Tag Archives: species tracker

Svalbard polar bear research: Day 5

Jon Aars is a researcher with the Norwegian Polar Institute, Norway’s main institution for research, environmental monitoring and mapping of the polar regions. With the support of WWF, Aars studies polar bear populations on the Norwegian island of Svalbard. Read all of  his field notes from a Spring 2013 research expedition, and follow the bears on our Polar Bear Tracker.
fig 9 (Medium)
29 April – We left KV Svalbard a week ago, and have not been out flying for eight days because of bad weather. That is how it works in the Arctic, low pressure systems can bring bad weather for periods of days, and helicopter flying is risky if conditions are not good. With white snow, and moderate sun light, it is hard to see the contrasts on the snow and easy to crash a helicopter flying close to the ground. Darting bears, we fly on only a few meters altitude.
But today, when the weather suddenly improved, we flew to Storfjorden, between the largest islands in Svalbard. This is core polar bear habitat, and we were efficient working from early morning to late night. All together we handled 11 bears, a number we rarely reach in one day of work. It feels good to get that much done after a long period without being able to work, particularly as tomorrow will be our last field day this spring.
Among the bears we captured were two old females on 21 and 24 years of age, the former with a cub of the year and the latter with a yearling. Females this old more often have one cub than two, age having taken its toll. We also captured two different two-year-old bears. They will just have departed from their mothers and will have a challenging time ahead, when they have to learn to hunt on their own. One of them had managed to kill a ringed seal pup, that is at least a good breakfast.

Svalbard polar bear research: Day 4

Jon Aars is a researcher with the Norwegian Polar Institute, Norway’s main institution for research, environmental monitoring and mapping of the polar regions. With the support of WWF, Aars studies polar bear populations on the Norwegian island of Svalbard. Read all of  his field notes from a Spring 2013 research expedition, and follow the bears on our Polar Bear Tracker.
N26135 MA (Medium)
14 April – After some days in southern Svalbard, the weather improved in more northern areas, and we sailed up north of Spitsbergen, at a latitude of about 80°. After lunch the weather was fine for flying, and we found an adult female in Woodfjorden, north-west Spitsbergen. Few polar bears survive long after they pass their early twenties, but this lady was marked in Woodfjorden already in 1994, as an adult with two small cubs, then estimated to be 7 years old. So at a likely age of 26 years, she will be one of the oldest bears around in Svalbard. She got a collar on, and hopefully she will still be able to hunt seals for a while, at least her condition seemed good.
We handled another two adult females, one together with a yearling and another with two small cubs. This is an area where a few females come out from maternity dens every spring, and most bears we encounter here are very local. Genetics have shown that daughters comes back to the fjords in this area and goes into den in the same area where they were born. Some may walk far into the pack ice north and northeast from there in summer, but will return before autumn. Other bears use the local area year around.

Svalbard polar bear research: Day 3

Jon Aars is a researcher with the Norwegian Polar Institute, Norway’s main institution for research, environmental monitoring and mapping of the polar regions. With the support of WWF, Aars studies polar bear populations on the Norwegian island of Svalbard. Read all of  his field notes from a Spring 2013 research expedition, and follow the bears on our Polar Bear Tracker.
fig 6 (Medium)
10th April – Today we had a good day in field, with six bears handled. We flew quite far, to Edgeøya at the south-eastern part of Svalbard. Hunters who shot bears for hides many decades ago frequently stayed here over the winter, as many bears pass through the area.
In the morning we found fresh tracks from a female with two cubs, but lost them when the snow got so hard the prints were not longer visible. We started to get a bit low on fuel, but fortunately had a depot on the island where we could refuel and thus continue the search on the east side of the island.
In front of one of the big glaciers we again encountered tracks, this time from a pair of mating bears. April is mating season. Tracks from bears mating are quite distinctive, frequently with parallel tracks with a lot of sharp turns and no particular direction. We found the bears after some effort, and darted them. She was a recapture, marked last year, about six years old.
Later we found a polar bear maternity den, occupied by a visiting adult male, and likely already departed by the family. He also turned out to be a known bear, marked in 2008, now close to 15 years old. We then searched for a female with two small cubs out in some very structured sea ice, making it quite challenging to follow the tracks. But finally we found them, a young female with her first litter, two small cubs about weighing about 8 kilos. Back on the boat we finally got a deserved meal after a long day. When it’s below -20°C and windy all day, then a warm meal is always good to warm up.

Svalbard polar bear research: Day 2

Jon Aars is a researcher with the Norwegian Polar Institute, Norway’s main institution for research, environmental monitoring and mapping of the polar regions. With the support of WWF, Aars studies polar bear populations on the Norwegian island of Svalbard. Read all of  his field notes from a Spring 2013 research expedition, and follow the bears on our Polar Bear Tracker.

The two sons of a female we captured today, back in 2007, in the same area. One of the two cubs of the pictures was killed in self defence when it tried to get into a cabin with two persons a few days ago.  Svalbard, Norway, April 2013 © Jon Aars / NPI

The two sons of a female we captured today, back in 2007, in the same area. One of the two cubs of the pictures was killed in self defence when it tried to get into a cabin with two persons a few days ago. Svalbard, Norway, April 2013 © Jon Aars / NPI


Yesterday we entered the Norwegian coast guard ship KV Svalbard, our home for the next couple of weeks. It is a great ship, and with a highly service-minded crew. Besides patrolling the areas around Svalbard to check that fishing boats follow the rules, they frequently help teams doing research in the area.
We planned to sail north, until we checked the weather forecast – snow and wind in that part of the archipelago. So we sailed south during the night, and surveyed Hornsund, the most southern fjord on the Spitsbergen west coast, today.
In the inner part, in front of the glaciers, we encountered tracks from two different adult females, with one and two small cubs respectively. However, we did not find the bears. But after some more searching, we found a single adult female, a twelve year old that was marked in Hornsund as a cub in 2001. We captured her in 2007 with two sons, her first litter. One of them was killed in self defense in a cabin a bit further west some days ago, when he tried to get into a cabin with two people. The female got a collar, and we located an adult male in the same area after a few minutes of flying. He was a large animal in his prime age, about 10 years old.

Svalbard polar bear research: Day 1

© Jon Aars / NPI

The foot of a polar bear, note the short and very sharp claws. Svalbard, Norway, April 2013


Jon Aars is a researcher with the Norwegian Polar Institute, Norway’s main institution for research, environmental monitoring and mapping of the polar regions. With the support of WWF, Aars studies polar bear populations on the Norwegian island of Svalbard. Read all of  his field notes from a Spring 2013 research expedition, and follow the bears on our Polar Bear Tracker.
6th April – We were out for a short trip yesterday in Isfjorden, the fjord where Longyearbyen, the main settlement in Svalbard, is located. We did not encounter any bears, but it is always good to get started, to see that the helicopter is working and get all necessary gear on board. So today, we went out on a longer trip, and we flew south, to Van Mijenfjorden and Van Keulenfjorden. These two fjords on the west coast of Spitsbergen, the largest island of Svalbard, end in glaciers that stretch over to the east coast. Bears may cross over to the east frequently, where the water is colder and more bears are found. However, there are usually some bears also on the western side of the island, and particularly in spring.
The first part of the day, we did not encounter any bears, although we found some tracks. We spotted a ringed seal pup on the ice, far from the lair or from the closest breathing hole. It does happen they get too far away from the closest safe exit into the water, and the odds are then high they will be found by foxes, gulls or polar bears before they can escape.
After a couple of hours flying without encountering any bears, we finally found some fresh tracks in the outer part of Van Keulenfjorden. Here we found two adult females, only a few hundred meters apart, both on the sea ice on search for seals.
One was a seven year old female that had been earlier marked in the same area, originally in April 2008 as a two year old when still together with her mother. The other female was old, likely between 15 and 20 years of age, and not marked before. Accordingly, she got lip tattoos and ear marks so we will be able to recognize her if we capture her again another year. Finally, on a glacier, we found another old female, together with a one year old daughter. All the three adults were equipped with iridium telephone collars so we can follow their movements.

Tracking narwhals – January 2013

Two narwhal (Monodon monoceros) surfacing to breathe in Admiralty Inlet, Lancaster Sound, Nunavut, Canada. © Paul Nicklen/National Geographic Stock / WWF-Canada


The four remaining functioning satellite radio tags were still transmitting information up to Christmas Day or thereabouts – but there have been no signals since then.  This is of course unfortunate, but also one of the realities sometimes of biological field studies using high-tech equipment like this!
Visit the WWF narwhal tracker
It’s possible that there has been some software/electronic signal transmission glitch along the information chain – all four radios seem to have stopped in the same week in late December.  But its also conceivable that the narwhals were having to push up some sea-ice in their wintering-feeding areas, and that could have caused the transmitter units mounted along their dorsal ridge to break free, and the just fall to the depths of Baffin Bay-Davis Strait.
On the bright side though, we did manage to establish the migratory path the whales took from August to December, and we showed that this year’s main wintering-feeding areas were quite a bit further south for most of the tagged animals, than in 2012 and some previous years.  All of this information is really vital to understanding where narwhal need to be to do their natural ‘thing’ – in the face of anticipated upcoming decisions about planned future seismic explosions and surveys/drilling for oil and gas deposits, as well as increased shipping and commercial fishing pressures in and around Baffin Bay and northern Davis Strait.
WWF-Canada will be monitoring this situation closely in the coming months, and will post any significant news updates on this narwhal tracker page – as well as news if the radios suddenly start transmitting again (this has happened in the past with other species!).

Tracking narwhals – December 2012

Visit the WWF narwhal tracker
The 4 narwhals still with working satellite transmitters are now spending most of their time towards the edge of the Canadian continental shelf, at the edge of Davis Strait, not far from the international boundary with Greenland.  They are likely feeding in relatively nutrient rich areas, probably mainly on Greenland Halibut.
At this time of year there’s often some satellite errors in the position fixes.  But with multiple fixes, one can  readily derive the most reliable positions over a 10-day period.  Indeed, these whales are now either just at the edge of the 9-10/10ths coverage annual sea ice, or in the case of narwhal #115957 and probably #115959, breathing at leads and cracks among the ice sheets.  Remember that the counter-clockwise currents in this productive Baffin Bay system maintain mobility of sea ice offshore, even though maximum surface air temperatures are often -20C now.  And narwhal can probably detect such gaps quite readily as they surface, using their echo-location click mechanisms.

Tracking narwhals – November 2012

Visit the WWF narwhal tracker
November 13
Two of the narwhals have struck out fast along the coast, now off Auyittuq National Park in southeast Baffin Island.
But the sea ice is way further north – well behind the seasonal norm in the past 30 years.  There is likely a lot of latent/residual surface heat in the water column. Maybe killer whales are still in the area.  Maybe the narwhal need to get to the best area to feed on turbot ?

Tracking narwhals – October 2012

Visit the WWF narwhal tracker
October 22
With so much latent heat still in the water column, the Arctic sea ice is slow in reforming again this autumn. Our 4 narwhal with radio transmitters still working are moving fairly slowly SE along the North Baffin coastlines. Only the inner reaches of Eclipse and Tremblay Sounds, Milne Inlet etc have started freezing, and there are large expanses of open water well to the north still. I wouldn’t expect our 4 whales to really start moving fast to the wintering areas until the temperatures drop substantially. Pond Inlet air temperatures this week are still in the zero to -10C range, quite warm still, really!
October 10
Now that people are mainly back at their homes, labs and offices, we can start sharing the summary results and weekly updates from the August narwhal tagging work WWF was proud to be able to support in the north Baffin region!
This August was a very different one from 2011 – local say that this was “the summer that never came”! The narwhal were there certainly, in Tremblay Sound and areas near Pond Inlet and Arctic Bay, but they certainly behaved very differently, as the windy, rainy, and gray weather dominated every single day it seemed.
In the 2 weeks we were there we caught 5 narwhal, and fitted them with Argos satellite radios – one seems to have malfunctioned or fallen off within the first few weeks, so we display the weekly updates now on the adjacent map, for the 4 animals (2 are males, and 2 are females). This year we’re able to give a small profile of the individual animal – sex, length, and even a nice mugshot/the radio when fitted.
Although there were far fewer bird species than in the same period last august around the Tremblay Sound camp, the daily rain/deluge this year was great news for plant life – many species that hadn’t flowered in 2011 august camp were carpeting the low tundra ‘garden’ beside our camp this august. We were also treated to almost daily visits by up to 4 polar bears and 5 arctic foxes, and a few narwhal carcasses along the coast provided much welcomed food for these bears and probably other scavenging foxes.
Right now, we know that narwhal 01 (tag #115959, a 4.4m male) moved quickly west into Admiralty Inlet, after tagging in mid-August, and remained there for September. It seems now to be slowly edging eastwards, catching up with the other 3 animals, heading east before the winter sea-ice starts forming fast from the shoreline outwards. In early October now, the region now has routine sub-zero temperatures, with overnight lows at -10C or lower, so sea ice will start to reappear soon., and we can expect the narwhal to keep heading steadily along their continental shelf migration corridors towards the wintering areas, where they will feed at much greater depths for much of the winter.

Tracking narwhals – July 2012

Visit the WWF narwhal tracker
The 7 main radios fitted in N Baffin Island back in August have added significant new data and a better sample size for this globally significant summering concentration of narwhal.
Basically the tagged animals remained in the fjords and channels around N Baffin until sea-ice started to form in October. Then they generally headed south and east along the Canadian shelf of Baffin Bay, to wintering areas off Cape Dyer, eastern Baffin Island.
Although the satellite images showed seemingly solid, 100% ice cover in these wintering areas, the currents in Baffin Bay kept the ice moving, and the narrow leads/cracks between sheets of annual sea-ice were clearly enough to provide narwhal with adequate breathing opportunity – between those dives down to sometimes 5000 ft, and the Greenland Halibut stocks down on the sea floor.
These areas, and some of the movement corridors that seem to be used by the narwhal between summering and wintering areas, are currently under various plans and applications for exploratory oil and gas drilling and seismic exploration, in the seemingly relentless search for more oil and gas resources. Having this information on timing of narwhal use of key areas is crucial for effective marine spatial planning in this region – taking care of what key wildlife species need, and not just racing to extract all available resources at whatever cost to the environment.
Over the fall, winter and spring, sea ice conditions were not significantly different in Baffin Bay compared to the average since about 1980. In fact the winter was relatively cold up in Baffin Island. But the overall trend remains one of increasing retreat of sea-ice, as the mean temperatures of both air and sea surface waters steadily increase.
WWF will again partner with local Inuit, and academic and government scientists this fall, and complete a final year of satellite tagging work on narwhal in this Tremblay Sound region. We plan to bring more information and some local stories to this wetracker page, to help convey the facts and figures for this mystical and still rather poorly understood arctic whale.