Remote cameras were deployed in the Arctic mountains across nearly a decade; Valuable footage of moms and cubs emerging from ...
The remote cameras have captured the moment a mother pokes her head out from her den to see if the world is safe enough for her little ones.
CREDIT: Polar Bears International / Norwegian Polar Institute / San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance. Polar bear mothers in the Arctic generally give birth in early January around the start of the new ...
Polar bear cubs were seen taking first steps as scientists study the effects of climate change on their development. Timelapse footage shows two arctic bear cubs and their mother wandering through the ...
Credit: Simon Gee/Kt Miller/Steven C Amstrup/Polar Bears International/Cover Images Researchers have revealed astonishing new insights into the lives of polar bear cubs by studying them as they emerge ...
After nearly a decade of trying to learn details about polar bears’ denning habits in the Arctic, researchers have captured cubs emerging from dens on video for the first time. The footage was ...
The extremely rare footage was captured by remote cameras deployed in the Arctic mountains for nearly a decade.
the Norwegian Polar Institute and the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance show the bears and their dens. The denning period is the most vulnerable time in a polar bear’s life — and less than 50% of cubs ...
Polar bear cubs are born about as helpless as human babies ... The study was conducted with researchers from Polar Bears ...
Past research has established that polar bear cubs’ odds of survival are impacted by how long their mothers spend denning.
Female polar bears give birth in December or early January when the cubs are blind, hairless and weigh just 0.5 kg.