Some attendees at a recent international human-bear conflict workshop may have been wondering: “What is that girl from the Netherlands doing here – there are no brown-, black-, or polar bears or any other large predators to be found in that small, flat country?!”. That is correct, but WWF-Netherlands is involved in international projects focussing on a wide variety of species including large predators. In many instances these programmes have to deal with human-wildlife conflicts which makes this a very important topic in our work. Together with Geoff York from the WWF Global Arctic Programme I am working on a circumpolar strategy on how to deal with human-polar bear conflicts. We attended the human-bear conflict workshop to learn from practitioners who have been working on human-bear (brown, black and polar) conflicts for years.
There were over 300 attendees from all over Canada and the US, and some from a bit further away; Japan, Finland, Slovakia and me from Holland. The main topics discussed during the workshops were on causes of human-bear conflicts, what can be done to prevent such incidents and how to communicate about bears and how to deal with them in a safe way. Additional information was given during demonstration sessions outside the workshop facility. There some ‘bear safe’ waste containers, bear traps, electric fences and other equipment were displayed. All these materials are being used to prevent conflicts between people and bears, and to enhance the coexistence between the two.
Human- bear conflicts are increasing in many areas as a result of increasing human populations and activity. In some areas the number of bears is increasing as well. Reduced bear habitat and increasing numbers of both people and bears increases the potential of contact between the two. Polar bears are forced to spend more time ashore in close proximity of people as a result of melting sea-ice, caused by climate change. Bears can pose a threat to people’s life, and damage property in search of food. In some areas where bears live in close proximity of people, management interventions are in place to prevent serious conflicts. Residents are informed about how to share their surroundings with bears in a safe way, such as by using ‘bear safe’ waste bins, carrying bear spray, and securing houses properly. In some cases bears are relocated to a more suitable area with less people.
In Russia, Canada and Alaska WWF assists the authorities who work closely with local communities to prevent and mitigate human-polar bear conflicts. The people are educated about conflict prevention, polar bears are chased out of villages and attractants such as walrus/whale carcasses are relocated far from towns. WWF can learn a lot from these and other programmes and implement successful measures elsewhere. Such as in Greenland, where an increase of human-polar bear conflicts has been reported and no measures have been taken yet to prevent this. The workshop was very helpful to Geoff and me and provided us with information about management options which we can implement in the WWF strategy on how to deal with human-polar bear conflicts in the Arctic.
Tag Archives: polar bears
A bear “dining room” keeps a village safe
Despite temperatures well below freezing, Cape Kozhevnikov is bustling. The Umky Patrol is hard at work in this Russian Arctic nature reserve, using tractors and snowmobiles to transport frozen walrus carcasses and pile them at a distance from the nearby village of Ryrkaypy. The result is a “polar bear dining room” that keeps both bears and villagers safe from conflict.
“Umky” means “polar bear” in the local Chukchi language, and the the Umky Patrol works to ensure the safety of people living near polar bears, preserve walrus haul-outs and other unique places, and to help local people participate in scientific research on polar bears and other animals. The Patrol was developed in 2006 by WWF and the people of Vankarem, a village on the Arctic shores of Chukotka, Russia. Today, patrols flourish in Russia, Canada and the United States.
Two hungry bears have already visited the village this month, and the Patrol had to encourage these uninvited guests to leave town — a stressful experience for both bears and people. So with support from WWF, the Patrol has rented equipment to create a “bear dining room” away from the village. Villagers hope the bears will be less hungry, and less inclined to look for a meal in the village — a positive outcome for all.
“We must try to protect each bear”, said Tatiana Minenko, Umky Patrol coordinator in Ryrkaypy. “Just a kilometer away from the village, with the active support of WWF and local people Cape Kozhevnikov nature monument was created. Thousands of Pacific walruses rest here each autumn. Now we are here to help polar bears. ”
Original article on WWF.ru (in Russian)
More about the Umky Patrol:
Another beautiful day in the Arctic
In early April, WWF’s Bering and Arctic Sea program officer, Elisabeth Kruger, traveled to the United States Fish and Wildlife Service field office in the Arctic to assist with interpretation for our Moscow colleague, Natalia Illarionova.
In these blog posts, Elisabeth describes her experiences on the Arctic slope and the work that the FWS does to help us understand the Chukchi Sea polar bear population.
The study is conducted over US waters, just miles from Russia. Exchanges such as this between Russian and American biologists will help to foster a similar research program in Russia.
Read the previous post here.
April 12, 2011
By Elizabeth Kruger
This is the last day Natalia and I will be flying with the team before we head back to Anchorage, so we are happy to see blue skies in the morning. After breakfast, we prep for the day and pack up the helicopters.
We see track after track all morning, but all of them appear to be old. We flew northwest today, in search of larger male bears. They have definitely been spending a lot of time here, but we have yet to sight a bear.
Continue reading
Fostering understanding: US-Russian polar bear information exchange
In early April, WWF’s Bering and Arctic Sea program officer, Elisabeth Kruger, traveled to the United States Fish and Wildlife Service field office in the Arctic to assist with interpretation for our Moscow colleague, Natalia Illarionova.
In these blog posts, Elisabeth describes her experiences on the Arctic slope and the work that the FWS does to help us understand the Chukchi Sea polar bear population.
The study is conducted over US waters, just miles from Russia. Exchanges such as this between Russian and American biologists will help to foster a similar research program in Russia.
By Elisabeth Kruger
April 8, 2011
Natalia Illarionova, a polar bear biologist at the All-Russian Scientific Research Institute of Nature Conservation and a member of the Marine Mammal Council, arrived from Moscow with the help of a WWF travel grant one week ago to learn about the US Fish and Wildlife Service polar bear research team’s mark-recapture study techniques. I am excited to be joining her and the USFWS team near Kotzebue tomorrow to provide linguistic support. Continue reading
In search of the extraordinary: Chukchi Sea polar bear research
Geoff York, the WWF Global Arctic Programme’s resident polar bear expert, is in the field in the Chukchi Sea, Alaska, working with bears for the 14th year in a row. Read his previous posts here and here.
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Finally – a banner morning: clear, nearly calm, and should reach +5F by this afternoon. The team was joined by a second small helicopter late last night that will act as a spotter and may also haul extra fuel later in the season when the sea ice become too broken for the fixed wing to land. We meet at 8 AM for our briefing and plan to launch around half past ten. We will also have our fixed wing spotter/fuel plane today, so pilot coordination will be important.
Following the high winds this week, we are expecting that any old tracks will be well drifted, which should help us. However, snow scour (loss of snow) and hard pack will make new tracks harder to find. Good thing we will have a few more eyes on the ice today.
Continue reading
Watching and waiting with windy weather: Chukchi Sea polar bear research
Geoff York, the WWF Global Arctic Programme’s resident polar bear expert, is in the field in the Chukchi Sea, Alaska, working with bears for the 14th year in a row. Read his previous post here.
Sunday, April 3, 2011
It’s a blue sky day this morning, with the looming threat of worsening conditions later this afternoon. From the weather service map, we are in the middle of the only stretch of coast across the entire state of Alaska (more coastline than the rest of the US combined) that is under visual flight rules (VFR). Limited visibility from snow, blowing snow, or fog dominates the weather elsewhere. We find ourselves in the gap between a high pressure system over Chukotka and two deep lows pushing across the Bering Sea. With any luck, we’ll escape the snow – but we will not escape the wind. Continue reading
The journey north: Chukchi Sea polar bear research
By Geoff York
Fourteen years. It’s difficult to believe that this will be my fourteenth consecutive year conducting polar bear captures in Alaska. From my first fall capture season in 1998, I always assume that each season and year will be my last such opportunity. Why? Because so few people have the opportunity to work out on the frozen seas, and fewer yet with an animal as magnificent as the polar bear. It is both an opportunity and a real honour and one I do not take for granted- every flight, every day, every year.
Thursday, March 31
Today I am flying north from Anchorage to a field camp just north of Kotzebue along the shorelines of the Chukchi Sea. I’ll be joining the US Fish and Wildlife Service Chukchi research team led by Dr Eric Regehr and Dr Karyn Rode. They have been at the field station for two weeks and have captured 29 bears – mostly family groups and young single animals, but all in good condition.
This will be their 4th year of research in the Chukchi Sea, an area where we have significant need for more information on the shared polar bear population with Russia. The data gathered through this project will shed significant light on the current status of these bears and inform future management decisions. It will also expand our understanding of how polar bears in different geographic areas are responding to rapid changes in sea ice. Additional research will be required on the Russian side in coming years to complete this story, and both WWF and the USFWS are working with partners in Russia and Chukotka to fill that knowledge and capacity gap. Continue reading
Video of polar bear and cubs in the wild in Wapusk
Peter Ewins of WWF Canada and Rhys Gerholdt of WWF US are with an ABC News crew from New York in Wapusk National Park, observing the world’s largest concentration of maternity dens for polar bears.
They shot this lovely video footage (now available on the WWF Arctic Programme YouTube channel) of a polar bear cub, and another of a polar bear and her offspring, during the trip, showing how one mum and her cub behave as they emerge from a den, and a baby bear playing at the mouth of a den
Watch them below, or read a series of blog posts about the trip, here, here, here and here. Continue reading
Polar bear team update: It’s all about energy
Breakfast at 0700 h, then out in the tracked vehicles again, trundling over 1-2 inches of fresh snow, towards the south end of Fletcher Lake at the edge of Wapusk National Park.
Read our previous updates here, here and here.
By Peter Ewins
Mayor Mike Spence and his tracking-expert brother Morris tell us joyfully that “this is the warmest day this year” – a mere 35 degrees C below zero, positively balmy! (it would be totally ‘barmy’ if we didn’t all have the top-grade cold weather clothing of course, and those fabulous Canada Goose expedition parkas!). Rhys and I have a little touch of mild frostbite on our fingertips, due to the work with the tripod, cameras and binoculars, but when you’re 100 metres away from these magnificent animals, you don’t seem to feel the cold that much! Continue reading
Polar bear team update: Today on the tundra
By Peter Ewins
Rhys and I awoke to a crystal clear dawn, a numbing -40C again, and the excitement of reconnecting with the female polar bear and her single cub that we had left at sunset yesterday evening. After one of cook Daryl’s splendid tundra breakfasts at Wat’chee lodge, we headed out in the tracked vehicles with top-notch photographers from around the world, and the ABC news crew.
Continue reading