University of Toronto Scarborough researchers have directly linked population decline in polar bears living in Western Hudson ...
When scientists discovered polar bear populations were dropping rapidly, they created a framework to understand what is ...
Scientists have quantified how much climate change has driven the population decline of polar bears living in Canada's Hudson ...
Polar bear fur resists ice because of a natural greasy coating called sebum. This helps them move quietly while hunting.
This prolonged fasting drains polar bears’ energy reserves, reducing their ability to reproduce and raise cubs. Without ...
As sea ice dwindles due to climate change, polar bears living in Western Hudson Bay are struggling to get enough […] The post Polar Bears Aren’t Getting Enough To Eat Since Sea Ice Is Dwindling ...
U of T Scarborough researchers have directly linked population decline in polar bears living in Western Hudson Bay to ...
The North and South Pole regions have warmed by about three degrees C compared to the late 19th-century. Read more at ...
It’s not the white fluffy look-alike our kids snuggle or the cartoon image drinking Coca-Cola or “fat loungers who draw crowds at zoos” or animated replicas who speak to our children with the press of ...
Now, researchers have discovered the bears have another unexpected Arctic adaptation: greasy fur. It’s a trait that, ...
Polar bears in Western Hudson Bay have seen their population nearly halved over the last several decades, largely due to dwindling sea ice and limited hunting opportunities, according to the findings ...
Polar bears have a built-in defense against ice — greasy fur. A team of scientists has discovered that their fur is coated in ...