If you want to see polar bears it kind of depends on the time of year you intend to do so. In late fall and early winter they hang out around Churchill, Manitoba. That is a good place for a "southerner" to see them as it has an airport and hotels. The bears do wander into the town itself and if you can't afford things like a tundra buggy visit out to the snowfields maybe a couple of taxi rides around the dump would accomplish the same thing. However, the cabbie may not want to get too close and even the buggies avoid that. My advice may lack 'romance' but it all depends on what part of the experience you want. You can also go out onto the tundra on dog teams through certain outfitters etc.
No matter how you do this it is not inexpensive.
There are no polar bears in Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain there.
The polar bear is found in the Arctic only, not Antarctica.
Animals that live in the lowlands of the Hudson Bay are the musk ox and the caribou.
The polar bear is found in the Arctic only, not Antarctica.
Usually, they don't. Foxes are not a big part of a polar bear's diet.
In the circumpolar north in areas where they can hunt seals at openings in the sea ice called leads. There are five nations with polar bears: U.S. (Alaska), Canada, Russia, Greenland, and Norway. Polar bears do not live in Antarctica. Penguins do.
The polar bear has never been a part of the Antarctic wildlife. They evolved in the Arctic only.
Polar bears are in most zoos in every state, but they are only found wild in the Arctic. There is no state that is part of the Arctic Circle.
Polar bears live in the northern part of Alaska. They are near the arctic circle. They are also sometimes seen along the Bering sea. Polar bears have been known to come into towns along the coast, such as into the town of Barrow.
Polar bears do not live in the ocean but do swim some in the Arctic Ocean. They live in the Arctic where they hunt seals on the ice pack.
actually polar bears feet were always big and polar bears were just naturally born like that its part of nature
Sahara desert, Pacific Islands & Antarctica
No. While polar bears do live throughout much of the Arctic, they, like any animal, need to be reasonably close to a food source and the North Pole is much, much too far from their food source (mostly seals) .yes there is polar bears in the north pole
The greatest part of the Antarctic continent is within the Antarctic Circle, so yes, Antarctica is in the Antarctic Polar Region.
The Arctic Circle
Of course it is. They are part of an important ecosystem and the foodchain. Polar bears are majestic animals.