At the end of March there were two polar bear incidents on the same day in Svalbard, where one bear trashed a holiday cabin. Think a door or a window can keep out a polar bear? Think again!

“Polar bears continue to be described as ‘canaries in the coal mine’ for the effects of human-caused climate change, but the evidence shows they are far from being a highly-sensitive indicator species.” Susan Crockford, 24 February 2021
You’ll find the evidence I allude to above – backed up by references to the peer-reviewed literature – in my many publications (Crockford 2015; 2017; 2019, 2020, 2021). My open-access research paper from 2017 has been downloaded more than 6,000 times and despite this being an online forum for legitimate scientific critique, none has been offered. My comprehensive polar bear science book released just two years ago (see below) has a 4.7/5.0 star rating on Amazon, with 132 reviews so far.
For recent blog post examples of the evidence that polar bears are thriving despite profound summer sea ice loss, see this discussion about the many contradictions that exist for claims that sea ice declines have caused harm to polar bear health and survival and this review of the evidence that less summer sea ice has meant more food for polar bears.
For those who haven’t seen it, I’ve copied below the preface from The Polar Bear Catastrophe That Never Happened. This book is an antidote to the emotional blackmail coming at the public from all sides by journalists, polar bear specialists, and elite influencers like David Attenborough.
Continue reading
Comments Off on Choose verifiable facts over emotional narratives on polar bear conservation
Posted in Book promotion, Conservation Status, Population, Sea ice habitat, Summary
Tagged activist scientists, computer models, facts, lonliest polar bear, polar bear, science, sea ice, status
From Tom Harris at ICSC Canada: In ‘State of the Polar Bear Report 2020’, zoologist Dr. Susan Crockford writes, “in 2020, even though summer sea ice declined to the second lowest levels since 1979, there were no reports of widespread starvation of bears, acts of cannibalism, or drowning deaths that might suggest bears were having trouble surviving the ice-free season.”
22 March 2021 [1:34]
Comments Off on Polar bears are an environmental success story: short video from ICSC Canada
Posted in Life History, Sea ice habitat
Tagged ice-free season, polar bear, primary productivity, sea ice
From Tom Harris at ICSC Canada: Polar bears are nowhere near as sensitive to declining sea ice than originally thought. In fact, their population is now three times higher than in the 1960s. 17 March 2021 [1:28]
Comments Off on Polar bears are thriving: an ICSC Canada short video
Posted in Conservation Status, Population, Summary
Tagged polar bear, population size, sea ice, thriving, video
In early February this year, sea ice was much lower than usual along the Labrador coast and virtually non-existent in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, which are two important pupping habitats for North Atlantic harp seals. The picture would have been very bleak for harp seal pups and the Davis Strait polar bears that depend on them for food if ice hadn’t expanded and thickened by early March – but it did. Past experience suggests that harp seals that usually whelp in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, where ice is still well below average this year, will move to ice off Southern Labrador (‘the Front’) to have their pups.
Comments Off on Will low sea ice threaten harp seals & polar bears on Canada’s East Coast this year?
Posted in Life History, Sea ice habitat
Tagged Gulf of St. Lawrence, harp seal, Labrador, Newfoundland, polar bear, prey, pups, sea ice, whelping
A couple weeks ago I had a fabulous chat with Daniel Vitalis from Wildfed about a wide range of topics, including my work on polar bears and domestication as a process of speciation. The podcast went live this morning – have a listen here (also copied below), I think you’ll enjoy it. One hour, 36 minutes.
Comments Off on Podcast with WildFed about polar bears and domestication as speciation
Posted in Summary
Tagged academic freedom, attacks, domestication, hunting, interview, podcast, polar bear, sea ice, speciation, thyroid hormone
Canadian polar bear guide Dennis Compayre has spent more than 20 years around Churchill, Manitoba, and his simple words in a 19 February CBC article promoting an upcoming CBC documentary special are clear: Western Hudson Bay (WH) polar bears are currently thriving.
Compayre does not appear to be a global warming skeptic: he seems to accept the prophesy that the future is grim for these bears. However, if he hadn’t I’m certain he wouldn’t have gotten the job as guide for this Nature of Things documentary, hosted by Canada’s ultimate carbon dioxide doom-master David Suzuki. However, he is at least willing to tell the truth about what has been happening over the last four years (the time it took to film this documentary) with WH polar bears. Continue reading
Comments Off on Local guide says W Hudson Bay bears have recently ‘put on a lot of fat and are healthy’
Posted in Conservation Status, Life History, Population, Sea ice habitat
Tagged caribou, Eemian interglacial, eggs, extinction, geese, ice-free Arctic, Kingdom of the Bears, Nature of Things, polar bear, sea ice, survival, terrestrial foods
A review of my latest short novel from the UK really made me proud: if only Amazon offered a ‘geological fiction’ category, that is what I would have chosen. Tsunami meets sea ice meets polar bear…
First Class Geological Fiction.
A clever, imaginative, well crafted and well written story focused on a natural phenomenon which has become all too familiar to us – especially those in the Far East – in the last 16 years. But the story contains a twist, which is perfectly possible, indeed likely to occur in the long term, which few have possibly thought of before. The book also reflects and bears witness to the author’s detailed and extensive knowledge and experience of Arctic conditions and wildlife.
The story is a sort of geological fiction, and the action takes place on Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia – a place, by chance, already known for its spectacular geological curiosities. The book is quite short, and once into it, I found it hard to put down.
h/t B.G
Comments Off on UPHEAVAL review: ‘First class geological fiction’
Posted in Book review, Sea ice habitat
Tagged Cape Breton, geological fiction, maritimes, polar bear, sea ice, tsunami
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