Animal 0 Posté(e) le 7 septembre 2007 Any U.S. Ban on Hunting Polar Bears Unlikely to be Adopted in Canada Climatechange poses bigger threat, say experts By Sharda Vaidyanath Epoch TimesParliament Hill Reporter Sep 06, 2007Scientist Dr. Ian Stirling in the Beaufort Sea region last spring. The twopolar bears have been immobilized with drugged darts fired from a helicopterto facilitate tagging and collecting measurements and samples. (Courtesy ofIan Stirling)With climate change impacting some Polar bear populations in the Arctic, amove to list the bears under the United States Endangered Species Act(ESA) is gaining momentum.However, the politics of polar bear conservation south of the border may notbe enough to melt Canadian resistance to banning the hunting of the bears.The University of Alberta's Canadian Circumpolar Institute is playing a leadinternational role in examining the pros and cons of hunting polar bears inthe Canadian Arctic, including management and conservation."It's not only a question of science, it's a question of politics as well,"says senior research scholar at the institute, Milton Freeman.Freeman says of the 200,000 written submissions to the U.S. government, only37 per cent supported the U.S. government's proposal to list polar bears,and of the thirteen submissions made by Canadians, only two supported theU.S. proposed listing.There are eight polar bear jurisdictions, and the provincial governments donot want to be derelict in managing them, he says. But he doesn't believethere will ever be a ban on hunting polar bears in Canada."Canada is generally acknowledged to have a very good system of managementbecause the quotas are all science-based and the precautionary principle isapplied."Freeman says the Inuit are the first to tell the scientists if they have anyconcerns regarding hunting the bears. "The Inuit have negotiated variousmanagement processes throughout Canada, and under these processes they havea right to hunt the polar bears under sustainable management practices,"says Duane Smith, president of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference, Canada.However, Smith notes that a U.S. ban would have repercussions in Canada andresult in an economic and cultural impact. He says some communities that arepartially dependent on American tourist sports hunting, such as Resolute Bayand Pond Inlet, stand to lose $25,000 US per hunt. In addition, the culturalaspects of using dog teams would also disappear.Smith says the Inuit don't support a ban for the reasons the U.S. gives,"and the U.S. consultation with the Inuit could be better."Environment Canada's scientist emeritus, Ian Stirling, says there has been aproposal to list polar bears as "threatened" under the ESA, adding that theESA is currently undertaking an extensive review of the scientificinformation available on polar bears and on Arctic sea ice.Author of the book Polar Bears, Stirling says there are nineteen distinctpolar bear populations in the circumpolar north with a total globalpopulation of 20,000 to 25,000 bears.Thirteen of those populations are either entirely within Canadian territoryor shared with other nations such as Greenland, with which Canada sharesthree bear populations. A single bear population is shared with Alaska.Sixty per cent of the global polar bear population belongs to Canada.Climate Change Biggest ThreatHowever, experts agree that climate change concerns are more important whenit comes to the conservation of bears in the north.While circumpolar nations race to establish their claims to theresource-rich Arctic seabed, climate change and melting sea ice arethreatening the Nanuq, or polar bear. And as bear populations decline, theInuit, scientists and critics all agree that it's time the rapidly changingnorth became a priority. For thousands of years the Inuit led a nomadiclife, and Nanuq was his "equal" as predator and hunter. They shared the samehabitat and competed for the same food that ranged from seals to bigger preylike caribou, walrus and Beluga whales.The Inuit from birth on was taught all about respecting this symbioticrelationship with the prized polar bear and the harsh yet fragileenvironment."We were told not to speak about polar bears too much because they'relistening to you, because they're clever and dangerous," says GabrielNirlungayuk., a hunter, and director of Wildlife at Nunavut Tunngavik Inc.in Rankin Inlet. But traditional folklore and beliefs and the Inuit way oflife began changing after western contact and continues to changedramatically, more recently because of climate change and its impact.Freely harvesting bears or other wildlife is no longer possible, as quotasand other restrictions have been in place for at least three decades, saysNirlungayuk.The Inuit are not alone in observing changes in the North.Over three hundred scientists from around the world contributed to theground-breaking 2004 Arctic Climate Assessment (ACIA), which stated that theArctic is now experiencing some of the most "rapid and severe"climate change on earth, and the ongoing reduction in sea ice is "verylikely to have devastating consequence for polar bears, ice-dependent seals,and local people for whom these animals are a primary source of food."Since polar bears usually use ice as a platform to hunt seals from, thesituation looks grim. Stirling cites areas such as Western Hudson Bay andthe Southern Beaufort Sea as examples where long-term studies have observedsignificant decline.In Western Hudson Bay, the break-up of the sea-ice is happening three weeksearlier than it was thirty years ago. Stirling says that between1985 and 2000 there has been a 22 per cent decline in bear population."We are looking at a likelihood of a very large scale decline, 30 per centof the polar bear population in 40 to 50 years," he says.National Policy NeededOn a visit to the Arctic last week, NDP leader Jack Layton said that PrimeMinster Stephen Harper's focus on military solutions for Arctic sovereigntyis "too narrow.I've seen first hand that we need to tackle social, economicand environmental concerns."Executive Director of the Canadian Polar Commission, Steven Bigras, saysthat while our Canadian scientists are second to none, he laments the factthat we still don't have a national policy to support polar science."It's not that it hasn't been tried. It's a very diverse and dispersedcommunity, and getting all the players together and developing the consensusis a challenge," he says.The status of polar bears is currently under review by COSEWIC, theCommittee on Status of Endangered Species of Wildlife in Canada.Stirling says Canada needs to move quickly on over-harvesting, being mindfulto apply "the precautionary principle. If we're not certain of some details,give the resource the benefit of the doubt, something that did not happenwith Arctic cod which became a victim of over estimation of existingpopulation."Scientists and Inuit have a long history of working together, which isfacilitated through the Polar Bear Technical Committee, which meets once ayear, has direct Inuit participation, and all polar bear research is shared.However, Stirling says differences of opinion may arise over"interpretations of local ecological knowledge," such as interpretingincreasing sightings of bears in the community.Canada is signatory to the 1973 Agreement of the Conservation of Polar Bearsand Their Habitat that provides a framework for working with other polarnations, which is critical for conservation. However, many issues areparticular to Canada, such as funding for research, 60-80 per cent of whichcomes from outside sources, says Stirling."Polar bear research done by the federal government has been under-fundedfor almost twenty five years."While the degree to which human beings can respond to climate change withinthe next five or ten years is unknown, it will be the defining factor forsaving the polar bears, says Stirling."If we're going to conserve polar bears that means we're going to conservethe habitat they're dependent on, and that's going to have huge numbers oflarge scale benefits in many ways that we may not even appreciate."http://en.epochtimes.com/news/7-9-6/59471.html______________________________________________________Barry Kent MacKayCanadian RepresentativeAnimal Protection Institute<www.api4animals.org> Partager ce message Lien à poster Partager sur d’autres sites