Polar bears might go extinct because of global warming. Global warming causes the ice to melt, and the polar bears die from starvation. Some polar bears are forced to swim for a really long time and when they finally find snow that can support them, their to tired to catch prey.
Some ways you can help:
-shut off lights when you leave a room; buy the green lights
-shut off the TV before you leave the house/ when you go to sleep
-recycle bottles, cans, milk jugs, paper, news paper
-unplug things from outlets when not in use
-buy green stuff ( toilet paper, cleaning products, light bulbs ect.)
-don't leave the tap on when you brushing your teeth
Those are just some ways you can be green!
If they go extinct, it'll be 100%
They would go extinct.
Sometimes polar bears go in heat
Polar bears still live in the same habitat.
dinosaurs , flying foxes , manatees , buluga whales , polar bears , seals and so on. ( for more info please go to www.exstinct.com.
No polar bears son't go around in groups. The cubs go around with their mother, and the father leaves them
Well If global warming keeps on going then the ice at the North and South pole will just keep on melting. So Polar bears and penguins will probably be extinct then. They might go extinct because they need to get back to land to rest and eat the fish they caught. If there is no land they cant do this. So they might stop swimming and drown. yeah these are the only ones I can think of.
Because bears are part of the ecosystem and removing them messes up everything. Bears control the amount of fish or seals in the water. If bears go extinct, seals will take over the water, eating all the fish. When all the fish are gone, the seals will die of starvation. If the bears go extinct, more animals will go extinct too.
If you want pictures of polar bears just go to google images and type in polar bears and pick the one you like.
no, not unless you go to the zoo
yes
Polar bears are found in the North Pole. If one wanted to see interesting pictures of Polar bears, one can go to The Amazing Image, Polar Bears International, National Geographic and NWF to find good photographs.