Polar Bear: Inside Nature's Giants Special

Category: News Release

Polar Bear: Inside Nature's Giants Special, Thur 30 June, 9pm, Channel 4

 

The BAFTA-award-winning series returns with a feature-length Arctic special in search of the world's largest land carnivore: the polar bear. The Inside Nature's Giants team of experts join Inuit hunters and scientists studying these iconic creatures off the coast of Greenland.

Polar bears have become a symbol of climate change as their habitat is threatened. But for local subsistence hunters they are vital source of food and resources, as well as being culturally important.

Braving blizzards, freezing seas and temperatures that can plummet to -70C, the team join an international scientific expedition investigating the plight of polar bears.

Danish scientists have been monitoring the levels of toxic chemicals found in polar bears for over a decade. Because these creatures are at the top of the food chain they are especially vulnerable to physiological side effects from the man-made pollutants. There are early signs of changes to their reproductive organs and neurological damage.

The scientists need to collect blood and fresh tissue samples and collaborate with local people who are permitted to hunt a small quota of bears. The hunting is strictly controlled, using traditional methods and avoiding mothers with cubs.

The Inside Nature's Giants experts join the expedition to carry out a more extensive anatomical dissection to explore some of the mysteries of the polar bear, such as how they cope with such a high fat diet of seal blubber without risking heart failure.

Veterinary scientist, Mark Evans, is upset by his first encounter with a freshly-hunted polar bear. Comparative anatomist, Professor Joy Reidenberg, is astonished by the thickness of the polar bear's fur and even more surprised to discover that while its skin is black and its fur translucent, the polar bear still appears white.

And, out on the ice, Simon Watt comes face to face with a foot-long walrus penis bone, crawls inside a recently evacuated polar bear den, and traces their remarkable evolutionary story.

Polar bears evolved from grizzly bears in the last 150,000 years.  But as their habitat melts and their food becomes increasingly contaminated, the polar bears' future looks increasingly precarious. Can they adapt fast enough to survive this rapidly changing world?