Barents Sea Polar Bears: Thriving Despite Shrinking Sea Ice

Rebecca Dzombak 2026-01-29 16:00:00

rising temperatures and rapidly melting ⁣sea ice threaten polar bears across the Arctic. ⁤But the⁣ bears living 800 miles north of the Arctic circle ⁤have stayed surprisingly fat, researchers report ⁤January 29 ‍in⁢ Scientific ⁢Reports.

The Arctic is home ⁢to 20 populations of polar bears. Each group faces its own set⁣ of struggles — climate change, shifts in⁣ prey and human activity, among other⁢ factors. But loss of sea ice is ⁣one of the biggest threats to ⁢all polar bears. The bears use sea ice, ⁢which grows during winter⁢ and retreats in the summer, to hunt. ‍Typically, when sea⁤ ice goes away, polar bears get thinner. If polar⁣ bears in a ‍population are losing fat, that can be an early warning that the population ⁢will‍ decline.There will be lower rates of reproduction, then⁣ younger ⁢and older bears will die off.

About 800 miles north of ⁤the ⁢Arctic ‍Circle is an icy Norwegian island called Svalbard. The island is ⁢in the barents Sea, which has some of the most extreme sea ice ⁣loss‍ in the Arctic.⁤ Sea ice loss is‍ twice as fast there as in other polar bear⁤ habitats. Researchers are interested in polar bears living on Svalbard as ⁣the relationship between sea ice and fat loss should be strong. The polar bears there shouldn’t have much ⁣fat.

That’s the opposite of what polar bear ecologist Jon Aars and his colleagues found. ⁣The team analyzed sea ice levels and body fat⁤ of 770 adult polar bears using data from 1995 ⁣to 2019. Even though the area lost about 100 days of sea ice⁢ cover, the polar bears, on average, gained fat.

“we’ve seen that the ⁣polar bears are⁢ actually able to do quite fine with the conditions in Svalbard ⁣today, even though they’re quite different from what they were 20, 30 years ago,” says Aars of the Norwegian Polar Institute in Tromsø. The⁣ bears could be eating more land-based prey, such as reindeer, ⁣and harbor seals, which are thriving in the new, ⁢warmer conditions.

“That⁤ doesn’t mean that polar bears are going to do fine in the future,” ⁤Aars says.⁣ “If sea ice continues ⁤to disappear, we think ‍there will‍ be a threshold.”

Rebecca Dzombak is a science writer covering the natural world and humans’ role in it, past,⁢ present and ‍future. She holds a Ph.D. in Earth and Environmental Sciences.

Leave a Comment