4.7 Article

Incorporating climate change in a harvest risk assessment for polar bears Ursus maritimus in Southern Hudson Bay

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
Volume 258, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2021.109128

Keywords

Arctic; Climate warming; Habitat loss; Hunting; State-dependent management; Subsistence; Sustainability

Funding

  1. Environment and Climate Change Canada [GCXE20C066]
  2. University of Washington

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Arctic marine mammals are important subsistence resources for Indigenous people, with a focus on understanding the impacts of climate change on sea-ice loss and harvesting activities for ice-dependent species like polar bears. A demographic model was developed for polar bears in Southern Hudson Bay, Canada, using Bayesian methods to estimate parameters and inform a harvest management strategy. The study showed that under different environmental scenarios, maintaining sustainable harvest levels for polar bears requires careful consideration of female harvest rates.
Arctic marine mammals are harvested by Indigenous people for subsistence and are socially and culturally important. For ice-dependent species like the polar bear Ursus maritimus, management and conservation require understanding interactions between harvest and sea-ice loss due to climate change. We developed a demographic model to evaluate harvest risk for polar bears in Southern Hudson Bay, Canada, where the annual ice-free season has increased by approximately one month in recent decades. The model was based on the theta-logistic equation and allowed for density-dependent changes (through carrying capacity [K]) and density-independent changes (through population growth rate [r]). Model parameters were estimated using a Bayesian Monte Carlo method that included capture-recapture, aerial survey, and harvest data. Harvest management followed a statedependent approach under which new estimates of abundance were used to update the harvest level every five years. Under a middle-of-the-road environmental scenario that assumed K and r would decline in proportion to projected sea-ice declines, annual removal of 0.02-0.03 of females resulted in a 0.8 probability of maintaining subpopulation abundance above maximum net productivity level for three polar bear generations (similar to 34 years), our primary criterion for sustainability. Under more pessimistic and optimistic environmental scenarios, comparable female harvest rates were 0.01 and 0.055, respectively. Our coupled modeling-management framework can be used to inform tradeoffs between protection and sustainable use for wildlife populations experiencing habitat loss.

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