字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント Climate change is the biggest problem facing polar bears, and as sea ice has diminished over the last three decades we’re seeing a very marked response in polar bear populations. Bears are suffering because of loss of sea ice. The study that I’m doing out of BYU is looking at the potential interaction of bears and people. I go up to Alaska in the wintertime and monitor maternal polar bear dens. When you’re dealing with a white animal in a white landscape buried inside of a cave you have an obvious problem of finding these animals. When we first start out we go up there and we find the dens with forward-looking infrared. There she is. I can see her moving. Do you see the two ears and the nose looking at us, you can see her. . . There she is. She’s looking out. And we go and we set up these kind of self-contained camera units and they just film the bears 24/7. At their den sites some of them have a meter of snow over them. They’re so powerful they just arch against the roof and they’ll shove a meter-thick block of snow up in the air. You’ll see it come up and then it will tip over and their head comes out like a periscope on a submarine. When they first come out the mothers will, they rub all around on their back like a dog and they wriggle and they’re cleaning their fur on the snow, and the little cubs will roly poly play around on the ground. The mothers just sit there and scan the terrain. There’s a couple of times where they’ve noticed our cameras. This past year we had one where they just kind of came up and sniffed it and we got a nice closeup of the cub’s face. When the bears abandon the den we’ll crawl in and take measurements and just kind of see, you know, what a polar bear den is and it gives us a better idea of what they’re doing in there. To the folks back home what’s a bear den like? It’s got an odor to it. Ugh. That's the first noticeable thing? Yeah. We’ve got some good scratch marks back here. Well the benefit of this kind of long-term, ongoing study is we can see how their behavior changes over time as the sea ice changes. We see bears moving off of sea ice, coming on to terrestrial areas in order to have their cubs, and so now we have more humans than ever, more bears than ever all jammed in the same zone. So we’re kind of in there trying to sort it out to let them have their lives as undisturbed as possible. I go up and speak on behalf of Polar Bear International. Nobody’s predicting that they’ll go extinct. What they are saying is that their overall numbers will be diminished. Sea ice has a physical relationship with the planet’s temperature and if we can reduce CO2 we’ll see a corresponding response in the sea ice. There’s no question that we can do things to lessen our individual impact on the planet. Whether polar bears are at stake or not this has always been good counsel.
B1 中級 米 BYUの研究によると、薄い氷の上のホッキョクグマ (BYU Studies Show Polar Bears on Thin Ice) 702 32 羅述芳 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語