Department of Biology, York University, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Faculty of Environmental Studies, York University, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Glob Chang Biol. 2020 Feb;26(2):840-850. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14817. Epub 2019 Sep 23.
Climate-driven sea ice loss has led to changes in the timing of key biological events in the Arctic, however, the consequences and rate of these changes remain largely unknown. Polar bears (Ursus maritimus) undergo seasonal changes in energy stores in relation to foraging opportunities and habitat conditions. Declining sea ice has been linked to reduced body condition in some subpopulations, however, the specific timing and duration of the feeding period when bears acquire most of their energy stores and its relationship to the timing of ice break-up is poorly understood. We used community-based sampling to investigate seasonality in body condition (energy stores) of polar bears in Nunavut, Canada, and examined the influence of sea ice variables. We used adipose tissue lipid content as an index of body condition for 1,206 polar bears harvested from 2010-2017 across five subpopulations with varying seasonal ice conditions: Baffin Bay (October-August), Davis Strait and Foxe Basin (year-round), Gulf of Boothia and Lancaster Sound (August-May). Similar seasonal patterns were found in body condition across subpopulations with bears at their nadir of condition in the spring, followed by fat accumulation past break-up date and subsequent peak body condition in autumn, indicating that bears are actively foraging in late spring and early summer. Late season feeding implies that even minor advances in the timing of break-up may have detrimental effects on foraging opportunities, body condition, and subsequent reproduction and survival. The magnitude of seasonal changes in body condition varied across the study area, presumably driven by local environmental conditions. Our results demonstrate how community-based monitoring of polar bears can reveal population-level responses to climate warming in advance of detectable demographic change. Our data on the seasonal timing of polar bear foraging and energy storage should inform predictive models of the effects of climate-mediated sea ice loss.
气候驱动的海冰消退导致北极关键生物事件的时间发生变化,然而,这些变化的后果和速度在很大程度上仍然未知。北极熊(Ursus maritimus)的能量储存会随着觅食机会和栖息地条件的季节性变化而变化。海冰减少与一些亚种群的身体状况下降有关,然而,熊获得大部分能量储存的觅食期的具体时间和持续时间及其与冰破裂时间的关系还知之甚少。我们使用基于社区的采样方法来调查加拿大努纳武特地区北极熊的季节性身体状况(能量储存),并研究了海冰变量的影响。我们使用脂肪组织脂质含量作为身体状况的指标,对 2010-2017 年在五个季节性冰况不同的亚种群中收获的 1206 只北极熊进行了研究:巴芬湾(10 月至 8 月)、戴维斯海峡和福克斯盆地(全年)、波弗特海和兰开斯特海峡(8 月至 5 月)。在身体状况方面,不同亚种群中存在相似的季节性模式,熊在春季达到状况的最低点,然后在冰破裂日期之后脂肪积累,随后在秋季达到身体状况的峰值,这表明熊在春末和初夏积极觅食。晚季觅食意味着即使冰破裂时间略有提前,也可能对觅食机会、身体状况以及随后的繁殖和生存产生不利影响。身体状况季节性变化的幅度在整个研究区域有所不同,大概是由当地环境条件驱动的。我们的研究结果表明,基于社区的北极熊监测可以在可检测的人口变化之前,揭示出对气候变暖的种群反应。我们关于北极熊觅食和能量储存季节性时间的研究数据应能为气候介导的海冰损失影响的预测模型提供信息。