The polar bear (Ursus maritimus) is not just the largest land predator on the planet, but a key indicator species of the state of Arctic ecosystems and one of the most charismatic umbrella species, whose protection ensures the preservation of the entire polar environment. The relationship between humans and polar bears has evolved from uncontrolled hunting and confrontation to recognition of the need for protection and complex conflict management. Today, these relationships are defined by two main factors: anthropogenic climate change destroying the bear's habitat and increasing human pressure in the Arctic.
For centuries, the polar bear was an important resource for the indigenous peoples of the North (Chukchi, Eskimos, Nenets)—a source of meat, fat, and hides. Hunting was conducted on the principle of sustainable use, embedded in cultural codes and mythology. The situation changed radically with the arrival of European hunters and explorers in the Arctic in the 18th–20th centuries. Bears were massively shot for their pelts and as trophies, leading to catastrophic population declines.
A turning point was the signing in 1973 of the Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears (the Moscow Agreement) by five Arctic states (USSR/Russia, USA, Canada, Norway, Denmark/Greenland). This was the first international document based on an ecosystem approach. It banned hunting from aircraft and icebreakers, introduced quotas for indigenous peoples, and initiated scientific cooperation. Thanks to it, the global population stabilized and increased from approximately 10–12 thousand in the 1970s to 22–31 thousand individuals by current estimates (IUCN, 2023).
The polar bear is a specialized hunter of seals, dependent on sea ice as a platform for hunting. Global warming is causing unprecedented reductions in ice area and thickness.
Physiological consequences: Reduced period for fat accumulation. Bears are forced to come ashore, where they cannot hunt effectively. This leads to starvation, reduced reproductive success, increased mortality, especially among cubs.
Behavioral changes: Cases of cannibalism, attempts to hunt terrestrial animals (reindeer, birds), and active visits to settlements in search of food have been recorded.
Interesting fact: Studies using satellite collars show that some bears, when stranded on land, enter a state similar to a “walking hibernation,” lowering their metabolism to survive the snowless period. However, this is an energy-saving strategy born out of desperation, not the norm.
The reduction of ice cover and increased human activity in the Arctic (shipping along the Northern Sea Route, resource extraction, tourism) lead to more frequent encounters.
Risks for people: Bears, especially young and hungry ones, become less cautious. In Russia, particularly on the Novaya Zemlya archipelago and in Chukotka settlements, “bear emergencies” are regularly declared.
Risks for bears: “Problem” bears approaching housing are often driven away, tranquilized for relocation, or, in extreme cases, shot. This direct anthropogenic mortality further reduces population numbers.
A key tool is continuous monitoring. In Russia, polar bear populations are tracked using aerial surveys, satellite tagging, and genetic analysis. The “Bear Patrol” program by WWF Russia, involving local residents of Chukotka and the Nenets Autonomous Okrug in monitoring and conflict prevention, is a vivid example of conservation through participation.
Non-lethal methods are being developed and implemented:
Warning systems (radars, motion sensors) around settlements.
Patrolling and deterrence using flare guns, noise cannons, rubber bullets.
Establishing “bear patrols” composed of indigenous people who understand bear behavior.
Organizing landfills and food storage sites to be inaccessible to bears.
The polar bear is listed in the IUCN Red List as Vulnerable and in the Russian Red Book. Hunting has been completely banned in Russia since 1957 (except for a very limited quota for indigenous peoples of Chukotka). Arctic states continue cooperation under the Circumpolar Action Plan for Polar Bear Conservation, coordinating research and protective measures.
Indigenous peoples today are not just “resource users” but key partners in conservation. Their traditional knowledge about migration routes, behavior, and ecology of bears is invaluable to science. Integrating this knowledge with Western scientific methods (co-management) is the most promising path. In Greenland and Canada, harvest quotas for indigenous needs are determined based on joint decisions of communities and scientists.
Example: In Chukotka, a project for collecting and analyzing genetic samples (hair, feces) conducted by hunters themselves is successfully operating. This allows tracking bear movements and kinship without costly and stressful captures and tagging.
Scenarios for the polar bear directly depend on the pace of global warming. Scientists predict that if greenhouse gas emissions are not reduced, the population may decline by 30% by 2050. However, the species shows some plasticity:
Exploiting new ecological niches (hunting terrestrial prey).
Using anthropogenic resources (which, however, increases conflict risk).
The task of humanity is not just to preserve the species in zoos or isolated areas, but to maintain functional Arctic ecosystems where the polar bear continues to play its key role at the top of the trophic pyramid. This requires both global measures to combat climate change and local measures to minimize direct anthropogenic pressure.
The relationship between humans and polar bears is a test of our ability to be responsible neighbors on the planet. The bear has become a living symbol of the consequences of the climate crisis—its struggle for survival on melting ice is vivid and dramatic. Preserving this species is not only an ethical duty but also an indicator of the health of the entire Arctic, a region critically important for Earth's climate. Success will mean that humanity has moved from exploitation and confrontation to complex, science-based, and respectful management of coexistence with wildlife in the Anthropocene. The future of the polar bear is essentially a question of what kind of Arctic future the next generations will see and whether there will still be room for a real, wild—not symbolic—master of the icy deserts.
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