Monthly Archives: April 2009

Tracking the Beaufort bears: Day 7

Caribou and wolverine tracks, 15 miles north of land in the Beaufort Sea, Alaska.

Caribou and wolverine tracks, 15 miles north of land in the Beaufort Sea, Alaska.


WWF’s polar bear coordinator, Geoff York, keeps up his field knowledge with trips out onto the ice to check on the condition of the bears. This year, he is keeping a daily blog of his experiences over two weeks. Keep visiting this blog for regular updates and live the life of a polar bear biologist.
By Geoff York
I awaken to a grey morning. The visibility is still good, but there is high overcast and the light is flat. Not the best conditions for searching, but still worth heading out on the ice. We plan to hunt to the northwest today after checking on the den we found to see if the family has departed.
On our way out to the den site, we bump into a second likely maternal den about 10 miles west of the other location. Tracks are present and there is some recent scat, or feces, in the area, but there are no obvious tracks leading to the ice.  We take a good waypoint on the GPS and will keep a close eye on this one as well. As we approached the second den, no one was outside and there were also no tracks leading away, so we departed to continue our search back to the west.
After about an hour of searching in flat light conditions, we happen on a single bear we believe is a recently weaned two year old or small sub adult. Regardless, it looks thin from the air as we set up for a capture. Once on the ground, we are surprised to see a very thin yearling. In this part of the Arctic, a yearling should still be with its mother. Unfortunately, there is little information as to what happened, but plenty of questions.
A yearling alone, and in such poor condition is truly a ghost bear. Its chances of surviving are very slim. Once again reminding me of how difficult life can be for these seemingly invincible animals and something I had not seen in a decade of capture work.
We return to Kaktovik for refueling then resume our search efforts further to the northwest. After several hours of searching without much sign, we stumble across a small pan of multi-year ice with a hill near the center. While there are no clear tracks coming or going, the area on the pan is covered with the old tracks of a family group. The striking feature is clear slide marks were small polar bears had repeatedly climbed the hill and slid down. It looks similar to a river otter playground. Bears had spent some time here, and they apparently enjoyed themselves.
A bit further along we encounter a red spot in the snow and land to check it out. We assume it is our first kill site and George is hoping to start sampling prey remains as a routine part of his work. After a quick look around, it is clearly not a kill site, just a blood trail. We pick back up again to investigate from the air. We backtrack about 100 meters to where the trail begins. George and I both go outside to investigate while the helicopter stays running. It is clear there was an altercation between two animals and we assume it must have been two bears, however there are only two sets of track in the area: polar bear, and wolverine. Once more, we have more questions than we can find clues to answer and we have to move on.
We are beginning to wonder about this day when we finally discover another breeding pair. They look healthy and this time there are no surprises. The male turns out to be our oldest catch of the season at 25. This is very encouraging as I am beginning to have some concern about the potential population age structure from the animals we are encountering. Most of the bears we had captured to date were younger than 12, and I recall a similar concern last season. As a population is stressed, you would expect the impacts to be seen first among the most vulnerable segments of the population; young bears and old bears. The female is much younger but has had cubs before. She is half his size, but both appear to be doing well. It was a good way to end our day on the ice.
WWF’s polar bear coordinator, Geoff York, keeps up his field knowledge with trips out onto the ice to check on the condition of the bears. This year, he is keeping a daily blog of his experiences over two weeks. Keep visiting this blog for regular updates, photos, and maybe some video too, and live the life of a polar bear biologist.

Tracking the Beaufort bears: Day 6

Short range Distant Early Warning site at Lonely, Alaska

Short range Distant Early Warning site at Lonely, Alaska


WWF’s polar bear coordinator, Geoff York, keeps up his field knowledge with trips out onto the ice to check on the condition of the bears. This year, he is keeping a daily blog of his experiences over two weeks. Keep visiting this blog for regular updates and live the life of a polar bear biologist.
By Geoff York
We awake to some very light snow, just enough to help obscure older tracks, but not so much as to keep us on the ground. Our plan is to search to the east northeast up to the Canadian border.
Just to give you an idea of the typical day in the life of a field biologist: we start the day about half past 6 AM and need to be ready to load the helicopter by 9 AM, weather permitting. The typical day includes about ten hours out on the ice, including one refueling stop. We generally land between around 8-9 PM, unload the helicopter, clean and dry gear, eat dinner, and enter data. Our days end around 11 PM, later if we capture a large number of bears. This is the routine for the duration of the field season except for weather days, so 12 hour work days are the norm and there are no scheduled weekends!
About 35 miles to the east northeast, we encounter a family group, but the sow is not reacting normally. As we circle around to get a better perspective and load a dart, the sow is just pacing with her coy. We soon see the problem- she has a second coy who has not survived and is lying frozen nearby. The mother is clearly reluctant to leave, though her condition also looks suspect. Once we have her and the remaining cub safely sedated, we understand what has happened. The female is one of the thinnest George or I have seen in a combined two decades of capture experience. If she does not find prey soon, she will not survive, nor will her remaining cub. It could be that she just drew the short straw this year as nature is not forgiving, but the USGS team will also scrutinize her samples for signs of stress or disease. We depart this group in a very somber mood. Polar bear cub survival in this part of the world has declined from about 60% survival to as low as 40% in recent years. Cubs are routinely lost in the first year; we just rarely witness the actual death in the field.
After we refuel, we begin searching to the northwest. We continue our work and encounter a breeding pair just as we started searching back towards Barter Island. We are a bit surprised to encounter little to no ringed or bearded seal activity since arriving in the east. The ice is still very tight in this area with few leads, so we hope they are present, but just using lairs (simple snow caves built in areas of active ice) beneath the snow. It is also unusual to have covered so much area and so many tracks without coming across a single kill.
WWF’s polar bear coordinator, Geoff York, keeps up his field knowledge with trips out onto the ice to check on the condition of the bears. This year, he is keeping a daily blog of his experiences over two weeks. Keep visiting this blog for regular updates, photos, and maybe some video too, and live the life of a polar bear biologist.

Tracking the Beaufort bears: Day 5

Polar bear paw print in the snow

Polar bear paw print in the snow


WWF’s polar bear coordinator, Geoff York, keeps up his field knowledge with trips out onto the ice to check on the condition of the bears. This year, he is keeping a daily blog of his experiences over two weeks. Keep visiting this blog for regular updates and live the life of a polar bear biologist.
By Geoff York
Second day of capture work and the good weather continues to hold, though high clouds are moving in from the west all day. George and I head out again and bring a new USGS biologist along for training. We fly east and near shore all morning, but turn up little but tracks of animals we cannot locate. We could still use some snow.
Just as we start to turn back from the Canadian border, we spot a female polar bear with two cubs of the year, often referred to as coys. We carefully position them for capture and quickly have them safely sedated. The mother bear and both cubs are in great condition, the weather is perfect, and the Brooks Range is in full view to the south. Family groups provide critical information on the reproductive rates and rearing success of wildlife populations and key indicators for population trends.
On the way back to Kaktovik for fuel, we spend some time searching the coastal bluffs for evidence of denning. Polar bears prefer high bank habitat along the coast that hold consistent snow drifts to dig their dens, and there are many bluff areas along the coast of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.  Our plan pays off as we spy a polar bear female with two new cubs sunning themselves a few hundred yards from their maternal den. We make a quick mark of the den location on our GPS and quickly depart. We will try to revisit the site once the family has moved off to the sea ice. Understanding where polar bears den is critical to protecting these habitats and ensuring viable populations.
We refuel and spend the balance of the day further out to the NE. Once again we finally encounter a bear, this time a large solitary male, near the Canadian border. The darting goes smoothly and we are able to run through a routine processing operation. This bear weighs in
At 398 kg and would easily weigh an extra 200 kg in the fall. He has several new minor wounds on his face and neck, very common around breeding season both from sparring with other males and from interacting with females too.
WWF’s polar bear coordinator, Geoff York, keeps up his field knowledge with trips out onto the ice to check on the condition of the bears. This year, he is keeping a daily blog of his experiences over two weeks. Keep visiting this blog for regular updates, photos, and maybe some video too, and live the life of a polar bear biologist.

Visiting the Svalbard seed bank


The amazing scenery on Svalbard, Norway

The amazing scenery on Svalbard, Norway


The director of the WWF International Arctic Programme, Dr Neil Hamilton, is visiting Svalbard with a group of WWF colleagues to discuss WWF operations in the Arctic, and the critical importance of securing a major shift in political action over the coming year if the worst impacts of climate change are to be avoided. He will be blogging from the trip, taking photos and maybe some video too – please come back for more updates as his journey continues!

By Dr Neil Hamilton

Another bright and beautiful day, with sun from 4am ensuring that any hope of sleeping in was just a dream. It is a great time of year to be on Svalbard, not too cold (minus 10 to minus 20, and 20 hours of sun). Breakfast for 8, and planning the next few days.  Christian de Marliave (of Tara fame) and Francois Bertrand, two highly experienced polar explorers briefed the crew before we headed out for a relaxing morning around Longyearbyen, including visiting the new airship museum, buying last minute supplies, and climbing a small mountain to test our snow isotope sampler.

Our late arrivals from Switzerland landed early and we joined up for lunch.  This is the first time the group has been together since the planning meeting a month ago, and is the beginning of a really exciting trip to a place none of us have been since the 1990s.  So what did we eat for lunch? Pizza and pasta, those well known Norwegian delicacies.

Members of the group on Svalbard

Members of the group on Svalbard


We were fortunate today to be able to visit a globally unique facility, the Global Crop Diversity Trust “ Svalbard Seed Bank”, often called “the doomsday vault” by the media.  This is an amazing facility for storing the genetic diversity of the worlds food crops, in seed form.  Julian Laird from the Trust explained that this place already houses over 400 thousand samples from all over the world, keeping them safe for the future.

Back to the hotel, where I briefed the team on WWF operations in the Arctic, and we discussed the critical importance of securing a major shift in political action over the coming year if we are to avoid the worst impacts of climate change.   In spite of our varied backgrounds, nationalities, and professions it is obvious that everyone thinks along exactly the same lines: we are in a unique situation, a crisis, and the need to act is urgent.

Tracking the Beaufort bears: day 4

Village of Kaktovik on Barter Island, Alaska

Village of Kaktovik on Barter Island, Alaska


WWF’s polar bear coordinator, Geoff York, keeps up his field knowledge with trips out onto the ice to check on the condition of the bears. This year, he is keeping a daily blog of his experiences over two weeks. Keep visiting this blog for regular updates and live the life of a polar bear biologist.
By Geoff York
First day out searching for polar bears on the sea ice and it feels like something I have done all my life. Odd that flying in a helicopter at 90 metres above the frozen ocean would seem normal, but that’s part of being a polar bear biologist. I am out with George Durner, the lead biologist for USGS polar bear research and a long time colleague.
Within sight of Kaktovik, we luck into a sow with two new cubs and begin our capture routine. Once the mother bear is safely positioned and darted, we carefully walk in and sedate the cubs by hand. Now the work really begins as we run through a series of measures and sample collection for each bear. Every bear captured is marked with a permanent ID number as both a lip tattoo and a small numbered ear tag. These marks allow researchers to follow individual animals throughout their lives and across jurisdictions (between Canada and the US, or the US and Russia for example). We are on the ground for about an hour and a half. The mom is in great shape as are both of the cubs with the male weighing in at a hefty 15 kg, 3 kg heavier than his sister.
After such a great start to the day, our expectations are high as we depart the family group and continue on our search. Unfortunately, those would be the only bears we would see despite a full day of flying and many miles of tracking. The snow has hardened and the conditions are just not good for following tracks as new tracks and old tracks look nearly identical from the air. While the blue skies and sunny days are welcome, we could use some snow or wind to reset the surface and aid our search efforts.
Despite the lack of polar bear sightings, we did see some interesting Arctic ecology. About 16 km northeast of Kaktovik, we hit of some tracks that looked interesting. We quickly realized they were not polar bear however, but wolverine tracks. We abandoned them and continued on only to cut them a second time, but this time they were not alone. The wolverine was following, or more likely chasing, a caribou far out on the sea ice, something none of us had ever encountered. We decided to give these a look as the outcome was increasingly inevitable the further offshore they went. As expected, the tracks converged in an area of intense activity. All that was left on the surface was a scavenging Arctic fox, some lightly stained snow, and a large patch of Caribou hair scattered over a 3 m radius- nothing else remained. Resources in the Arctic are scarce and generally used efficiently by predators and scavengers alike. This kill site was likely less than a week old.
WWF’s polar bear coordinator, Geoff York, keeps up his field knowledge with trips out onto the ice to check on the condition of the bears. This year, he is keeping a daily blog of his experiences over two weeks. Come back for regular updates, photos, and maybe some video too, and live the life of a polar bear biologist.

Tracking the Beaufort bears: WWF polar bear expert reports from the ice

Geoff York, looking very frosty on the sea ice north of Alaska.

Geoff York, looking very frosty on the sea ice north of Alaska.


WWF’s polar bear coordinator, Geoff York, keeps up his field knowledge with trips out onto the ice to check on the condition of the bears. This year, he is keeping a daily blog of his experiences over two weeks. Come back for regular updates and photos and live the life of a polar bear biologist.
By Geoff York
For the next two weeks I will be rejoining the  United States Geological Survey (USGS) polar bear research team as they work on a variety of research and monitoring activities in the Alaskan Beaufort Sea. The study area spans the northern coast of Alaska between Point Barrow and the Canadian border. The project spends 6-8 weeks each spring conducting polar bear capture operations from three logistic bases: Barrow, Deadhorse (Prudhoe Bay), and Kaktovik.
Almost everything we know about polar bears comes from research programs like the one conducted by USGS in Alaska. Similar projects are carried out in Canada and Norway and to a lesser extent in Russia and Greenland. As you might imagine, the cost for sustaining such efforts is extensive as helicopter support is required and remote operations always pose some challenges. The work is stressful and can be dangerous to both the capture crew and the bears. The Arctic is an unforgiving environment and care must always be taken for the safety of all concerned.
Capturing and handling polar bears, as with other wildlife, is critical to understanding their individual health, population health, population trends, reproduction, movements, and abundance. Without such intensive long term efforts, we would not have the data to see the current declines in polar bear populations or understand their associations with sea ice. Without such efforts worldwide, polar bears would have fewer protections, including the recent Endangered Species Act listing in the US. While it is invasive, the data from such research is invaluable for long term conservation efforts.
After 12 consecutive years of Arctic fieldwork and 10 working with polar bears, packing for the field seems routine. I sort through a pile of layers and options for head, hands and feet- it has been a cold winter in northern Alaska this year. Another routine for those who work with polar bears is leaving the warming temperatures and promising signs of spring in the areas we live to head north: Anchorage was just hitting 7 C while Barrow was still hovering around -30 C.
Flying north in the spring is almost like a time machine. Views of melting snow and brown hillsides are quickly replaced with the pure white of winter as we pass over Fairbanks and cross the Brooks Range. The North has always had a certain draw for me, larger than life landscapes stretching out to the horizon. While I am sad to leave my friends and family, I am glad to arrive back in the Arctic.
The USGS research team is operating out of the old Naval Arctic Research Laboratory, or NARL, which sits a few kilometers north of Barrow. The USGS collaborates with the North Slope Borough who manages the facilities. We arrive late in the evening and quickly heat up some dinner for the returning capture crew. The night becomes a whirlwind of activity as gear is cleaned and dried and samples are processed, stored and labeled. The evening is clear and cold.
Day 2:
I am joining the capture team mid-season this year. A group has spent the last two weeks working out of the Arctic Research Facility, or ARF, a bunkhouse and work area within the NARL. Now it is time to transition the team and gear to the Inupiat Village of Kaktovik on Barter Island, just offshore of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Over 2000 lbs of gear support a team of 4-6 people for about 6 weeks, not including food.
Despite our ambitions to spend the morning packing and the afternoon searching for polar bears, we spend the entire day packing and making the logistic arrangements to move the gear, team, and helicopter over 320 km to the east. The NARL itself is abuzz with scientific activity as scientists from across the country and around the globe are increasingly running atmospheric and sea ice projects from this perfectly situated town.
Day 3:
Moving day dawns clear and cold yet again as our weather luck continues to hold. Conditions at this time of year can frequently turn ugly with high winds, snow, and icing conditions. The team is up early to finish packing and clean the facility we have been using, all before 9 AM. We pack our equipment and supplies onto a charter flight along with our helicopter mechanic and we launch shortly thereafter headed east in the helicopter.
First on our agenda for the flight is to check on the denning site of a radio collared female to confirm the area and obtain a more accurate location. This female polar bear denned about 64 km east of Barrow in a snow drift along a lake bluff.  While we can find no sign of her den (they are quickly drifted over once vacated) we stumble upon a sow with three small cubs resting in the sun. As we have a tight schedule, they do not risk additional disturbance from us today, but it was great to see them as triplets are rare in this part of the world.
We make a stop at an abandoned cold war era radar site, appropriately named Lonely, to check on a project fuel tank then head on to Prudhoe Bay to refuel the helicopter. The industrial activity around Prudhoe is in stark contrast to the quiet and loosely populated areas on either side. Prudhoe Bay is the center of oil and gas development in Alaska.
As we continue eastward, we head out onto the sea ice to check out conditions and look for polar bear activity. The ice is much more continuous than I have seen during the past several years in the Beaufort, though it remains very thin compared to the late 90’s and early 2000. No significant leads (cracks formed in the sea ice revealing open water) can be seen, just vast expanses of rubble ice (Jumbled blocks from constant movement over the winter) and young pans (Flat expanses of ice often circular or oval in shape) of newly formed ice.  We also see little bear activity and arrive safely in Kaktovik.
Kaktovik is an Inupiat Village of approximately 250 people located on Barter Island in the eastern corner of Alaska’s North Slope. USGS bases its polar bear work out of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service bunkhouse for the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Picture a fairly cozy house like setting with some lab and office space and plenty of bunk beds. We spend the balance of the evening unpacking and preparing for our first day of capture from the new base. We have a great new pilot this year and an eager crew.