Community-led non-invasive polar bear monitoring in the Eeyou Marine Region of James Bay, Canada: insights on distribution and body condition during the ice-free season

Author:

Langwieder Alexandra1ORCID,Coxon Angela2,Louttit Natasha3,Varty Stephanie2,Boulanger Felix2,Diamond Sanford23,Lameboy John23,Jolly Anderson4,Natawapineskum George23,Okimaw Derek23,Humphries Murray M.1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Indigenous Peoples' Nutrition and Environment, McGill University, Macdonald Campus, 21111 Lakeshore Rd, Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, QC H9X 3V9, Canada

2. Eeyou Marine Region Wildlife Board, P.O. Box 580, 6 Chief Isaiah Salt Rd, Waskaganish, QC J0M 1R0, Canada

3. Regional Cree Trappers’ Association, 158 Opinaca Street, P.O. Box 250, Eastmain, QC J0M 1W0, Canada

4. Cree Nation of Waskaganish, Eeyou Istchee, Canada

Abstract

Wildlife conservation is informed by detailed understanding of species demographics, habitat use, and interactions with environmental drivers. Challenges to collecting this information, particularly in remote places and on widely ranging species, can contribute to data deficiencies that detract from conservation status assessment and the effectiveness of management actions. Polar bears in James Bay face rapidly changing environmental conditions at the southern edge of their global range, but studying their ecology has been limited by community concerns about the methods typically used in polar bear research. Using a community-led and non-invasive approach, we deployed hair snare and camera trap sampling stations across 400 km of the Eeyou Marine Region in eastern James Bay. Stations collected >100 hair samples and thousands of photographs in one eight-week period that allowed for a novel investigation of this population’s distribution and body condition during the ice-free season. Polar bears were in average to above average body condition, and model selection of detections at stations revealed distance to mainland as a significant predictor of polar bear presence. Given its high potential, we suggest community-based monitoring using this method become a standard protocol to expand the scope and local leadership of polar bear research across the North.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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