Polar bear 'extinct within 100 years'
The polar bear could be driven to extinction by global warming within 100 years, warns an ecology expert.
Scientists say Arctic sea ice is melting at a rate of up to 9% per decade. Arctic summers could be ice-free by mid-century. Dr Andrew Derocher, of the University of Alberta, Edmonton, has used the data to assess the impact on the Arctic's top predator.
Top carnivore
He told "Polar bears are a species whose whole life history is dependent on having sea ice.
Polar bears are uniquely adapted to survival in the Arctic. They are the world's largest land predator, feeding mainly on seals.
They use the sea ice as a floating platform to catch prey and they travel across it on their way to their dens.
British polar expert Dr Peter Wadhams of the University of Cambridge says the bear faces a gloomy future unless it is able to change its habits.
Fragile ecology
Scientists believe that Ursus maritimus, the "sea bear", evolved about 200,000 years ago from brown bear ancestors.
There have been cases of polar bears scavenging in bins for food in summer, she said, but the animals need seal fat to get through the winter.
"In the absence of sea ice the whole basis of polar bear ecology ceases to exist," she explained. Polar bears are currently found in Arctic regions of Alaska, Canada, Russia, Greenland and Norway.
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