Berliner Boersenzeitung - Polar bear biopsies to shed light on Arctic pollutants

EUR -
AED 4.202809
AFN 72.097162
ALL 95.786655
AMD 431.439057
ANG 2.048573
AOA 1049.415759
ARS 1600.159384
AUD 1.631526
AWG 2.059922
AZN 1.946316
BAM 1.951454
BBD 2.304767
BDT 140.417249
BGN 1.956135
BHD 0.434931
BIF 3397.133571
BMD 1.144401
BND 1.464338
BOB 7.907388
BRL 6.100344
BSD 1.144351
BTN 105.626738
BWP 15.593269
BYN 3.385958
BYR 22430.261126
BZD 2.301374
CAD 1.568877
CDF 2582.913266
CHF 0.903665
CLF 0.026583
CLP 1049.655944
CNY 7.892473
CNH 7.896257
COP 4213.914357
CRC 538.400821
CUC 1.144401
CUP 30.326629
CVE 110.019953
CZK 24.464976
DJF 203.77613
DKK 7.471852
DOP 70.303413
DZD 152.804659
EGP 59.88872
ERN 17.166016
ETB 178.620459
FJD 2.550527
FKP 0.860334
GBP 0.863347
GEL 3.124469
GGP 0.860334
GHS 12.427321
GIP 0.860334
GMD 84.117996
GNF 10031.656512
GTQ 8.775454
GYD 239.40677
HKD 8.958085
HNL 30.290534
HRK 7.538742
HTG 150.045803
HUF 393.085178
IDR 19409.0995
ILS 3.598386
IMP 0.860334
INR 105.954202
IQD 1499.061144
IRR 1512583.514184
ISK 144.53934
JEP 0.860334
JMD 179.550088
JOD 0.811364
JPY 182.495918
KES 148.010337
KGS 100.077533
KHR 4588.779421
KMF 493.237021
KPW 1029.960907
KRW 1719.748978
KWD 0.351823
KYD 0.953576
KZT 560.21224
LAK 24520.385795
LBP 102472.163961
LKR 356.136777
LRD 209.403596
LSL 19.219393
LTL 3.379118
LVL 0.692237
LYD 7.301737
MAD 10.777695
MDL 19.962537
MGA 4751.417178
MKD 61.503014
MMK 2402.567533
MNT 4084.341362
MOP 9.224754
MRU 45.784025
MUR 53.226009
MVR 17.680917
MWK 1984.180639
MXN 20.448216
MYR 4.507221
MZN 73.138831
NAD 19.219393
NGN 1585.566919
NIO 42.106217
NOK 11.172719
NPR 169.002581
NZD 1.97261
OMR 0.440025
PAB 1.144251
PEN 3.946211
PGK 5.003855
PHP 68.194646
PKR 319.517539
PLN 4.27653
PYG 7382.556846
QAR 4.159735
RON 5.107007
RSD 117.109163
RUB 91.651288
RWF 1669.880678
SAR 4.294863
SBD 9.214394
SCR 17.472084
SDG 687.784516
SEK 10.806413
SGD 1.466619
SHP 0.858597
SLE 28.094957
SLL 23997.530791
SOS 652.845918
SRD 42.969965
STD 23686.791775
STN 24.445552
SVC 10.012699
SYP 126.484907
SZL 19.213206
THB 36.996194
TJS 10.968171
TMT 4.005404
TND 3.384162
TOP 2.755443
TRY 50.576857
TTD 7.760715
TWD 36.843533
TZS 2980.860735
UAH 50.462505
UGX 4302.417235
USD 1.144401
UYU 45.967616
UZS 13817.224924
VES 506.63165
VND 30090.881941
VUV 135.32917
WST 3.130183
XAF 654.499235
XAG 0.014083
XAU 0.000228
XCD 3.092801
XCG 2.062307
XDR 0.813987
XOF 654.499235
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.99679
ZAR 19.305382
ZMK 10300.948139
ZMW 22.273391
ZWL 368.49668
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    14.41

    +0.69%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    34.14

    -0.12%

  • GSK

    -0.8900

    53.39

    -1.67%

  • NGG

    0.0900

    90.9

    +0.1%

  • AZN

    -2.6000

    189.9

    -1.37%

  • RYCEF

    -1.1300

    16.12

    -7.01%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    59.93

    +0.07%

  • CMSC

    -0.1500

    22.99

    -0.65%

  • RIO

    -2.8700

    87.83

    -3.27%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    22.99

    -0.48%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    25.57

    -0.43%

  • BP

    0.5100

    42.67

    +1.2%

  • BCC

    0.3800

    70

    +0.54%

  • JRI

    -0.2300

    12.59

    -1.83%

Polar bear biopsies to shed light on Arctic pollutants
Polar bear biopsies to shed light on Arctic pollutants / Photo: Olivier MORIN - AFP

Polar bear biopsies to shed light on Arctic pollutants

With one foot braced on the helicopter's landing skid, a veterinarian lifted his air rifle, took aim and fired a tranquiliser dart at a polar bear.

Text size:

The predator bolted but soon slumped into the snowdrifts, its broad frame motionless beneath the Arctic sky.

The dramatic pursuit formed part of a pioneering research mission in Norway's Svalbard archipelago, where scientists, for the first time, took fat tissue biopsies from polar bears to study the impact of pollutants on their health.

The expedition came at a time when the Arctic region was warming at four times the global average, putting mounting pressure on the iconic predators as their sea-ice habitat shrank.

"The idea is to show as accurately as possible how the bears live in the wild -- but in a lab," Laura Pirard, a Belgian toxicologist, told AFP.

"To do this, we take their (fatty) tissue, cut it in very thin slices and expose it to the stresses they face, in other words pollutants and stress hormones," said Pirard, who developed the method.

Moments after the bear collapsed, the chopper circled back and landed. Researchers spilled out, boots crunching on the snow.

One knelt by the bear's flank, cutting thin strips of fatty tissue. Another drew blood.

Each sample was sealed and labelled before the bear was fitted with a satellite collar.

Scientists said that while the study monitors all the bears, only females were tracked with GPS collars as their necks are smaller than their heads -- unlike males, who cannot keep a collar on for more than a few minutes.

- Arctic lab -

For the scientists aboard the Norwegian Polar Institute's research vessel Kronprins Haakon, these fleeting encounters were the culmination of months of planning and decades of Arctic fieldwork.

In a makeshift lab on the icebreaker, samples remained usable for several days, subjected to controlled doses of pollutants and hormones before being frozen for further analysis back on land.

Each tissue fragment gave Pirard and her colleagues insight into the health of an animal that spent much of its life on sea ice.

Analysis of the fat samples showed that the main pollutants present were per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) -- synthetic chemicals used in industry and consumer goods that linger in the environment for decades.

Despite years of exposure, Svalbard's polar bears showed no signs of emaciation or ill health, according to the team.

The local population has remained stable or even increased slightly, unlike parts of Canada, where the Western Hudson Bay group declined by 27 percent between 2016 and 2021, from 842 to 618 bears, according to a government aerial survey.

Other populations in the Canadian Arctic, including the Southern Beaufort Sea, have also shown long-term declines linked to reduced prey access and longer ice-free seasons.

Scientists estimate there are around 300 polar bears in the Svalbard archipelago and roughly 2,000 in the broader region stretching from the North Pole to the Barents Sea.

The team found no direct link between sea ice loss and higher concentrations of pollutants in Svalbard's bears. Instead, differences in pollutant levels came down to the bears' diet.

Two types of bears -- sedentary and pelagic -- feed on different prey, leading to different chemicals building up in their bodies.

- Changing diet -

With reduced sea ice, the bears' diets have already started shifting, researchers said. These behavioural adaptations appeared to help maintain the population’s health.

"They still hunt seals but they also take reindeer (and) eggs. They even eat grass (seaweed), even though that has no energy for them," Jon Aars, the head of the Svalbard polar bear programme, told AFP.

"If they have very little sea ice, they necessarily need to be on land," he said, adding that they spend "much more time on land than they used to... 20 or 30 years ago".

This season alone, Aars and his team of marine toxicologists and spatial behaviour experts captured 53 bears, fitted 17 satellite collars, and tracked 10 mothers with cubs or yearlings.

"We had a good season," Aars said.

The team's innovations go beyond biopsies. Last year, they attached small "health log" cylinders to five females, recording their pulse and temperature.

Combined with GPS data, the devices offer a detailed record of how the bears roam, how they rest and what they endure.

Polar bears were once hunted freely across Svalbard but since an international protection agreement in 1976, the population here has slowly recovered.

The team's findings may help explain how the bears' world is changing, and at an alarming rate.

As the light faded and the icebreaker's engines hummed against the vast silence, the team packed away their tools, leaving the Arctic wilderness to its inhabitants.

(T.Renner--BBZ)