<img sizes="(min-width: 1280px) 50vw, (min-width: 1008px) 66vw, 96vw" srcset="https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/240/cpsprodpb/6ba5/live/db9dc480-bc75-11ef-9e94-492e454c4f8c.jpg.webp 240w,https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/320/cpsprodpb/6ba5/live/db9dc480-bc75-11ef-9e94-492e454c4f8c.jpg.webp 320w,https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/6ba5/live/db9dc480-bc75-11ef-9e94-492e454c4f8c.jpg.webp 480w,https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/640/cpsprodpb/6ba5/live/db9dc480-bc75-11ef-9e94-492e454c4f8c.jpg.webp 640w,https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/800/cpsprodpb/6ba5/live/db9dc480-bc75-11ef-9e94-492e454c4f8c.jpg.webp 800w,https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/1024/cpsprodpb/6ba5/live/db9dc480-bc75-11ef-9e94-492e454c4f8c.jpg.webp 1024w,https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news…
Many murals in Churchill depict Arctic wildlife, particularly polar bears
Churchill is known as the polar bear capital of the world. Every year, the Hudson Bay – on the western edge of which the town is perched – thaws, and forces the bears on shore. As the freeze sets in in Autumn, hundreds of bears gather here, waiting.
“We have freshwater rivers flowing into the area and cold water coming in from the Arctic,” explains Alysa McCall from Polar Bears International (PBI). “So freeze-up happens here first.
“For polar bears, sea ice is a big dinner plate – it’s access to their main prey, seals. They’re probably excited for a big meal of seal blubber – they haven’t been eating much all summer on land.”
The polar bear population decline in the Western Hudson Bay has been linked to warming temperatures
There are 20 known sub-populations of polar bears across the Arctic. This is one of the most southerly and best studied.
“They’re our fat, white, hairy canaries in the coal mine,” Alysa explains. “We had about 1,200 polar bears here in the 1980s and we’ve lost almost half of them.”
The decline is tied to the amount of time the bay is now ice-free, a period that is getting longer as the climate warms. No sea ice means no frozen seal-hunting platform.
…
“Bears here are now on land about a month longer than their grandparents were,” explains Alysa. “That puts pressure on mothers. [With less food] it’s harder to stay pregnant and to sustain those babies.”
While their long-term survival is precarious, the bears draw conservation scientists and thousands of tourists to Churchill every year.
We tag along with a group from PBI to search for bears on the sub-Arctic tundra – just a few miles from town. The team travels in a tundra buggy, a type of off-road bus with huge tyres.
…
Protecting the community is the task of the polar bear alert team – trained rangers who patrol Churchill every day.
We ride along with ranger Ian Van Nest, who is looking for a stubborn bear that he and his colleagues tried to chase away earlier that day. “It turned around and came back [towards] Churchill. He doesn’t seem interested in going away.”
For bears that are intent on hanging around town, the team can use a live trap: A tube-shaped container, baited with seal meat, with a door that the bear triggers when it climbs inside.
“Then we put them in the holding facility,” Ian explains. Bears are held for 30 days, a period set to teach a bear that it is a negative thing to come to town looking for food, but that doesn’t put the animal’s health at risk.
They are then moved – either on the back of a trailer or occasionally air-lifted by helicopter – and released further along the bay, away from people.
…
Cyril Fredlund, who works at Churchill’s new scientific observatory, remembers the last time a person was killed by a polar bear in Churchill, in 1983.
“It was right in town,” he says. “The man was homeless and was in an abandoned building at night. There was a young bear in there too – it took him down with its paw, like he was a seal.”
People came to help, Cyril recalls, but they couldn’t get the bear away from the man. “It was like it was guarding its meal.”
…
Climate change poses a challenge for the polar bear capital of the world, but the mayor is optimistic. “We have a great town,” he says, “a wonderful community. And the summer season – [when people come to see the Beluga whales in the bay] – is growing.”
“We’re all being challenged by climate change,” he adds. “Does that mean you stop existing? No – you adapt. You work out how to take advantage of it.”
While Mike Spence says “the future is bright” for Churchill, it might not be so bright for the polar bears.
Tee and her friends look out over the bay, from a window at the back of the school building. The polar bear alert team’s vehicles are gathering outside, trying to move a bear away from town.
“If climate change continues,” muses Tee’s classm…