home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT2044>
- <title>
- Sep. 16, 1991: In Search of the Great White Bear
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 16, 1991 Can This Man Save Our Schools?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATURE, Page 70
- In Search of the Great White Bear
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A handful of hearty U.S. government researchers brave dangerous
- Alaskan ice and cold to track and protect elusive arctic polar
- bears
- </p>
- <p>By Ted Gup/St. Lawrence
- </p>
- <p> Above a glistening ice pack in the Bering Sea, a helicopter
- stalks a polar bear, following paw prints in the snow. The bear
- suddenly appears as a hint of movement, white against white,
- padding its way across the ice. The helicopter descends, hovering
- over the frightened creature, and a shotgun slides out the
- window, firing a tranquilizer dart into the massive fur-covered
- rump. Minutes pass. The bear shows no effects. The helicopter
- drops for a second shot. This time the bear stands its ground,
- and the pilot, fearing the animal is about to lunge for the
- aircraft, abruptly noses the chopper skyward. He remembers how a
- 9-ft. bear once swiped at a helicopter's skids, shredding the
- pontoons.
- </p>
- <p> But this bear finally staggers, then stretches out on the
- ice like a giant sheep dog. The helicopter sets down, and
- biologist Gerald Garner advances, kicking the bear in the behind
- to make sure it is immobilized. A swivel of its head and a
- flashing of teeth warn Garner that there is plenty of defiance
- left in this 272-kg (600-lb.) carnivore. With a syringe, he
- injects more drug. At last the head droops, and Garner can
- proceed. Around the bear's neck he fastens a vinyl collar
- containing a computer that will send data to a satellite,
- allowing scientists to keep track of the animal for a year. By
- the time Bear No. 6,886 raises its head, the helicopter is
- safely aloft.
- </p>
- <p> Those tense moments were all in a day's work for Garner,
- one of a handful of hearty scientists, pilots and technicians
- taking part in a ground-breaking and hazardous $700,000 annual
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service study of arctic polar bear
- populations. In an effort to follow the fate of more than 600
- bears since the program's inception, the researchers have braved
- wind-chill factors of -59 degrees C (-75 degrees F), spartan
- living conditions, the constant threat of mechanical failures
- and the peril of being stranded on an ice pack. Last October two
- government biologists and a pilot vanished while tracking polar
- bears from the air. Officials believe their helicopter plunged
- under the ice, muffling their emergency signal. Other
- researchers have been rescued after a wakeful night on an ice
- floe.
- </p>
- <p> "This is a very unforgiving environment," says mechanic
- Lester Hampton. "The biggest danger is getting caught in bad
- weather and running low on fuel. The second biggest danger is
- having a mechanical failure and having to put in out there. The
- third biggest danger is that after you do, the bears are going
- to come in and try to eat you up--and that's if you don't
- freeze to death. If you go in that water, it's a done deal--you're dead."
- </p>
- <p> Two decades ago, big-game hunters, not researchers,
- pursued polar bears from the air and on the ground. A thousand
- carcasses a year littered the Arctic. The number of ice bears
- dwindled, and there was worldwide concern that the animal might
- be hunted to extinction. Today the bears' recovery is one of the
- success stories of conservation. Worldwide, polar bears now
- number as least 20,000, all of which are protected by a 1976
- international agreement. Alaska has 3,000 to 5,000 polar bears,
- and only the state's Native Americans can hunt them--and
- strictly for subsistence purposes.
- </p>
- <p> The Fish and Wildlife Service project is part of a
- continuing effort to advance biologists' understanding of the
- polar bear and assess potential new threats against the
- creature. Researchers, for example, are most concerned about the
- impact of increasing oil and gas exploration in the Arctic.
- Another concern comes from the Soviet Union, which has proposed
- to lift its 35-year-old ban on polar bear hunting. Many of
- western Alaska's bears migrate as much as 1,609 km (1,000 miles)
- to set up winter dens in the Soviet Union. U.S. and Soviet
- biologists are working together to find out how many bears
- migrate in this fashion to ensure that one country does not
- undermine the conservation efforts of the other.
- </p>
- <p> In search of the bears, the Fish and Wildlife Service has
- dispatched scientists to some of the most remote regions of the
- U.S. One expedition earlier this year was based on St. Lawrence
- Island's desolate expanse of tundra and mountains rising out of
- the Bering Sea. In Savoonga, an Eskimo village on the edge of
- the frozen sea, researchers lived in a bunkhouse with no running
- water and snow drifts above the windowsills. "We're stretching
- everything to the limit in terms of safety to accomplish these
- research objectives," says Larry Pank of the Alaska Wildlife
- Research Center. "We have a real interest in ensuring we have
- a polar bear population at the same or similar levels 50 or 100
- years from now."
- </p>
- <p> Many of the pilots and mechanics have Vietnam combat
- experience. "Most of these guys have been shot out of the air
- a time or two. That's valuable experience if you have a
- mechanical problem," says biologist Garner. Pilot Paul Walters
- flew low-level reconnaissance in Vietnam. Before taking off to
- track polar bears, he tells any neophyte on board that if the
- chopper crashes, survivors should kick out the glass, retrieve
- the orange survival bag and activate the emergency transmitter.
- </p>
- <p> "Risk goes with the territory," says biologist Tom McCabe,
- who lost a third of his arm to shrapnel in Vietnam. If another
- bear charges while he is examining a bear, he will try to scare
- it off with Teflon bullets. If that fails, he has a shotgun and a .44 Magnum pistol in a shoulder holster. "The polar bear is the
- ultimate predator," he says. "He doesn't seem to fear
- anything." Alaska polar bear expert Jack Lentfer remembers how
- a bear that was thought to have been tranquilized suddenly
- reared up and chased him. When the bear was almost upon him, a
- colleague shot the animal. ``It would have chewed me up," says
- Lentfer.
- </p>
- <p> "You develop a fatalistic attitude. If something happens,
- it happens," says Garner. He has handled 250 polar bears--and
- 450 grizzly bears. At times he resembles a bear. He stands 6 ft.
- 2 in., weighs 225-plus lbs., chomps cigars through a wild beard
- and is girded in layer upon layer of insulated clothing, topped
- off with a beaver hat. He has little time for worry. Mornings
- he contacts Anchorage for the latest satellite fixes on his
- bears. During the day, he tracks and collars the animals. Each
- is subjected to an exhaustive exam. A tooth is removed to
- determine age. Vials of blood are drawn for immunological and
- genetic study. A hole is punched in the ear for an
- identification tag. A number is tattooed on the bear's upper
- lip. A snippet of fur is cut. At night Garner spins bear blood
- in a centrifuge, readies his darts and cleans the barrels of his
- shotguns.
- </p>
- <p> Any hardship is offset by the chance to work with mammals
- as charismatic as they are inaccessible. "This is as good as it
- gets," says Garner. "I'm surprised people would pay me to do
- this." Ian Stirling of the Canadian Wildlife Service sums up the
- admiration felt by most of the bears' scientific followers: "The
- polar bear is the Arctic incarnate. When you watch one
- sauntering across the ice and it's 30 below, he looks as
- comfortable as someone in a pair of shorts on the beach in
- Hawaii."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-