Monthly Archives: April 2010

Late night lab duties

By Geoff York
Our last day for flight operations and we are all up early. Well, everyone but Jessica, our dedicated lab whiz, who was up until 3 AM working on the samples from the six bears we brought her late last night.

Jessica Carrie, a WWF Intern packaging samples and running blood chemistries.

Jessica Carrie, a WWF Intern packaging samples and running blood chemistries.

Some samples are more aromatic than others.

Some samples are more aromatic than others.

The lab work is yet another important and time consuming task. All of the samples taken in the field are placed in containers for longer-term storage and most are transferred into smaller sub samples (blood, serum). Whole blood is spun down in a centrifuge to separate serum. The remaining blood clot is kept for fatty acid analysis that will help tell what polar bears have been eating. The FWS also carries a mobile blood chemistry analyser that allows us to get basic information on each bear while in the field. Teeth are placed in formalin to fix them for later analysis. Samples are frozen each night and shipped frozen back to Anchorage.
The lab duties also include repacking our field collection supplies each night as well as maintaining adequate drug inventory. The drug most commonly used by bear researchers around the world is called Telezol and blends a sedative with a paralytic agent. Telezol comes freeze-dried and has to be mixed into solution as needed and in the correct concentration.
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Life on a treadmill

By Geoff York
I stare out into a snowy and partially foggy morning as I work my way through breakfast and my morning coffee. Patchy squalls moving across the tundra and out on the ice – could go either direction today. The change in weather is expected, but we hoped for a couple of more blue sky weather days. The visibility is still fair, and the fixed wing will have no trouble flying, so we’ll push on out and see what we can accomplish today.
The weather improves as fly out to the northwest yet again. The sea ice is also becoming more fragmented by the day and the primary lead along the shore fast ice has continued to widen towards the north. We head back to the area where we last saw a bear on Tuesday, though of course the area is not really the same. As Heraclitus famously said: “You cannot step into the same river twice.” Sea ice in the Chukchi is much like a river, always on the move, always changing. Life for polar bears is life on a treadmill.
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Arctic ‘April showers’

By the Catlin Arctic Survey Explorer Team
The scientists and staff at the Catlin Arctic Survey Ice Base in the high Arctic off Ellef Ringnes island in the Canadian high Arctic have reported an abnormal occurrence at the weekend: it rained.
Paul Ramsden, the Catlin Arctic Survey ice base manager, reported big raindrops fell during the shower. “I had to look twice. Snow flurries we expect, not rain. It is obviously quite worrying when you are camped out on ice! I felt distinctly nervous for a while because the consequences of getting wet here can be serious – but eventually it stopped and we are all safe,” he said.
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Polar bear harvesting challenges

By Geoff York
As luck would have it, the weather is good, but we are required to take the second mandatory crew rest day for our pilot (two off during any 14 day window). He would much rather be flying, but the rules are very clear. With only two more flight days for the season ahead, we begin to make plans for our return to Anchorage on Saturday. For our pilot Howard and our lab technician Jessica, it has been almost seven straight weeks of fieldwork – and as much as they like the job, they are ready to be home.
The down time also allows Karyn and Jessica to start looking ahead to June when the FWS will host two important meetings under the recently activated US/Russia bilateral polar bear management agreement (Bilateral Agreement). This agreement was a decade in the making, was signed in 2000, ratified by the US in 2007 and implemented in 2009 with a meeting of the Bilateral Commission in Moscow last December. It is a landmark for polar bear conservation as it requires a collaborative, long-term, science-based conservation plan for the shared population.
As I’ve mentioned, this region has seen the most severe losses of summer sea ice compared with the rest of the Arctic, along with temperatures as much as 4C above average. This warming is not only melting sea ice; it is also melting the permafrost in many areas and allowing new species of plants and animals to push further north. Concurrent with these changes in physical habitat and the ecological impacts that are likely to follow, polar bears are still hunted on both sides of the Chukchi.
Russia officially banned all polar bear harvest in 1956, the first country to take such a protective stance. This ban, however, was very difficult to effectively enforce in such a massive and remote region as the Chukotkan coast. While the ban effectively eliminated any sport hunting, poaching (by people from outside the region), and subsistence hunting by native Chukchi people was pushed underground creating a situation of unknown harvest for several decades.
Chukchi, Inuit, and Yupik people still utilise polar bear and other marine mammals for food, spiritual, and cultural purposes. These are hunting cultures that rely on these traditional practices to pass on language, beliefs, values, and fundamental survival skills to future generations. In much of the high Arctic, living off the land and sea is not merely a choice, it is a necessity. The cost of imported western goods is very prohibitive and the comparative nutritional value of processed foods is generally poor. From a human health and ecological footprint stance, sustainably harvested local food is far and above the best choice in the Arctic as it is for the rest of us around the world.
In Alaska, polar bears are legally harvested by coastal dwelling Alaskan natives, predominantly Inuit and Yupik people living from St Lawrence Island in the northern Bering Sea all the way to the Canadian border in the Beaufort Sea. The Beaufort population is shared with Canada and has been effectively co-managed under the Inuit and Inuvialuit Agreement, an arrangement between people on both sides of the border and informed by government scientists and managers that sets voluntary quotas. Harvest in the Alaskan Chukchi, while reported and monitored, currently has no set quota system.
Addressing the information gaps and shared management challenges is exactly what the Bilateral Agreement sets out to accomplish. The agreement also formally recognizes the engagement and requires the input of Indigenous people. The FWS research we are working on this week is the beginning of what will become a bilateral effort that to provide much needed information on the heath and current status of this population.
The two meetings FWS is holding this June, a harvest workshop followed by a meeting of the Bilateral Commission, will focus on the discussion of needed information and quotas. Unlike the Beaufort Sea where we have very good current data on the population size and status, we have spotty and mostly dated information on the Chukchi. We do have sound information on historical harvest in Alaska, but only estimates of potential harvest from Chukotka.
The Commission will essentially be confronted with two main harvest choices: request a temporary moratorium on both sides or allow a legal, but very conservative harvest on both sides. Neither will be easy and both are fraught with political and conservation challenges. A moratorium, already proven ineffective in Russia, would politically be a non-starter in Alaska, would have similar enforcement issues across a remote region, and is opposed by both Alaskan and Chukchi Indigenous groups.
A limited legal harvest, closely monitored, and adaptively managed as new information is available may actually be the best choice at present. This would affirm the rights of Indigenous people on both sides to the sustainable use and management of polar bears, would allow a regulated and reported hunt on the Russian side (to replace the illegal and unreported harvest at present), and would give scientists and local people time to gather new data along both coasts to better inform future management decisions.
Results from the recent Scientific Working Group of the Bilateral Commission and the upcoming harvest workshop will provide the Commissioners with the best possible advice as they consider this delicate situation. I will be sitting in on the meetings and will update you on the outcomes later in June, so stay tuned.
WWF International Arctic Programme polar bear specialist, Geoff York, is currently in the Chukchi Sea area with the US Fisheries and Wildlife Service, conducting research into the status of polar bear populations in the area, and is blogging for the WWF Climate blog while he is there.

Losing tracks

By Geoff York
The winds have dropped a bit when I check the weather station data and we still have mostly clear skies. We coordinate with our fixed wing pilot in Kotzebue and make plans to meet up somewhere out on the ice west of Point Hope. We try to get the plane out well ahead of us as he has much more endurance than our helicopter. Ideally, the plane will find a bear or at least tracks and we can take it from there.
Such is our luck today as we hunt our way towards an area of tracks that the fixed wing picked up ahead of us. Along the way we encounter and catch one of the few single females of the season. The FWS biologists will have to try and tease out the story from the data, but it appears one or two years of low cub survival were followed by two really good years given the unusually high percentage of yearlings and low percentage of single adult females.
We eventually make it out to the tracks, and they turn out to be too much of a good thing. The combination of a large orange fishing buoy (hard to say where it may have come from) and a nearby seal kill seem to attract every bear in the area. There are easily track sets for at least four separate bears/groups!  We spend a frustratingly long time trying to tease out a good set to follow, but they invariably lead back to the kill site or the buoy time and time again.
We eventually untangle a single set that continues away from the heavily tracked area. As seems too often be the case however, we are just at the edge of being able to capture the bear and still fly to our refueling point. The tracks are also leading us out over a combination of new six inch ice (safe to work on) and some thinner grey ice that would be problematic. The tracks lead us to a single bear that appears to be a young adult male. We’ll only get one darting run as we have to spend a little time positioning him away from possible hazards (thin ice and water). The bear proves to be a bit too agile and our one shot sails over his shoulder – time to refuel.
After taking on another load from our fixed wing support, we head back to the GPS waypoint I made for the single male. It is surprisingly easy to lose both tracks and even bears out on the sea ice, and we have no luck finding our boy for a second attempt to capture. After following a few more sets back to the maze, we decide to fly several miles to the west in search of a better area.
One logistic challenge in the Chukchi, polar bears are not evenly distributed across the available landscape, nor are they necessarily near shore. This year we have basically two “hot” areas for encountering bears and both are about 100 km from our base. This means we use a fair bit of our fuel just getting to the good bear areas and getting back to camp. Today this means that our second fuel load will not buy us a great deal of additional time out on the ice.
We soon find ourselves up against our range limitation when we, of course, find a sow with cubs. To pull off a successful capture, we’d use up the fuel we need to get home and would be forced to try and refuel at the village of Point Hope. As it is the height of bowhead whaling season for the local Inuit people, we decide it is best to pass this opportunity up and start heading southeast towards home. After spending most of the day following tracks without finding the track makers, we are taunted one last time as we fly over a large single male – just not quite enough fuel, so we mark a waypoint for future reference and call it a day.
WWF International Arctic Programme polar bear specialist, Geoff York, is currently in the Chukchi Sea area with the US Fisheries and Wildlife Service, conducting research into the status of polar bear populations in the area, and is blogging for the WWF Climate blog while he is there.

Igloos and Earth Day

By the Catlin Arctic Survey Explorer Team
The Catlin Arctic Survey Explorer Team received the second and final resupply in the early hours of Friday morning. The chance to recoup supplies was extremely welcome following some heroic efforts on their part to manage a massive 50 nautical miles this week bringing them close to 880. They now sit at 87.46.56N 66.35.48E.
Whilst the scientists on the Ice Base continue to go about their vital research into ocean acidification, the support team at the Ice Base opted to spend what little free time they had building an igloo this week! Led by Russell, the Inuit Guide at the Ice Base, the team has captured the occasion on an amazing time-delay video.
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Why do we do it?

By Geoff York
The weather holds and even improves as we head into the last week of the project. Clear skies and sun, though the winds are forecast to pick up during the day. We’ll launch in the late morning as we’ve noticed over the years that the bears seem less active earlier in the day. Tracks and bears are also both easier to spot in the low angle light of the evening hours.
Within an hour of leaving the base, we cross the tracks of a family group and are soon safely on the ice with a sow and two yearlings. The winds are much stronger on the ice, blowing a steady 20 knots. Although the temperature is moderate (well – relatively speaking), the wind and blowing snow make for challenging work conditions.
Much of the sampling we do requires us to kneel on the ice and often take our gloves off to manipulate equipment or samples. Today, there is blasting snow up to about half a metre from the ice surface. Anything that is open (gear bags and tagging boxes) begin to immediately fill with snow. Exposed fingers become wet with snow and chill quickly. Gear, paperwork, and people are covered and our progress is slowed. When you stand up, it’s actually pretty nice out, but our work is on the ground.
As described this past week and throughout these entries, the capture and handling of polar bears is logistically challenging, stressful to crew and animal alike, and poses some risk to all involved. For people, the work involves successively long days of physical work in sometimes very cold conditions. The Arctic itself, both due to the remoteness and weather, is a very unforgiving place to work. Mistakes or poor judgment can quickly lead to serious trouble, and you are a long way from any help. Since 1990, four biologists and one pilot have died trying to better understand these amazing animals. A sobering statistic, given the small number of scientists who conduct field research on polar bears across the Arctic.
Capturing polar bears is clearly stressful for them as well, and not without some risk. The greatest danger for bears during capture is water and possible drowning. Managing this requires constant vigilance from the capture crew as the sea ice is constantly changing. Research-related mortalities are fortunately very uncommon.
The capture event itself, and to a lesser degree the sample collection and handling, places extra demands on the animals. Given the wounds we see from bear/bear interaction, the tagging, tattooing, blood, and tooth collection are comparatively minor. That said, all possible care is taken to minimize stress and reduce the invasiveness of sample collection during all procedures.
So why do we do it?
For me, it’s the love of the animals and the place they represent (both symbolically and ecologically) – the Arctic. For all involved in polar bear research, it is the desire to better understand and conserve these truly unique bears. Governments are bound to manage polar bears through national laws and international treaties. Mangers need sound scientific information to meet the goals of these laws and treaties. Indigenous people across the Arctic still rely on polar bears for food, fur, and cultural/spiritual uses. Setting sustainable quotas is critical to protecting this usage today and for generations to come.
Almost everything we know about polar bears comes from long term research programs. Without capturing, handling, and applying tracking devices to polar bears, we would not know where they roam, or anything about trends in their health or condition. We would know nothing about their genetics or population boundaries, we’d have no idea how they used the sea ice or where they denned (it was only through collaring in Alaska that we learned some bears den on the sea ice, or at least used to). Without data on condition, reproduction, and movements, we would have little to say about the impacts of changes in sea ice to polar bears. We’d also have less to say about the potential risks offshore industrial activities pose. Lastly, we would have no idea how many bears are in certain populations, or absent that, population trends in specific regions. Without trends or numbers, biologists would be hamstrung to sustainably manage harvest and other potential disturbances.
The traditional knowledge of polar bears from Indigenous people is another important part of the information puzzle needed to understand and manage this species. People who live in the Arctic year round and travel the landscape have unique and valuable perspectives on animal behavior, and local habitat use. Like all observational data however, this information is limited in space and time. Polar bears still spend the majority of their days and nights beyond the areas where people travel, and we rely on technology to help fill in those information gaps.
Observational data is important and can give us a coarse idea of animal condition, but it is no substitute for hands-on weights, measures, and analytical sampling. Imagine a doctor trying to assess your health without careful data, or a coworker using your habits at work to define what you do when you are not at the office. The same is true for wildlife where we need a combination of techniques, and both local and scientific information to come up with the best diagnosis.
WWF International Arctic Programme polar bear specialist, Geoff York, is currently in the Chukchi Sea area with the US Fisheries and Wildlife Service, conducting research into the status of polar bear populations in the area, and is blogging for the WWF Climate blog while he is there.

Time for a rest…

By Geoff York
As you might imagine, this sort of work entails some long days and a certain amount of stress on the crew. A key player in a successful field season, and actually the one who makes it all possible, is the pilot. To fly animal capture work for the US federal government, you have to be carded – which basically means meeting fairly high minimum flight hours, having prior low level flight experience, and passing a check flight. Our pilot in the Chukchi exceeds those requirements several times over and this is his third year on this project.
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What do we do once we safely sedate a bear?

By Geoff York
The morning breaks the same as the day before and, once again, it is hard to say which way the weather will go. We’ve had some fresh snow overnight and the temperature is hovering right at -16 C with a wind chill of about -23 C. Winter never completely leaves this far north region as they can see snow during every month of the year!
The first couple of hours flying are fairly uneventful. The helicopter we are using this year has an operational limit of about three hours per fuel load. The fixed wing fuel support allows us to work for the better part of a day, especially if we are catching bears and spending several hours on the ice. Finding a spot where the plane can land and transferring the fuel can take a bit of time as well. You would be surprised how few flat areas are out here some days!
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Shishmaref is literally falling into the sea…

By Geoff York
As will likely be a common scene from here on out, I awake to a snowy, foggy morning. As the sea ice starts to break up, more and more water opens up and that significantly adds moisture to the near shore environment. With the right temperature and dew point combination, fog doesn’t move in, it just happens.
The weather improves enough to fly, though our fueling airplane is stuck in Kotzebue due to local weather conditions down there. We gear up and head out to the southwest in the direction of the village of Shishmaref, though we will remain far offshore. You may have heard of this town as it became famous during recent discussions on the impacts of climate warming to people in the north.
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