Because the glaciers are melting, so they're migrating into Eskimo villages and wiping them out. They are becoming extinct, we need to save the Eskimos.
Yes. There are more polar bears in Alaska because it has not been very effected by global warming and many polar bears in other places have starved and died populations have decreased by 50%
As cool as polar bears are, an encounter with a wild one could be fatal.
One species that is increasing in numbers is the polar bear, despite the fact that most people think they are all dying. A report published by the World Conservation Union in 2013 said that there were about 4,200 more polar bears in 2013 than there were in 2001.
Despite perceptions, polar bear attacks are relatively rare. It has been noted by polar bear expert, Tom Smith, that in the last 125 years, there have been 8 fatalities in Canada and two in Alaska.
According to records compiled by James Wilder, a US Forest Service biologist, there were only 20 fatal polar bear attacks (out of 73 total attacks) between 1870 and 2014
* 17 polar bears die every year acording to average
Tigers and polar bears.
the melting of polar ice caps is one proof that the world temperature is indeed increasing.
After decades of increasing numbers, the polar bear population is fairly stable now, at around 25000 animals.
As of now, the polar bear is a vulnerable species, not on the endangered species list, as some populations are increasing.
Actually, the polar bear's numbers are higher today than in recent memory, with a population of around 25000.
The increasing order of electronegativity in bonds is lowest for nonpolar covalent bonds, followed by polar covalent bonds, and highest for ionic bonds. In nonpolar covalent bonds, the electronegativity difference between atoms is minimal, whereas in polar covalent bonds, there is a moderate electronegativity difference leading to partial charges. Ionic bonds have the highest electronegativity difference, resulting in complete transfer of electrons.