Polar Bears 600,000 Years Old and More Vulnerable to Climate Change Than Previously Thought


Polar bears, like this mother and cubs on one of the few remaining pieces drift ice in the Barents Sea in late July, underwent speciation 600,000 years ago, making them more susceptible to climate change. (Photo ©
Florian Schulz)

With melting sea ice, thawing permafrost, and disappearing glaciers, the Arctic is one of the most vulnerable regions to anthropogenic climate change. The area’s annual average temperature has increased at almost twice the rate of the rest of the world in the last few decades and, as the Arctic climate warms and snow cover shrinks, less heat is reflected back into the atmosphere, hastening the process. Arctic creatures like the caribou, horned puffins, and the polar bear will have to adapt to this widespread warming. While scientists previously believed polar bears were an example of a rapid adaptation to temperature changes, a new genetic analysis shows the species diverged from their closest relatives about 600,000 years ago — suggesting it will be more difficult for polar bears to adjust to climate change.

Looking at the nuclear genomes of 19 polar, 18 brown, and seven black bears around the world, scientists determined polar bears diverged from from a common ancestor of the brown bear about 600,000 years ago.

“We found that, when looking at the nuclear genetic loci, polar bears were genetically much more distinct than previous studies had indicated,” explains lead author Frank Hailer. In previous genetic analysis of polar bears, scientists mainly looked at mitochondrial DNA data and determined that the species was only about 150,000 years old. But Hailer and his colleagues’ technique found polar bears were almost five times older than suggested by mtDNA, which is only inherited in the maternal line.


Polar bear walking on a frozen pond with blowing snow near Cape Churchill, Canada. (Photo courtesy of
Hansruedi Weyrich)

“Now, looking at single (short) pieces of DNA obviously cannot tell you the whole story — it's like reading only a few pages of a book,” Hailer says of the mtDNA analysis.

Though the mtDNA studies showed the polar bears were younger, the authors of the new study, published in the April 20 issue of Science, explain this discrepancy with past hybridization between polar and brown bears. After initial speciation, polar bears may have come into contact with brown bears again because of past climate fluctuations at some point in the late Pleistocene. But the nuclear genome, which Hailer and his colleagues studied, seems to be unaffected by hybridization. miochondrial DNA studied previously is inherited maternally, while nuclear loci are inherited from both the father and mother.

“Those nuclear markers are independently inherited, and thus yield independent information — stories, if you wish — about the evolutionary past,” he says.

The new “story” shows polar bears had more time to adapt to cold climates after diverging from their closest relatives. When polar and brown bears diverged into distinct species, global temperatures were at a long-term low, according to the Pleistocene climate record. Though this could be coincidental, Hailer and the study’s authors believe the evolutionary origin of the polar bear and the global climate cooling during the Pleistocene are linked.


Female polar bear with her cub on a frozen lake near Cape Churchill, Canada. (Photo courtesy of
Hansruedi Weyrich)

“That idea, that polar bears were able to colonize and adapt to the arctic within about 150,000 years, would have rendered polar bears an exception among mammals,” Hailer says. The species’ new age appears to make more sense on an evolutionary timescale, though it is a troubling reminder that polar bears — and indeed other species — cannot adapt quickly to climate change.

But Hailer also adds polar bears also face other human-caused risks.

“Polar bears are thus losing their main habitat, sea ice,” Hailer says. “When polar bears then instead are reaching the land habitats, they encounter human settlements…and conflicts with humans imply that many polar bears are killed each year.” Likewise, increasing chemical pollution can negatively influence polar bear reproduction.

“Should polar bears indeed go extinct this time, we would have to ask ourselves what our role in it was. We could not just simply blame the climate,” Hailer says.

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Comments

Inspiring information for us

Inspiring information for us new into this realm. Will visit again soon so keep it up.

Excellent information on

Excellent information on polar bear and their vulnerability to climatic changes.

Global warming is real. Its

Global warming is real. Its here. Its happening. Lets not ignore it.

The polar bear population

The polar bear population will unfortunately rely on the humans to maintain their numbers. Lets pray we can save them.

Polar bears cannot be left

Polar bears cannot be left to face the fates that us humans render them. Please be aware.

I want to thank you for this

I want to thank you for this informative read, I really appreciate sharing this great post. Keep up your work.

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Very useful information. I

Very useful information. I was very pleased. Thanks

To bad that this specie is

To bad that this specie is very affected by the global warming. We should make a new strategy to protect that area.

I know what you mean, but we

I know what you mean, but we can not change so many things. I am sure that we can save them somehow.

The new “story” shows

The new “story” shows polar bears had more time to adapt to cold climates after diverging from their closest relatives

Somehow human beings with

Somehow human beings with feet of clay have got to find a way to do something more and do it somehow better than things are being done in our time. Inasmuch as humankind’s reckless per capita overconsumption, relentless large-scale overproduction and unregulated overpopulation activities worldwide can be seen threatening future human well being and environmental health, perhaps people who are so fortunate as to possess the scientific knowledge, ‘the lights’ and the wherewithall to realize and respond ably to what is happening on our watch, have a duty to warn the human community of the ‘ecological cliff’ toward which all of us are madly careening. As things appear now, the masters of the universe and their many minions are denying science and failing humanity. Are we witnessing the greatest failure of nerve in human history at the worst possible moment: when everything (i.e. life as we know it and Earth as a fit place for human habitation) is at stake?

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I get very sad when I

I get very sad when I remember that this kind will be extincted very soon if we didn't move! It lives million of years to die in the twentieth one century! thanks for this blog, I wish to see a lot of it to let people know that Polar Bears are going to extincted if we didn't make serious actions

We need do something to keep

We need do something to keep them from extinction. Your action today make their future 

 I agree with your comments

 I agree with your comments

Good job, really have to

Good job, really have to practice the best methods to care for our planet thinking about a better future for our children, thank you!

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To put it mildly

To put it mildly