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      What to eat now? Shifts in polar bear diet during the ice-free season in western Hudson Bay

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          Abstract

          Under current climate trends, spring ice breakup in Hudson Bay is advancing rapidly, leaving polar bears ( Ursus maritimus) less time to hunt seals during the spring when they accumulate the majority of their annual fat reserves. For this reason, foods that polar bears consume during the ice-free season may become increasingly important in alleviating nutritional stress from lost seal hunting opportunities. Defining how the terrestrial diet might have changed since the onset of rapid climate change is an important step in understanding how polar bears may be reacting to climate change. We characterized the current terrestrial diet of polar bears in western Hudson Bay by evaluating the contents of passively sampled scat and comparing it to a similar study conducted 40 years ago. While the two terrestrial diets broadly overlap, polar bears currently appear to be exploiting increasingly abundant resources such as caribou ( Rangifer tarandus) and snow geese ( Chen caerulescens caerulescens) and newly available resources such as eggs. This opportunistic shift is similar to the diet mixing strategy common among other Arctic predators and bear species. We discuss whether the observed diet shift is solely a response to a nutritional stress or is an expression of plastic foraging behavior.

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          Effects of Earlier Sea Ice Breakup on Survival and Population Size of Polar Bears in Western Hudson Bay

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            Ancient Hybridization and an Irish Origin for the Modern Polar Bear Matriline

            Polar bears (Ursus maritimus) are among those species most susceptible to the rapidly changing arctic climate, and their survival is of global concern. Despite this, little is known about polar bear species history. Future conservation strategies would significantly benefit from an understanding of basic evolutionary information, such as the timing and conditions of their initial divergence from brown bears (U. arctos) or their response to previous environmental change. We used a spatially explicit phylogeographic model to estimate the dynamics of 242 brown bear and polar bear matrilines sampled throughout the last 120,000 years and across their present and past geographic ranges. Our results show that the present distribution of these matrilines was shaped by a combination of regional stability and rapid, long-distance dispersal from ice-age refugia. In addition, hybridization between polar bears and brown bears may have occurred multiple times throughout the Late Pleistocene. The reconstructed matrilineal history of brown and polar bears has two striking features. First, it is punctuated by dramatic and discrete climate-driven dispersal events. Second, opportunistic mating between these two species as their ranges overlapped has left a strong genetic imprint. In particular, a likely genetic exchange with extinct Irish brown bears forms the origin of the modern polar bear matriline. This suggests that interspecific hybridization not only may be more common than previously considered but may be a mechanism by which species deal with marginal habitats during periods of environmental deterioration. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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              Nuclear genomic sequences reveal that polar bears are an old and distinct bear lineage.

              Recent studies have shown that the polar bear matriline (mitochondrial DNA) evolved from a brown bear lineage since the late Pleistocene, potentially indicating rapid speciation and adaption to arctic conditions. Here, we present a high-resolution data set from multiple independent loci across the nuclear genomes of a broad sample of polar, brown, and black bears. Bayesian coalescent analyses place polar bears outside the brown bear clade and date the divergence much earlier, in the middle Pleistocene, about 600 (338 to 934) thousand years ago. This provides more time for polar bear evolution and confirms previous suggestions that polar bears carry introgressed brown bear mitochondrial DNA due to past hybridization. Our results highlight that multilocus genomic analyses are crucial for an accurate understanding of evolutionary history.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ecol Evol
                Ecol Evol
                ece3
                Ecology and Evolution
                Blackwell Publishing Ltd
                2045-7758
                2045-7758
                September 2013
                28 August 2013
                : 3
                : 10
                : 3509-3523
                Affiliations
                Division of Vertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History 79th Street and Central Park West, New York, NY, 10024-5192
                Author notes
                Linda J. Gormezano, Division of Vertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, 79 th Street and Central Park West, New York, NY 10024-5192. Tel: 516-909-5598; Fax: 212-769-5759; E-mail: ljgorm@ 123456amnh.org

                Funding Information Financial support for this work was provided primarily by the Hudson Bay Project, but also the American Museum of Natural History – Theodore Roosevelt Memorial Grant (#0655), Arctic Institute of North America – Grants-In-Aid, Churchill Northern Studies Centre – Northern Research Fund, City University of New York and Manitoba Conservation – Sustainable Development Innovations Fund (#27070).

                Article
                10.1002/ece3.740
                3797495
                24223286
                f4d87ed9-6e8a-4b82-87d3-f3b1dbea0232
                © 2013 Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

                Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2.5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.

                History
                : 27 May 2013
                : 15 July 2013
                : 24 July 2013
                Categories
                Original Research

                Evolutionary Biology
                climate change,diet,feces,polar bears,scat,terrestrial,ursus maritimus,western hudson bay
                Evolutionary Biology
                climate change, diet, feces, polar bears, scat, terrestrial, ursus maritimus, western hudson bay

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