Manitoba

Hunt quotas cut for southern population of polar bears

Inuit and Cree hunters have agreed to slash their polar bear quotas for Canada's southernmost population of the mighty Arctic predator.
Polar Bear Mother and Her Cubs, Hudson Bay, Canada, 1999. Scientists say there are about 900 polar bears in the population living in northern Quebec, Ontario and southern Nunavut. That number has been stable for years. ((Norbert Rosing/National Geographic/Christie’s Images))
Inuit and Cree hunters have agreed to slash their polar bear  quotas for Canada's southernmost population of the mighty Arctic  predator.

Scientists say the old allowable harvest of 60 bears in the  southern Hudson Bay region was unsustainable.

But Inuit say they 
agreed to cut their hunt back to 45 mostly over fears of an  international backlash against Canada's management policy.

"We keep saying there's too many bears out there but the  biologists don't seem to understand that," said Paul Irngaut of  Nunavut Tunngavik Inc., the group that administers the Nunavut land  claim.
 
He said hunters feared that if they hadn't agreed to reduce the  southern Hudson Bay hunt, Environment Canada would ban the export of  skins from those particular bears in an effort to prevent the entire  trade from being forbidden.
   
The last two meetings of the Convention on International Trade in  Endangered Species saw U.S.-led initiatives to ban exports and imports of polar bear parts. Another such attempt is expected at the  group's next meeting in 2016.
   
Scientists say there are about 900 polar bears in the population  living in northern Quebec, Ontario and southern Nunavut. That number  has been stable for years.

But 
polar bear biologist Andrew Derocher at the University of  Alberta said as climate change melts sea ice the bears use as  seal-hunting platforms, their health is deteriorating.
 
"The bears get in poorer condition over time. They get a bit  smaller. Then what you tend to see is reproduction and survival  rates tend to decline. Then the population declines.
   
"There's no indication right now (this) population is in serious  jeopardy. But the concerns we have is that nobody that I was aware  of thought that a harvest of 60 bears was even remotely sustainable ."
 
Inuit hunters have long disagreed with biologists on whether bear  numbers in this region and others in the Arctic are in decline.

"It's completely opposite to what Inuit have been saying and  seeing on the land," said Irngaut .
 
Population counts can be controversial because polar bear surveys  are expensive to mount and conducted infrequently. When they are  done, the bears are hard to spot.

Derocher welcomed news the southern Hudson Bay hunt is to shrink  by 25 per cent. But even that reduced quota may still be too high,  he said.

"Do we have the monitoring in place to assess the population age  structure and the recruitment and reproductive rates? I would argue  we do not."

The current quota is to remain in place until 2016.

On average, about 500 polar bears are hunted every year in  Canada. About two-thirds of the world's 20,000 to 25,000 bears live  in 13 population groups in the Northwest Territories, Nunavut,  Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec.