Wildlife technician Pete Detwiler of the North Slope Borough Department of Wildlife Management samples polar bear tracks north of Utqiagvik in April 2021 for a project to identify bears by the DNA left behind in their footprints. |
In her genetics lab in Moscow, Idaho, Waits and her colleagues have processed melted snow skimmed from polar bear tracks in Utqiagvik, Wainwright and Kaktovik. That broth includes some cells that have allowed scientists to get a DNA fingerprint of a particular polar bear.
Scientists want to find out more about an animal dependent on northern sea ice, a substance that has been steadily decreasing for as long as we’ve had a good look at it. Polar bears use sea ice as a platform for hunting ringed seals, the fatty staple of their diets.
Polar bears of the northern sea ice number from about 20,000 to 30,000 animals, with the waters and shorelines of northern and western Alaska supporting an unknown number. Scientists have identified two populations of polar bears in Alaska: a Chukchi Sea group that also expands to Russia and Beaufort Sea animals that extend into northern Canada.
Scientists want to know more about the numbers of these iconic carnivores, which are coping with a warming climate that is greatly affecting their ephemeral hunting grounds.
“With less sea ice, the bears have to spend more time on land,” Waits said.
More time on land may subject polar bears to more competition for food from brown bears and other animals.
Polar bears hunt on the sea ice north of Utqiagvik, the farthest-north community in the United States. |
For the past several years, a team led by Andy Von Duyke of the North Slope Borough Department of Wildlife Management in Utqiagvik and including biologists with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game has experimented with using sterilized trowels to scrape a thin layer of snow from fresh polar bear footprints.
Waits, who has studied Galapagos bats, red pandas in Nepal and bears of the Andes, showed at her presentation that about half of those polar bear track samples yielded viable nuclear DNA. Nuclear DNA allows scientists to say not only that those molecules came from a polar bear but also which specific bear left the track.
Longtime Utqiagvik resident and retired biologist Craig George said the potential of the DNA-from-bear-tracks method impresses him.
“To think that a polar bear walking across the sea ice leaves enough DNA in its footprint to identify and genotype a bear is astonishing,” he said in an email. “No bears are harassed or even bothered. This can be expanded to other communities, with local hire, and getting locals interested in the science.”
Von Duyke, whose team now has a manuscript in review regarding the method, is cautious not to oversell the polar bear track method at the moment.
“While it’s very exciting, there’s still much work to do before this can be considered a useful tool for management,” said Von Duyke. “But, we’re making incremental progress.”
Since the late 1970s, the University of Alaska Fairbanks Geophysical Institute has provided this column as a public service in cooperation with the UAF research community. Ned Rozell [ned.rozell@alaska.edu] is a science writer for the Geophysical Institute. |
Representations of fact and opinions in comments posted are solely those of the individual posters and do not represent the opinions of Sitnews.
Send a letter to the editor@sitnews.us
SitNews ©2023
Stories In The News
Ketchikan, Alaska
Articles & photographs that appear in SitNews are considered protected by copyright and may not be reprinted without written permission from and payment of any required fees to the proper freelance writers and subscription services.
E-mail your news & photos to editor@sitnews.us
Photographers choosing to submit photographs for publication to SitNews are in doing so granting their permission for publication and for archiving. SitNews does not sell photographs. All requests for purchasing a photograph will be emailed to the photographer.