Few signs of polar bears remain in Alaska. “It wasn’t always like this”
Few signs of polar bears remain in Alaska. “It wasn’t always like this,” Herman Ahsoak, an Alaskan whaling captain, told the. Climate change and its associated rising temperatures has pushed polar bears to leave their American homes behind and move to Russia. According to Ahsoak, there were over a hundred bears in his town of Utquiagvik in the late 1990s, so many that a “dedicated patrol team” kept watch over the bears and protected the town from them.
Meanwhile, the population has grown significantly on Russia’s Wrangel Island in the nearby Chukchi sea. Polar bears in Russia are, according to Dr, Karyn Rode of the Alaska Science Center, “in better condition, larger, and [appear] to have higher reproductive rates than bears inhabiting the southern Beaufort sea.”
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