In the second population in East Greenland, 15 of 124 polar bears had similar injuries. What's more, two Greenland bears had blocks and balls of ice up to 1 foot (30cm) in diameter stuck to ...
Warming temperatures may be changing the ways ice forms, making it more likely to stick to and injure polar bears in two far ...
Their fun day out at the zoo would soon take a nightmarish turn after a woman scaled the three foot perimeter wall and jumped ...
The study indicates the injuries appear to be an 'unexpected consequence of climate change' as conditions continue to change ...
The technique which uses DNA from traces of cells left behind by the bears has been described as game changing for polar bear research. It's less intrusive than other techniques and could help ...
Polar bears have small bumps on their foot pads that help provide traction on slippery surfaces. These bumps, which are ...
To collect e-DNA from wild polar bears in northern Alaska, we sampled the upper layer of snow (~1 cm) from their footprints. The snow was thawed and filtered to capture DNA—in the form of epidermal ...
(B.J. Kirschhoffer/Polar Bear International/Submitted to The Weather ... "Snow [becomes] caught in the fur on a dog’s foot, melting slightly from body heat or being squeezed as the dog walks ...