Polar Bear Status & Population

 / ©: © D. Vongraven and E. Richardson, 2011: Biodiversity - Status and Trends of Polar Bears [in Arctic Report Card 2011],
© © D. Vongraven and E. Richardson, 2011: Biodiversity - Status and Trends of Polar Bears [in Arctic Report Card 2011],

Adopt a Polar Bear

 / ©: WWF-Canada
Give the gift of a symbolic adoption. Help protect polar bears!

Current bear populations

  • 20-25,000 polar bears worldwide
  • Aproximately 19 distinct sub-populations (see above map)
  • 60% of these are in Canada

Status by country

Timeline of polar bear conservation

Before 1973

  • Several polar bear populations were decimated by unsustainable hunting by European, Russian and American hunters and trappers from the 1600s right through to the mid-1970's.

1973

  • Canada, the United States, Denmark, Norway and the former USSR signed the International Agreement on the Conservation of Polar Bears and their Habitat, strictly regulating commercial hunting.
  • The US Government classified the Polar Bear under its Endangered Species Act (ESA).

2005

  • The polar bear was upgraded from Least Concern to Vulnerable by the the IUCN Polar Bear Specialist Group, based on the likelihood of a decline in the total global polar bear population of more than 30% within the next 35 to 50 years.

Today

  • Today, polar bears are among the few large carnivores that are still found in roughly their original habitat and range--and in some places, in roughly their natural numbers.
  • Although most populations have returned to healthy numbers, there are differences between the populations. Some are stable, some seem to be increasing, and some are decreasing due to various pressures. A 2011 study found that 7 of 19 populations were declining.
  • Some populations are still harvested quite heavily, and their status is uncertain.

In the future

Polar Bear Tracker

Polar bear Mother and young Churchill, Canada / ©: François PIERREL / WWF-Canon
Follow radio-collared bears as they explore their sea-ice habitat in the Hudson Bay.