooth of its powerful "big uncle", the polar bear. The skulls of killed polar bears were buried at sacred sites, and altars, called ''sedyangi'', were constructed out of the skulls. Several such sites have been preserved on the [[Yamal Peninsula]].<ref name="Uspensky"/>

===Symbols and mascots===
[[File:GRE-10-Greenland-5 Kroner (1911).jpg|thumb|left|Greenland's 1911 five kroner note depicting a polar bear]]
{{multiple image
| align = right
| align = right
| direction = vertical
| direction = vertical
| width =
| width = 200px
|image1=Ours nageant (Musée du quai Branly) (3034045389).jpg|caption1=Model of a swimming polar bear from the [[Dorset culture]], northern Canada
| image1 = Coat of Arms of Chukotka.svg
|image2=World of Coke & Amy Todd (10472227035).jpg|caption2=[[Cola Coca polar bear]] costume at [[World of Coca-Cola]] Museum, Atlanta
| caption1 = Coat of arms of the [[Chukotka Autonomous Okrug]] in the Russian Federation
| image2 = Coat of arms of Greenland.svg
| caption2 = Coat of arms of the Greenlandic Self-Rule government ([[Kalaallit Nunaat]])
}}
}}
Polar bears have had prominent roles in [[Inuit culture]] and [[Inuit religion|religion]]. The deity [[Torngarsuk]] was sometimes imagined as a giant polar bear. He resided underneath the sea floor in an [[underworld]] of the dead and had power over sea creatures. [[Kalaallit]] [[shaman]]s would worship him through singing and dancing and were expected to be taken by him to the sea and consumed if he considered them worthy. Polar bears were also associated with the goddness [[Nuliajuk]] who was responsible for their creation, along with other sea creatures. It was believed that shaman could reach the moon or the bottom of the ocean by riding on a [[Tutelary deity|guardian spirit]] in the form of a polar bear. Some folklore involves people turning into or disguising themselves as polar bears by donning their skins or the reserve, with polar bears removing their own skins. Polars bears also feature in [[Inuit astronomy]], where the [[Pleiades]] constellation is conceived of as a polar bear trapped by dogs while [[Orion's Belt]], the [[Hyades (star cluster)|Hyades]] and [[Aldebaran]] represented the hunters, dogs and wounded bear respectively.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=152–153, 156–162}}


Nordic and Icelandic folklore and literature has also featured polar bears. In ''[[The Tale of Auðun of the West Fjords]]'', a poor man named Auвun spend all this money on a polar bear in Greenland but ended up become rich by given the bear to the king of Denmark.{{sfn|Fee|2019|p=32}} In the 14th century manuscript [[Hauksbók]], a man named Odd kills and eats a polar bear that have killed his father and brother. In the story of ''The Grimsey Man and the Bear'', a mother bears nursing and recuses a farmer stuck on an ice floe and is repaid with a sheep. In the 18th century writings mention the legend of a "polar bear king" known as the ''bjarndýrakóngur''. This beast was depicted as a polar bear with "ruddy cheeks" and a [[unicorn]]-like horn, which glows in the dark. The king could understand when humans talk and was considered to be very asute.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=165–166, 181–182}} Two Norwegian fairy tales, [[East of the Sun and West of the Moon]] and [[White-Bear-King-Valemon]] involve white bears turning into men and sleeping with women.{{sfn|Fee|2019|p=98}}
Their distinctive appearance and their association with the Arctic have made polar bears popular icons, especially in those areas where they are native. The Canadian [[Toonie|two-dollar coin]] carries an image of a lone polar bear on its reverse side, while a special millennium edition featured three.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.canlii.org/en/ca/laws/regu/sor-2000-245/latest/sor-2000-245.html |title=Order Authorizing the Issue of a Two Dollar Circulation Coin Commemorating the Millennium and Specifying its Characteristics, SOR/2000-245 |publisher=CanLII |date=19 November 2011 |access-date=2 December 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090606014359/http://www.canlii.org/en/ca/laws/regu/sor-2000-245/latest/sor-2000-245.html |archive-date=6 June 2009 }}</ref> Vehicle licence plates in the [[Vehicle registration plates of the Northwest Territories|Northwest Territories]] in Canada are in the shape of a polar bear, as was the case in [[Vehicle registration plates of Nunavut|Nunavut]] until 2012; these now display polar bear artwork instead.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/north/nunavut-s-polar-bear-licence-plates-may-go-extinct-1.1119751|title=Nunavut's polar bear licence plates may go extinct|date=3 August 2011|work=CBC News}}</ref> The polar bear is the mascot of [[Bowdoin College]], [[Maine]]; the [[University of Alaska Fairbanks]]; and the [[1988 Winter Olympics]] held in [[Calgary]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://bowdoinorient.com/2019/11/01/the-bowdoin-polar-bear-origins-in-a-history-of-exploration/|title= The Bowdoin polar bear: origins in a history of exploration|date=1 September 2019|access-date=2 July 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.uaf.edu/universityrelations/guidelines/logos/history.php|title=University of Alaska Fairbanks Logo History|access-date=2 July 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.olympic.org/calgary-1988-mascots |title=Calgary 1988 Mascots |access-date=2 July 2020}}</ref> The [[Eisbären Berlin]] hockey team uses a roaring polar bear as their logo, and the [[Charlotte, North Carolina]] hockey team the [[Charlotte Checkers]] uses a polar bear named Chubby Checker as their mascot.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://gocheckers.com/fan-zone/chubby |title=Charlotte Checkers Chubby|access-date=2 July 2020}}</ref>


Polar bears drawing has historically been featured on maps of the northern regions. Possibly the earliest depictions of a polar bear on a map is the ''[[Carta marina]]'' of 1539, which has a white bear on Iceland or "Islandia". A 1544 map of North America includes two polar bears near Quebec. Notable paintings featuring polar bears include [[François-Auguste Biard]]'s ''Fighting Polar Bears'' (1839) and [[Edwin Landseer]]s ''[[Man Proposes, God Disposes]]'' (1864). A real polar bear hunt was filmed for the 1932 documentary ''[[Igloo (1932 film)|Igloo]]''. The 1974 film ''[[The White Dawn]]'' features a polar bear being speared but it was simulated and the trained bear was unharmed. The novel ''[[Northern Lights (Pullman novel)|Northern Lights]]'' (1995), also known as ''The Golden Compass'' features [[Races and creatures in His Dark Materials#Armoured bears (panserbjørne)|armour-clad polar bears]] who performed ritualized combat bouts. In the radio show ''[[The Jack Benny Program]]'', the title character gets a pet polar bear named Carmichael, voiced by [[Mel Blanc]], in a 1939 episode.{{sfn|Engelhard|2017|pp=xi–xii, 36, 82–83, 100, 184}} The polar bears is also a popular symbol. It is featured on the [[Coat of arms of Greenland|coat of arms of Greenland]], and in many advertisements, notably for [[Coca Cola]].{{sfn|Fee|2019|pp=32, 133–135}} The bear is considered to be a powerful symbol for the dangers of climate changes and has been used to raise awareness.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Born|first=D|year=2019|title=Bearing Witness? Polar Bears as Icons for Climate Change Communication in National Geographic|journal=Environmental Communication|volume=13|issue=5|doi=10.1080/17524032.2018.1435557}}</ref>
[[Coca-Cola]] has used images of the polar bear in its advertising,<ref>{{cite web|title=Our Coca-Cola Polar bears|url=http://www.coca-cola.co.uk/stories/our-coca-cola-polar-bears|publisher=Coca-Cola|access-date=31 January 2017|archive-date=2 December 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161202123042/http://www.coca-cola.co.uk/stories/our-coca-cola-polar-bears|url-status=dead}}</ref> and [[Polar Beverages]], [[Nelvana]], [[Bundaberg Rum]], [[Klondike bar]]s, and [[Fox's Glacier Mints]] all feature polar bears in their logos.{{citation needed|date=April 2022}}

===Fiction===
Polar bears are popular in fiction, particularly in books for children or teenagers.
*''The Polar Bear Son'' is adapted from a [[Inuit mythology|traditional Inuit tale]].<ref>{{cite book |title=The polar bear son: An Inuit tale |last=Dabcovich |first=Lydia |year=1997 |publisher=Clarion Books |location=New York |isbn=978-0-395-72766-9 |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780395727669 }}</ref>
*The animated television series ''[[Noah's Island]]'' features a polar bear named Noah as the protagonist.
*Polar bears feature prominently in ''[[East (novel)|East]]'' (''North Child'' in the UK) by [[Edith Pattou]].<ref>{{cite web |title=East (East, book 1) by Edith Pattou |url=http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/p/edith-pattou/east.htm |website=www.fantasticfiction.com |access-date=1 September 2022}}</ref>
*''The Bear'' by [[Raymond Briggs]] (adapted into [[The Bear (1998 film)|an animated short in 1998]]) is a story of a girl's encounter with a polar bear.<ref>{{cite web |title=Gentleman Briggs - The Bear (TVC) |url=http://www.toonhound.com/briggsthebear.htm |website=www.toonhound.com |access-date=1 September 2022}}</ref>
*The ''[[Panserbjorne|panserbjørne]]'' of [[Philip Pullman]]'s fantasy trilogy ''[[His Dark Materials]]'' are sapient, dignified, [[anthropomorphism|anthropomorphic]] polar bears. They feature prominently in the 2007 [[The Golden Compass (film)|film adaptation of ''The Golden Compass'']].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cgsociety.org/index.php/CGSFeatures/CGSFeatureSpecial/golden_compass_the_bear_facts|title=The Golden Compass: The Bear Facts|publisher=CG Society|access-date=17 March 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180423113902/http://www.cgsociety.org/index.php/CGSFeatures/CGSFeatureSpecial/golden_compass_the_bear_facts|archive-date=23 April 2018|url-status=dead}}</ref>
*The television series ''[[Lost (2004 TV series)|Lost]]'' features polar bears living on the tropical island setting.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.tvguide.com/news/lost-producers-questions-1014514.aspx|title=13 Questions with the Producers of Lost: Polar Bears, the Smoke Monster, and the Man in Black|website=TV Guide|first=Natalie|last=Abrams|date=31 January 2010|access-date=17 March 2014}}</ref>
*The manga and anime series ''[[Shirokuma Cafe]]'' centers on a polar bear who runs a cafe in Japan.


==See also==
==See also==
Line 310: Line 265:
* [[Flagship species]]
* [[Flagship species]]
* [[International Polar Bear Day]]
* [[International Polar Bear Day]]
* [[List of individual bears]] - includes individual captive polar bears
* [[2019 mass invasion of Russian polar bears]]
* [[2019 mass invasion of Russian polar bears]]
* [[Umbrella species]]
* [[Umbrella species]]
{{Clear}}


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{reflist}}


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
{{Refbegin}}
* {{cite book|ref=Aars |date=June 2005 |title=Polar Bears. Proceedings of the 14th Working Meeting of the IUCN/SSC Polar Bear Specialist Group |editor=Aars, Jon |others=Nicholas J. Lunn and Andrew E. Derocher |volume=32 |publisher=[[IUCN]] |location=Seattle, Washington, United States |url=http://pbsg.npolar.no/docs/PBSG14proc.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080409082137/http://pbsg.npolar.no/docs/PBSG14proc.pdf |access-date=19 April 2008 |archive-date=9 April 2008 |isbn=978-2-8317-0959-8 }}
* {{cite book |ref=Bruemmer|title=World of the Polar Bear |last=Bruemmer |first=Fred |year=1989 |publisher=[[Key Porter Books]] |location=Toronto, Ontario, Canada |isbn=978-1-55013-107-9 }}
*{{cite book|last=Derocher|first=Andrew E.|year=2012|title=Polar Bears: A Complete Guide to Their Biology and Behavior|publisher=John Hopkins University Press|isbn=978-1-4214-0305-2}}
*{{cite book|last=Ellis|first=Richard|authorlink=Richard Ellis (biologist)|year=2009|title=On Thin Ice: The Changing World of the Polar Bear|publisher=Knopf|isbn=978-0-307-27059-7}}
* {{cite book |ref=Hemstock |title=The Polar Bear |last=Hemstock |first=Annie |year=1999 |publisher=Capstone Press |location=Manakato, MN |isbn=978-0-7368-0031-0 |url=https://archive.org/details/polarbear0000hems }}
* {{cite book |ref=Lockwood |title=Polar Bears |last=Lockwood |first=Sophie |year=2006 |publisher=The Child's World |location=Chanhassen, MN |isbn=978-1-59296-501-4 |url=https://archive.org/details/polarbears0000lock }}
*{{cite book|last=Engelhard|first=Richard|year=2017|title=Ice Bear: The Cultural History of an Arctic Icon|publisher=University of Washington Press|isbn=978-0-295-99922-7}}
* {{cite book |ref=Matthews |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/polarbear0000gura |title=Polar Bear |last=Matthews |first=Downs |year=1993 |publisher=Chronicle Books |location=San Francisco, CA |isbn=978-0-8118-0204-8}}
*{{cite book|last=Fee|first=Margrey|year=2019|title=Polar Bear|publisher=Reaktion Books|isbn=978-1-78914-146-7}}
* {{cite book |title=The World of the Polar Bear|last=Rosing |first=Norbert |year=1996 |publisher=Firefly Books Ltd. |location=Willowdale, ON |isbn=978-1-55209-068-8}}
*{{cite book|last=Stirling|first=Ian|authorlink=Ian Stirling (biologist)|year=2011|title=Polar Bears: Natural History of a Threatened Species|publisher=Fitzhenry and Whiteside|isbn=978-1-55455-155-2}}

==Further reading==
* {{citation |title=Ice Bear: The Cultural History of an Arctic Icon |author=Michael Engelhard |year=2016 |publisher=[[University of Washington Press]]}}.
* {{cite web |title=Inside Canada's Polar Bear Jail |date=2 Mar 2023 |first=Lina |last=Zeldovich |website=Atlas Obscura |url=https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/churchill-polar-bear-jail}}


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 21:41, 28 July 2023

Polar bear
Temporal range: Pleistocene-recent[1]
Sow near Kaktovik, Barter Island, Alaska, United States
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[3]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Carnivora
Family: Ursidae
Genus: Ursus
Species:
U. maritimus
Binomial name
Ursus maritimus
Phipps, 1774[4]
Subspecies[5]

Ursus maritimus tyrannus(?)

Polar bear range
Synonyms

Ursus eogroenlandicus
Ursus groenlandicus
Ursus jenaensis
Ursus labradorensis
Ursus marinus
Ursus polaris
Ursus spitzbergensis
Ursus ungavensis
Thalarctos maritimus

The polar bear (Ursus maritimus) is a large bear native to the Arctic and surrounding areas. Its range includes the nations of Canada, Denmark (Greenland), the United States (Alaska), Russia and Norway (Svalbard). It is closely related to the brown bear and the two species can interbreed and have so in the last hundreds of thousands of years. The polar bear is the largest species of bear, an adult male is 200–250 cm (6.6–8.2 ft) long and weighs 300–800 kg (660–1,760 lb). Adult females are much smaller and the species is sexual dimorphic. The polar bear is white or yellowish-furred with black skin and a thick layer of fat. It is more slenderly built than the brown bear, with a narrower skull, longer neck and lower shoulder hump. Its teeth are sharper and more adapted to cutting meat.

Polar bears are both terrestrial and

hibernate
. Young stay with their mother for up to to two-and-a-half years.

The polar bear is considered to be a vulnerable species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Its biggest threats are climate change, pollution and oil/gas development. Climate change threatens the bear's habitat on the sea ice and access to its favoured prey, leading to malnutrition or starvation. Less sea ice also means that the bears must spend more time on land, increasing conflicts with people. Polar bears have been hunted, both by indigenous peoples of the Arctic and Europeans, for their coats, meat and other items. They have been kept in captivity in zoos and circuses. Polar bears are prevalent have been featured in art, folklore, religion and modern culture.

Naming

The polar bear was given its common name by Thomas Pennant in A Synopsis of Quadrupeds (1771). It was historically known as the "white bear" in Europe between the 13th and 18th centuries as well as "ice bear", "sea bear" and "Greenland bear".[6] The scientific name Ursus maritimus is Latin for "bear" and "maritime" or "sea bear".[7][8] The bear is called nanook by the Inuit, and those of the Netsilik cultures have names for different bears based on factors such as sex and age: these include adult males (anguraq), single adult females (tattaq), gestating females (arnaluk), newborns (hagliaqtug), large adolescents (namiaq) and denning bears (apitiliit).[9]

Taxonomy

Constantine John Phipps formally described the polar bear as a distinct species, Ursus maritimus in 1774, following his 1773 voyage towards the North Pole.[11] Due to its adaptations to a marine environment, some have placed the polar bear in its own genus Thalarctos.[12] However Ursus is widely considered to be the valid genus for the species based on the fossil record and the fact that it is interfertile with the brown bear.[12][13]

Different subspecies have been proposed including Ursus maritimus maritimus (Phipps in 1774), U. m. marinus (Pallas 1776).[14] However these are not widely supported and the polar bear is offically considered to be monotypic.[15] One alleged fossil subspecies has been identified: Ursus maritimus tyrannus, which was significantly larger than the living polar bear.[13] However, it may in fact be a large brown bear.[16]

Evolution

The polar bear is one of eight species in the bear family Ursidae and of six species in the subfamily Ursinae. Ursine bears may have originated around 5 million years ago and show extensive hybridization of species in their lineage. The following cladogram is based on a genetic study by Kumar and collages (2017):[17]

Ursidae

Fossils of polar bears are uncommon and limited to

Prince Charles Foreland, Norway in 2004.[18][1] Scientists in the 20th century surmised that polar bears directly descended from a population of brown bears, possibly in eastern Siberia or Alaska.[13][16] Mitochondrial DNA studies in the 1990s and 2000s have supported the status of the polar bear as a derivative of the brown bear, finding that some brown bear populations were more closely related to polar bears than other brown bears, particularly the ABC Islands bears.[18][19][20] Lindqvist and collages (2010) estimated that the polar bear linage split from other brown bears around 150,000 years ago.[18]

Polar/brown bear hybrid taxidermy specimen on display at Natural History Museum at Tring in Hertfordshire, England

More extensive genetic studies have found that the two species are in fact separate

Glaciation events over hundreds of thousands of years led to both the origin of polar bears and their subsequent interactions and hybridizations with brown bears.[23]

Studies in 2011 and 2012 concluded that the genetics of brown bears passed into polar bears.

matrilines from now extinct Irish brown bears.[24] Later studies have clarified that gene flow went from polar to brown bears rather than the reverse.[23][25][26] Close to 9 percent of the genome of ABC bears resulted from introgression from polar bears,[27] while Irish bears had 20 percent polar bear origin.[25] Mass hybridization between the two species appears to have stopped around 260,000 years ago. Modern hybrids are relatively rare in the wild.[22]

Analysis of the

American black bears shows distinct adaptions. Polar bears have a less diverse array of olfactory receptor genes, a result of there being less odours in their Arctic habitat. With its carnivorous, high fat diet; the species has less copies of the gene involved in making amylase, an enzyme that breaks down starch, and more selection for genes for fatty acid breakdown and a more efficient circulatory system. The bear's thicker coat is the result of more copies of genes involved in keratin creating proteins.[28]

Physical characteristics

Polar bear skeleton
Skull
Bear climbing on ice
Captive bear swimming

The polar bear is both the largest living species of bear and land carnivore, though some brown bear subspecies like the Kodiak bear can rival it in size.[29][30] Males are generally 200–250 cm (6.6–8.2 ft) long with a weight of 300–800 kg (660–1,760 lb). Females are smaller being 180–200 cm (5.9–6.6 ft) with a weight of 150–300 kg (330–660 lb).[5] Sexual dimorphism in the species is particularly high compared to most other mammals.[31] The weight of polar bears fluctuates during the year, as they can bulk up on fat and increase their mass by 50 percent.[29] A fattened, pregnant female can weigh as much as 500 kg (1,100 lb).[32] Adults may stand 130–160 cm (4.3–5.2 ft) tall at the shoulder. The tail is 76–126 mm (3.0–5.0 in) long.[5] The largest polar bear on record, reportedly weighing 1,002 kg (2,209 lb), was a male shot at Kotzebue Sound in northwestern Alaska in 1960. This specimen, when mounted, stood 3.39 m (11 ft 1 in) tall on its hindlegs.[33]

Compared to the brown bear, this species has a more slender build, with a narrower, smaller skull, longer neck, and lower shoulder hump.

Roman nose".[35] The more streamlined build of the polar bear is likely an adaption for swimming. The long neck may allow it more easily poke into ice holes and seal dens.[36] They have 34–42 teeth including 12 incisors, 4 canines, 8–16 premolars and 10 molars. The teeth are adapted for a more carnivorous diet than the brown bear, having longer, sharper and more spaced out canines, and smaller, more pointed cheek teeth (premolars and molars).[31][37][36] The species has a large space or diastema between the canines and cheek teeth, which may allow it to better bite into prey.[37][38] Since it normally preys on animals much smaller than it, the polar bear does not have a particularly strong bite.[38]

Polar bears have large paws; the front paws being broader than the back. They move around by walking or galloping. The feet are hairier than in other bear species, which allows then to walk on snow and sea ice. Walking bears tilt their front paws towards each other. They can run at speeds of up to 20 km/h (12 mph),[39] but typically move at around 5.5 km/h (3.4 mph).[40] When swimming, the broad front paws do the paddling, while the hind legs play a role in steering and diving.[5][41] They can transverse water at up to 6 km/h (3.7 mph).[42] The claws are small but sharp and hooked, and are used both to snatch prey and climb onto ice.[41][43]

The coat consists of dense

underfur around 5 cm (2.0 in) long and guard hairs around 15 cm (5.9 in) long.[5] Males have significantly longer hairs on their forelegs, which is thought to attract females, serving a similar function to the lion's mane.[44] The outer surface of the hairs has a scaly appearance, and the guard hairs are hollow, which allows the animals to trap heat and float in the water.[45] The transparent guard hairs forward scatter UV light between the underfur and the skin, leading to a cycle of absorption and re-emission.[46] The fur appears white due to the backscatter of incident light and the absence of pigment.[46][47] Polar bears are pure white after they molt and gain a more yellowish colouration as they are exposed more to the sun. They can also be grayish or brownish.[5] Their light fur provides camouflage in their snowy environment. After emerging from the water, the bear can easily shake itself dry before freezing since the hairs are resistant to tangling when wet.[48] The skin, including the nose and lips, is black and absorbs heat.[5][46] Polar bears have a 5–10 cm (2.0–3.9 in) thick layer of fat underneath the skin,[5] which provides both warmth and energy.[49] Polar bears maintain their core body temperature at about.36.9 °C (98 °F).[50]

The eyes of a polar bear are located close to the roof of the head, which may allow them to stay out of the water when the animal is swimming at the surface. They are relatively small, which may be an adaption against blowing snow and

frostbitten.[51] They can hear best at frequencies of 11.2–22.5 kHz (26,800–13,300 m).[52] The nasal concha has a large surface area, so more warm air can move through the nasal passages.[35] Their olfactory system is also large and adapted for smelling prey over vast distances.[53] The animal has reniculate kidneys which can efficiently filter out salt.[54]

Distribution and habitat

Map of 19 polar bear subpopulations. The colours represent the four major genetic clusters
Polar bear jumping on floating ice in Spitsbergen Island, Svalbard Archipelago, Norway

Polar bears inhabit the

Svalbard Archipelago of Norway.[5][55][56] Polar bears have been recorded just 25 km (16 mi) from the North Pole.[57] The southern limits of their range include James Bay and Newfoundland/Labrador in Canada and St. Matthew Island and the Pribilof Islands of Alaska.[5] They are not permanent residents of Iceland, but have historically been recorded visiting there if they can reach it via sea ice.[58] Due to minimal human development in its remote habitat, it can still be found in much of its original range, more so than any other large carnivore.[59]

Polar bears have been divided into 19 subpopulations labeled the East Greenland (ES), Barents Sea (BS), Kara Sea (KS), Laptev Sea (LVS), Chukchi Sea (CS), northern and southern Beaufort Sea (SBS and NBS), Viscount Melville (VM), M'Clintock Channel (MC), Gulf of Boothia (GB), Lancaster Sound (LS), Norwegian Bay (NB), Kane Basin (KB), Baffin Bay (BB), Davis Strait (DS), Foxe Basin (FB) and the western and southern Hudson Bay (WD AND SH) populations.[60][61] A 2022 study has suggested that the bears in eastern Greenland should be divided into north and south.[62] The bears can also be divided into four gene clusters; Southern Canadian, Canadian Archipelago, Western Basin (northwestern Canada west to the Russian Far East) and Eastern Basin (Greenland east to Siberia).[60]

The polar bear is dependent enough on the ocean to be considered a marine mammal.[15][63] It prefers the annual sea ice over continental shelves and between islands of archipelagos. These areas, known as the "Arctic ring of life", have high biological productivity in comparison to the deep waters of the high Arctic.[59][64] The species tends to frequent areas where sea ice meets water, such as polynyas and leads, to hunt the seals that make up most of its diet.[65] Polar bears travel in response to changes in ice cover throughout the year. They are forced onto land in summer when the sea ice disappears.[66] Terrestrial habitats used by polar bears include forests, mountains, rocky areas, lakeshores and creeks.[67] In the Chukchi and Beaufort seas, where the sea ice breaks off and floats north during the summer, polar bears generally stay on the ice, though a large portion of the population (15–40%) has been observed spending all summer on land since the 1980s.[68] Some areas have thick multiyear ice that doesn't completely melt and the bears can stay on all year,[69] though this type of ice has less seals and allows for less productivity in the water.[70]

Natural history

Some characteristic postures:
  1. at rest;
  2. assessing a situation;
  3. breaking into a seal den

Polar bears have wide home ranges. They may independently travel an average of 142,332 km2 (54,955 sq mi) per year, while drifting ice allows them to move even further at 178,040 km2 (68,740 sq mi) per year.[71] Depending on ice conditions, a bear can travel an average of 12 km (7.5 mi) per day.[72] These movements are powered by their energy-rich diet.[49] Bears are also capable swimmers. One study found they can swim an average of 154.2 km (95.8 mi) with an average duration of 3.4 days.[73] They can dive for as long as three minutes.[74]

Polars bears are active year-round, hibernation occurring only among pregnant females.[75] They typically have a normal 24-hour cycle even during days of all darkness or sunlight, though cycles less than a day are more common during the former.[76] The species is generally diurnal; being more active early in the day and less so towards the end.[77] Polar bears sleep close to eight hours a day on average.[78] They will sleep in various positions, including being curled up, sitting up, laying on the side, on the back with limbs spread or on the belly with the rump elevated.[40][43] On sea ice, polar bears snooze at pressure ridges where they dig on the sheltered side and lie down. After a snowstorm, a bear may rest under the snow for hours or days. On land, the bears may dig a resting spot on gravel or sand beaches.[40] They will also sleep on rocky outcrops. Adult males require less shelter for sleeping as they are less at risk from other bears.[79]

Social life

Young males play-fighting

Polar bears are typically solitary, aside from mothers with cubs and mating pairs.[80] On land, they are found closer together and gather around food resources. Adult males in particular are more tolerant of each other in terrestrial environments and outside the breeding season.[81][82] They have been recorded forming stable "alliances", traveling, resting and playing together. A dominance hierarchy exists among polar bears with the largest, mature males ranking at the top. Adult females outrank subadults and adolescents and younger males outrank females of the same age. In addition, cubs with their mothers outrank those on their own.[83] Females with dependent offspring tend to stay away from males,[82] but sometimes associate with other female-offspring units creating "composite families".[83]

Polar bears are generally quite but are heard to produce various sounds.[84] Chuffing, a soft pulsing call, is made by mother bears presumably to keep in contact with their young.[85] During the breeding season, adult males will chuff at potential mates.[86] Unlike in other animals where chuffing is passed through the nostrils, in polar bears it is emitted through a partially open mouth.[85] Cubs will cry for attention and produce humming noises while nursing.[87] Teeth chops, jaw pops, blows, huffs, moans, growls and roars are heard in more hostile encounters.[86] Chemical communication can also be important: bears secret their scent from their foot pads into their tracks which allow individuals to keep track of one another in the vast Arctic wilderness.[88]

Diet and hunting

The polar bear is a hypercarnivore,[89] and the most carnivorous species of bear.[36] It is the apex predator of the Arctic,[90] preying on ice-living seals and consuming their energy-rich blubber.[91] The most commonly taken species is the ringed seal, but they also prey on bearded seals and harp seals.[5] Ringed seals are ideal prey as they are abundant and small enough to be overpowered by even small bears.[92] Bearded seal adults are larger and are more likely to break free from an attacking bear, hence adult male bears are more successful in hunting them. Less common prey are hooded seals, spotted seals, ribbon seals and the more temperate-living harbor seals.[93] Polar bears, mostly adult males, will occasionally hunt walruses, both on land and on ice, though they mainly target the young, as adults are too large and formidable, with their thick skin and long tusks.[94]

Polar bear after failing to catch a bearded seal and on his way to find another prey
Bear feeding on a bearded seal
Bear out at sea. Polar bears sometimes stalk their prey from the water.
Bear with whale carcass

Besides seals, bears will prey on

narhwals, as well as hoofed mammals, birds and their eggs, fish and marine invertebrates. A small percentage of their diet is plant matter, such as berries, moss, grass and seaweed.[95] In their southern range, especially near Hudson Bay and James Bay, polar bears endure all summer without sea ice to hunt from. Hence they most sustain more on terrestrial foods.[96] The polar bear cannot derive enough energy from such foods as its metabolism is specialized to require large amounts of fat from marine mammals.[97][98]

Polar bears hunt their prey in several different ways. When a bear spots a seal

hauling out on the sea ice it slowly stalks it with the head and neck lowered, possibly to make its dark nose and eyes less noticeable. As it gets closer, the bear crouches more and eventually charges at a high speed, attempting to catch the seal before it can escape into its ice hole. Some stalking bears need to move through water; transversing though water cavities in the ice when approaching the seal or swimming towards a seal on an ice floe. The polar bear can stay underwater with its nose exposed. When it gets close enough, the animal lunges from the water to attack. Despite popular legend, there is no reliable evidence that polar bears cover their black noses with their paws when hunting.[99]

During a limited time in spring, polar bears will search for ringed seal pups in their birth lairs underneath the ice. Once a bear catches the scent of a hiding pup and pinpoints its location, it approaches the den quietly so as to not alert it. It uses its front feet to smash through the ice and then pokes its head in to catch the pup before it can escape. A ringed seal's lair can be more then 1 m (3.3 ft) below the surface of the ice and thus more massive bears are better equipped for breaking in. Some bears may simply stay still near a breathing hole or other spot near water and

wait for prey to come by.[100] This can last hours and when a seal surfaces the bear will try to pull it out with its paws and claws.[101] This tactic is the primary hunting method from winter to early spring.[5]

During walrus hunts, the sight of an approaching polar bear can cause aggregations of walruses to panic and stampede. The bear will look for young that was crushed or separated during the turmoil.

aquatic bird. Seals in particular, however, are more agile than bears in the water.[105] Polar bears rely on raw power when trying to kill their prey, and will employ bites or paw swipes.[89] They have the strength to pull a mid-sized seal out of the water or haul a beluga carcass for quite some distance.[106] Polar bears only occasionally store food for later—burying it under snow—and only in the short term.[107]

Arctic foxes routinely follow polar bears and scavenge scraps from their kills. The bears usually tolerate them but will charge a fox that gets too close when it is feeding. Polar bears themselves will scavenge. Subadult bears will eat remains left behind by others. Females with cubs often defer a carcass to an approaching adult male, though they may be less likely to if they haven't eaten in a long time.[108] Whale carcasses are a valuable food source, particularly on land and after the sea ice melts, and attract several bears.[81] In one area in northeastern Alaska, polar bears have been recorded competing with grizzly bears for whale carcasses. Despite their smaller size, grizzlies are more aggressive and polar bears are more likely to yield to them in confrontations.[109] Polar bears will also scavenge at garbage dumps during ice-free periods.[110] Enough fat reserves allow polar bears to fast for months.[111]

Reproduction and development

Courting male approaching female
Polar bear cubs
Mother nursing her young
Female with cubs

Polar bear mating takes place on the sea ice and during spring, mostly between March and May.

serial monogamy or promiscuity.[113][115]

Upon finding a female, a male will try to isolate and guard her. Courtship can be somewhat aggressive and a male will pursue a female if she tries to run away. It can take days for the male to mate with the female which induces ovulation. After their first copulation, the couple bond. Undisturbed polar bear pairings typically last around two weeks during which they will sleep together and mate multiple times.[116] Competition for mates can be intense and this has led to sexual selection for bigger males. Polar bear males often have scars from fighting.[112][113] A male and female that have already bonded will flee together when another male arrives.[117] A female mates with multiple males in a season and a single litter can have more than one father.[115]

When the mating season ends, the female will build up more fat reserves to sustain both herself and her young. Sometime between August and October, the female constructs and enters a maternity den for winter. Depending on the area, maternity dens can be found in sea ice just off the coastline or further inland, and may be dug underneath snow, earth or a combination of both.

delayed implantation and the fertilized embryo does not start development until the fall, between mid-September and mid-October.[121] With delayed implantation, gestation in the species lasts seven to nine months but actual pregnancy is only two months.[122]

Mother polar bears typically give birth to two cubs per litter. As with other bear species, newborn polar bears are tiny and altricial.[123] The newborns have woolly hair and pink skin, with a weight of around 600 g (21 oz).[5][29] Their eyes remain closed for a month.[124] The mother's fatty milk fuels their growth, and the cubs are keep warm both by the mother's body heat and the den. The mother emerges from the den between late February and early April, and her cubs are well developed and capable of walking with her.[125] At this time they weigh 10–15 kilograms (22–33 lb).[5] A polar bear family stays near the dens for roughly two weeks, during this time the cubs will move and play around while the mother mostly rests. They eventually head out on the sea ice.[126]

Cubs under a year old stay close to their mother. When she hunts, they stay still and watch until she calls them back.

lactating female cannot conceive and give birth,[130] and cubs are weaned between two and two-and-a-half years.[5] She may simply leave her weaned young or they may be chased away by a courting male.[129] Polar bears reach sexual maturity at around four years for females and six years for males.[131] Females reach their adult size at four or five years of age while males are fully grown at twice that age.[132]

Mortality

Starving polar bear

Polar bears can live up to 30 years.

wolves[134] and adult male bears. Males kill cubs to bring their mother back into estrus, but also kill young outside the breeding season for food.[135]

Subadult bears, which are independent but not quite mature, have a particularly rough time as they are not as successful hunters as adults. Even when they do succeed, there is a chance their kill will be stolen by a larger bear. Hence subadults have to scavenge and are often underweight and at risk of starvation. At adulthood, polar bears have a high survival rate, though adult males suffer injuries from fights over mates.

Conservation status

U.S. Geological Survey
shows projected changes in polar bear habitat from 2001 to 2010 and 2041 to 2050.

In 2015, the IUCN Red List categorized the polar bear as vulnerable due to "decline in area of occupancy, extent of occurrence and/or quality of habitat". It estimated the total population to be between 22,000 to 31,000, and the current population trend as unknown. Threats to polar bear populations include climate change, pollution and oil/gas development.[2] Polar bears receive some legal protection in all the countries they inhabit. The species has been labeled as 'threatened' under the US Endangered Species Act since 2008,[138] while the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada listed it as of 'Special concern' since 1991.[139] In 1973, the Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears was signed by all five nations with polar bear populations, Canada, Denmark (Greenland), Russia (then USSR), Norway and the US. This banned most harvesting of polar bears, allowing indigenous hunting using traditional methods, and promoted preservation of bear habitat.[140]

In 2021, the IUCN/SSC Polar Bear Specialist Group labeled four subpopulations (Barents and Chukchi Sea, Foxe Basin and Gulf of Boothia) as "likely stable", two (Kane Basin and M'Clintock Channel) as "likely increased" and three (Southern Beaufort Sea, Southern and Western Hudson Bay) as "likely decreased" over specific time periods between the 1980s and 2010s. The remaining ten did not have enough data.[61] A 2016 study projected a likely decline in polar bear numbers of more than 30 percent "over three generations" due to the reduction of sea ice. The study concluded that declines of more than 50 percent are much less likely.[141] A 2012 review suggested that polar bears may become regionally extinct in southern areas by 2050 if trends continue, leaving the Canadian Archipelago and northern Greenland as stongholds.[142]

The key danger from climate change is malnutrition or starvation due to habitat loss. As polar bears hunt seals on the sea ice, rising temperatures cause the ice to melt earlier in the year, driving the bears to shore before they have built sufficient fat reserves to survive the period of scarce food in the late summer and early fall. Thinner sea ice tends to break more easily, which appears to make it more difficult for polar bears to access seals. Insufficient nourishment leads to lower reproductive rates in adult females and lower survival rates in cubs and juvenile bears. Lack off access to seals also causes bears to find food on land which increases the risk of conflict with humans.[59][142]

Polar bear swimming. The loss of sea ice has lead to more open water and more pressure on the bears to swim great distances.

Reduction in sea-ice cover also forces bears to swim longer distances, which further depletes their energy stores and occasionally leads to

parasites would flourish more readily in a warmer climate.[142]

Oil and gas development also affects polar bear habitat. The Chukchi Sea Planning Area of northwestern Alaska, which has had many drilling leases, was found to be an important site for non-denning female bears.

pesticides, due to their position at the top of the ecological pyramid. Many chemicals, such as PCBs and DDT, have been internationally banned due to the recognition of their harm on the environment. Traces of these chemicals have slowly dwindled in polar bears but still persist and have even increased in some populations.[146]

Relationship with humans

1598 engraving of men shooting at raiding polar bears during the Willem Barentsz expedition.
Nelson and the bear, by Richard Westall (1773)

Polar bears have coexisted and interacted with circumpolar peoples for millennia.[147] "White bears" are mentioned as commercial items in the Japanese writing Nihon Shoki in the seventh century. It is not clear if these were polar bears or white-coloured brown bears.[148] During the Middle Ages, Europeans considered white bears to be a novelty and were more familiar with brown and black-coloured bears.[149] An early written account of the polar bear in its natural environment is found in the 13th century anonymous Norwegian text Konungs skuggsjá, which mentions that "...the white bear of Greenland wanders most of the time on the ice of the sea, hunting seals and whales and feeding on them" and says the bear is "...as skillful a swimmer as any seal or whale.".[150]

Over the next centuries, several European explorers would mention polar bears and describe their habits.[151][152] Such accounts became more accurate since the Enlightenment, and both living and dead specimens were brought back. Nevertheless, some fanciful reports continued, including the idea that polar bears cover their noses during hunts. A relatively accurate drawing of a polar bear is found in Henry Ellis' work A voyage to Hudson's Bay (1748).[153]

Polar bears were formally classified as a species on the

Comte de Buffon mentions and depicts a "sea bear", clearly a polar bear, and "land bears", likely brown and black bears. This helped promote ideas about speciation. Buffon also mentioned a "white bear of the forest", possibly a Kermode bear.[154]

Harvesting

Eskimo hunter with polar bear slain with bow and arrow (1924)
Skins of hunted bears in Greenland

Polar bears were hunted as early as 8,000 years ago, as indicated by archeological remains at Zhokhov Island. The oldest graphic depiction of a polar bear shows it being hunted by a man with three dogs. This rock art was among several polygraphs found at Pegtymel and date to the fifth to eighth centuries. Prior to access to firearms, native people used lances, bow and arrows, and hunted in groups accompanied by dogs. Though hunting typically took place on foot, some people as killed bears in the water, on boats with a harpoon. Polar bears were sometimes killed in their dens. Killing a polar bear was traditionally considered to be a rite of passage for boys in some cultures. Native people respected the animal and hunts were subject to strict rituals.[155] Bears were harvested for the fur, meat, fat, tendons, bones and teeth.[156][157] The fur was worn and slept on, while the bones and teeth were made into tools. For the Netslik, the individual who finally killed the bear had the right to its fur while the meat was passed to all in the party. Some people kept the cubs of slain bears.[158]

Norsemen in Greenland traded polar bear furs in the Middle Ages.[159] In Russia, Novaya Zemlya and Franz Josef Land were important commercial centers for polar bear products, the former starting all the way back in 1556. Large scale hunting of bears at Svaland occurred since at least the 18th century, when no less than 150 bears were killed each year by Russian explorers. In the next century, harvesting by Russian declined in favour of Norwegians. From the 1870s to the 1970s, around 22,000 of the animals were hunted. Over 150,000 polar bears in total were either killed or captured in both Russia and Svaland, from the 18th to the 20th century. In the Canadian Arctic, bears were harvested by commercial whalers especially if they could not get enough whales. The Hudson's Bay Company is estimated to have sold 15,000 polar bear coats between the late 19 century and early 20th century.[160] In the mid 20th century, countries begin to regulate polar bear harvesting, culminating in the 1973 agreement.[140]

Polar bear meat was commonly eaten as rations by explorers and sailors in the Arctic. Its taste and texture has been described both positively and negatively. Some have called it too coarse with a powerful smell, while others praised it as a "royal dish". Polar bear fat was also used for lamps when they ran out of fuel.[161] Polar bears rugs were historically popular and by the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, they were almost ubiquitous on the floors of Norwegian churches. In more modern times, Hollywood actors would pose on bearskin rugs, notably Marilyn Monroe. Such images often had sexual connotations.[162]

Conflicts

A polar bear holding facility or "jail" in Churchill

When the sea ice melts, polar bears, particularly subadults, conflict with humans over natural resources on land.[163] They are attracted to the smell of human-made foods, particularly at garbage dumps and may be shot when they encroach on private property.[164] In Churchill, Manitoba, local authorities maintain a "polar bear jail" where nuisance bears are held until the sea ice freezes again.[165] Climate change has increased conflicts between the two species.[163]

From 1870 to 2014, there were an estimated 73 polar bear attacks on humans, which led to 20 deaths. The majority of attacks were by hungry males, typically subadults, while female attacks were usually in defense of young. In comparison to brown and American black bears, attacks by polar bears were more often near and around were humans lived. This may be due to the bears being more desperate for food and thus more likely to seek out human settlements. Like with the other two species, polar bear are more likely to target no more than two people at once. Despite its reputation, the polar bear is generally not more aggressive than other bears.[166]

Captivity

The polar bear was a particularly sought after species for exotic animal collectors due to being relatively rare and remotely living, and its reputation as a fericous beast.[167] They were originally kept only by royals and elites. In 1609, James I was given two polar bear cubs by sailor Jonas Poole, who got them during a trip to Svalbard.[168] At the end of the century, Frederick I of Prussia housed them in menageries with other wild animals. He had them declawed and defanged to preform mock fights. Around 1726, Catherine I of Russia gifted two polar bears to Augustus II the Strong, who desired them for his animal collection.[167] Over time, polar bears were being displayed to the public in zoos and circuses.[169] In the early 19th century, the species would be exhibited at the Tower of London and the Exeter Exchange and a menagerie in Vienna.[170]

Visitors observing polar bears underneath a glass tunnel at the Detroit Zoo
Performing polar bear at the 1973 Nationaal Songfestival
Knut the polar bear on 31 October 2007, six months after his debut.

Polar bear exhibits were innovated by Carl Hagenbeck, who replaced cages and pits with settings that mimic the animal's natural environment. In 1907, he revealed complex panorama structure at the Tierpark Hagenbeck zoo. It consisted of exhibits made of artificial snow and ice separated by moats. Different polar animals were displayed on each platform, giving the illusion of them living together. Starting in 1975, Hellabrunn Zoo housed its polar bears in an exhibit which consisted of a glass barrier, a house, concrete platforms mimicking ice floes and a large pool. Inside the house were maternity dens, and rooms for the staff to prepare and store the food. The exhibit was connected to an outdoor yard for extra room.[171] In 2001, the Detroit Zoo opened its "Arctic Ring of Life" exhibit, which cost $15 million dollars to build.[172] The exhibit has a plexiglass tunnel underneath the water allowing for a more immersive experience for the guests.[173] Many zoos in Europe and North America have stopped keeping polar bears due to the costs of their exhibits.[174]

Polar bears have historically been trained to perform in circuses. Bears in general were popular in circuses as they were large, strong, easy to train and had human-like characteristics, and the white coat of polar bears made them particularly attractive. Preforming polar bears were being used in 1888 by Circus Krone in Germany and later in 1904 by the Bostock and Wombwell Menagerie in England. Circus director Wilhelm Hagenbeck trained up to 75 polar bears to slide into a large tank though a chute. He began preforming with them in 1908 and they had a particularly well-received show at the Hippodrome in London. Other circus tricks performed by polar bears included tightrope walking, ball bouncing, roller-skating and motorcycle riding. One of the most famous polar bear trainers post-WWII was East German Ursula Böttcher, whose small stature contrasted with that of the large bears. Starting in the late 20th century, polar bear acts were being retired and the use of these bears for the circus is now prohibited in the US.[175]

Several captive polar bears were given celebrity status, notably

Prozac by a therapist for constantly swimming in his pool.[178] To reduce stereotypical behaviours, zookeepers provide the bears with enrichment items to trigger their play behaviour.[179] Zoo polar bears may appear green due to algae concentrations.[180]

Cultural significance

Model of a swimming polar bear from the Dorset culture, northern Canada
Cola Coca polar bear costume at World of Coca-Cola Museum, Atlanta

Polar bears have had prominent roles in

shamans would worship him through singing and dancing and were expected to be taken by him to the sea and consumed if he considered them worthy. Polar bears were also associated with the goddness Nuliajuk who was responsible for their creation, along with other sea creatures. It was believed that shaman could reach the moon or the bottom of the ocean by riding on a guardian spirit in the form of a polar bear. Some folklore involves people turning into or disguising themselves as polar bears by donning their skins or the reserve, with polar bears removing their own skins. Polars bears also feature in Inuit astronomy, where the Pleiades constellation is conceived of as a polar bear trapped by dogs while Orion's Belt, the Hyades and Aldebaran represented the hunters, dogs and wounded bear respectively.[181]

Nordic and Icelandic folklore and literature has also featured polar bears. In The Tale of Auðun of the West Fjords, a poor man named Auвun spend all this money on a polar bear in Greenland but ended up become rich by given the bear to the king of Denmark.[182] In the 14th century manuscript Hauksbók, a man named Odd kills and eats a polar bear that have killed his father and brother. In the story of The Grimsey Man and the Bear, a mother bears nursing and recuses a farmer stuck on an ice floe and is repaid with a sheep. In the 18th century writings mention the legend of a "polar bear king" known as the bjarndýrakóngur. This beast was depicted as a polar bear with "ruddy cheeks" and a unicorn-like horn, which glows in the dark. The king could understand when humans talk and was considered to be very asute.[183] Two Norwegian fairy tales, East of the Sun and West of the Moon and White-Bear-King-Valemon involve white bears turning into men and sleeping with women.[184]

Polar bears drawing has historically been featured on maps of the northern regions. Possibly the earliest depictions of a polar bear on a map is the

Coca Cola.[186] The bear is considered to be a powerful symbol for the dangers of climate changes and has been used to raise awareness.[187]

See also

References

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Bibliography

External links