NEWS ALERT!
I'm dancing for joy and sharing the news. I just received this note in my email in box on December 21. What a wonderful holiday gift to have received. SPREAD THE GOOD NEWS! If you have not yet joined our sister network -- Ursa Freedom Project -- please join and help end the suffering of all bear species. Six of the world's eight bear species are perched on the brink of extinction. Ursa Freedom Project works to conserve them… Continue
Posted by A~KC Molloy on December 21, 2009 at 1:22pm
The white colour phase has long been recognized by the aboriginal peoples of the Northwest Coast. In 'Somewhere Between' (Carter 19**), there is an account of the Tsimpshian legend of the white bear. The Gitksan and N'ishga also held 'Moksgm'ol' in high regard (Robinson 1991). Ethnologists Frans Boas and Maurius Barbeau recorded stories of white bears being associcated with great hunting prowess and with helping people faced with hunger (Robinson… Continue
Posted by Dwayne Franks on December 27, 2008 at 8:30am
The Kermode bear (Ursus americanus kermodei) is a rare and elusive subspecies of the North American black bear in which approximately one in every 10 bears is white or cream-coloured.
The Kermode bear is endemic only to the unique temperate rainforest region off the Pacific coast of British Columbia, Canada. Biologists estimate a population of 1,200 kermode bears, of which less than 200 are white phased. These white phased bears are known locally… Continue
Posted by Dwayne Franks on December 27, 2008 at 8:28am
As the bear clan waited outside of the Den, the Elder stood up and watched the skies. "What are you looking at?", Kato asked?
In his deep penetrating voice, Elder said, "Look Kato!" Kato looked up where Elder was pointing and saw a flash travel through the heavens.
"What does this mean, Elder, said Kato.
"It means the Bear Prophecy of our Ancestors has arrived, Kato."
At that moment, The Eagle Clan flew overhead, screeching,
"KAKO, The International Bear of Peace and… Continue
They're amazing, one can appreciate the hard work that is done, in order to keep such beauty there. A handful of Staffs dress-up in Period Clothes, it's great.
Click on the moving graphic above and sign up is a snap to our new site. Once you've signed in, just join the URSA group for bear conservation so you can conitnue the battle!.
See You All There.
Mystic Rebel I have awakened from my long winter slumber.
I am stepping out into the rays of the spring sun again to guard the dawning of this new age. I am calling on all of you to wake up and emerge from that dark hole of safe ignorance you've created for yourself and help secure our future. Without you our future is questionable, other than in your grandchildren's history lessons
The Great Bear Rainforest is a primal rain forest of towering red cedars, where eagles soar above the treetops and rivers teem with wild salmon.
To view the BC government's promise for this great land, Click Here
Spirit Bear
The all white Kermode or Spirit Bear (Ursus americanus kermodei) is the rarest of the North American bears and something of a "holy grail" for wildlife enthusiasts and photographers, and of great spiritual significance to the Pacific Northwest First Nations community who consider its appearance to be a very good omen.
A genetic variation of the ubiquitous North American Black Bear (Ursus americanus), the Spirit Bear is not an albino but rather the product of two parents possessing a common recessive gene. Because both parents must possess the gene in order to produce a white cub, it is possible for a white cub to have two black parents (if they both carry the gene), or a white parent to have a black cub (if it's mate does not carry the gene). Due to the delayed implantation common among bears which means a female may carry eggs fertilized by different males, a female carrying the gene may even have a mixture of black and white cubs in a single litter.
Spirit Bears can occur in any Black Bear population but are exceptionally rare, except on a cluster of heavily forested islands off the Central Coast of British Columbia where there is an unusually high concentration of the recessive gene. Here 1 in 10 black bears are born white, and on some of the islands the ratio may be as high as 1 in 4. Although otherwise identical in biology and behaviour to other black bears, there is scientific evidence to suggest that spirit bears have some inherent advantages due to their otherwise very conspicuous colouration. Studies have shown that spirit bears have a greater degree of success catching salmon in broad daylight than their black brethren. This seems to be a result of their lighter colouration and light reflection off the water's surface, and may account for adult white bears being larger on average that their black contemporaries in the same area.
Spirit Bears are currently afforded no legal protection from trophy hunters but are in effect made safe in their island home thanks largely to the will and wishes of the First Nations people who lay claim to the land on which they live. A number of influential conservation groups are however actively working in partnership with First Nations groups to pursue legislation to protect Spirit Bears and their habitat, and is to be hoped that this popular movement will receive government backing so that future generations may still be lucky enough to glimpse this rare and elusive spirit of the Great Bear Rainforest.
we hoped would never have to be written, but as of this week, despite promises to save the spirit bear, the British Columbia government has permitted one third of the bear’s last intact ecosystem - the Green wilderness - to be logged. And the trees are starting to fall.
Two-thirds of the spirit bear’s last intact habitat was set aside for protection by the BC government as a part of an historic land-use agreement last February; however, while the deal accomplished a great deal for many coastal stakeholders, it did not save the spirit bear.
While black bears usually can adapt to change, in this one case, if the Green is logged, bears that do not carry the unique gene that produces the white bear will be forced to migrate to areas where they do, diluting the gene pool and rendering the areas already protected - in the name of the spirit bear - useless.
If we destroy the fine ecological balance that results in these white bears, we risk losing the spirit bear forever. The world needs these bears to survive not only for the role it plays in its globally important ecosystem, but also as a symbol to what youth and citizens can achieve when they work together. If we fail, there is no turning back, no reintroducing white bears: we have one chance and this is it.
We feel that our track record is one of being positive, cooperative, engaged, and pragmatic; not one of being alarmists or dogmatic ideologues in addressing this issue. We have always tried to find positive solutions to meet this bear’s bottom line without compromising the economic bottom line.
Despite the fact that the Spirit Bear Youth Coalition has pledged to help address the economic concerns associated with protecting the Green - an area only 200 times the size of Vancouver’s Stanley Park - with the forthcoming CGI Hollywood animated movie THE SPIRIT BEAR, its release date in 2008 will be too late to aid in the bear’s protection if logging doesn’t cease immediately. But make no mistake: this movie will be made and if the money cannot help the people of Klemtu offset the cost of protecting the Green watershed, the money will go towards an international campaign to showcase what went wrong and what we must never do again - to ensure the voice of our membership and young people in all corners of the world continues to be heard.
It is a case of the present shouting and the future whispering. We can cross our fingers, log, and hope the bear lives, but run the risk of losing the bear and certainly lose the opportunity to create a more broad-based, stable economy for coastal communities. Or, for the sake of two or three years, in .005% of the entire coast’s total operating area, the government can help the affected community defer logging until the release of our movie and allow us to put our money where our mouth is and really build a new paradigm between ecology and economics.
We’re not anti-logging, anti-jobs - this isn’t about the environment on one side and the economy on the other. We’re for a rare bear and its last chance of survival. Our responsibility is great and the actions we take today will be our legacy for our future, and the bottom line is if logging in the Green does not cease immediately, not only do we run the risk of losing the spirit bear, we run the risk of failing a generation. Millions of young people from urban Vancouver to war-torn Iraq have passionately made their voice heard on behalf of the spirit bear in the hopes of making a difference, but if we do not heed their message, we will serve only to prove the skeptics right and confirm to young people the worst lesson of all: their voice doesn’t matter
Premier Campbell, on behalf of all British Columbians and as a global steward, has the responsibility to err on the side of caution when speaking of the last chance to save an animal as unique to Canada as the Panda bear is to China - especially when we have placed an economic alternative on the table. Just as we would never ask the Premier to run a budget deficit to save this bear, he cannot ask us to run an ecological deficit in the last place the spirit bear can call home. Yet, with every tree that falls - trees that act as bear dens for their winter sleep - that is exactly what is happening.
Everyone, everywhere who believes in a world where the spirit bear will forever be wild and free needs to stand up and make their voice heard today. This is it. This is the final battle, the culmination of all our efforts - we have nothing left to lose…
…Except the spirit bear.
PLEASE TAKE ACTION TODAY - YOUR ADDED VOICE HAS NEVER BEEN SO URGENTLY NEEDED.
1. To all our supporters worldwide: write, fax, and e-mail Premier Gordon Campbell and urge him to intervene immediately to protect the 80, 000 hectare Green wilderness in order for him to honour his word to save the spirit bear for “generation after generation”.
2. Contact 25 people you know and ask them to make their voice heard today by writing a letter to Premier Campbell and urge them to spread the word to 25 people they know.
3. Write a letter to the editor of your local paper - no matter where you live - expressing your support for the immediate halt to logging in the Green to save the spirit bear.
4. If you live in British Columbia, write to your MLA and demand that they represent you by taking a stand to protect the Green to save the spirit bear.
5. If you live in Canada, write to your MP and Prime Minister Stephen Harper and ask that they represent you by urging the BC government to immediately intervene to stop the logging in the Green.
This crisis may seem huge and it may seem unstoppable. But it is not. We have protected two-thirds of this remarkable bear’s habitat thanks to you standing up and being counted on this issue over the last decade. We need your help this one last time and if we all do our part, like ripples in a pond, one by one, our voice will never have been stronger and, together, we will save our spirit bear, truly, for generation after generation.
The Kermode bear (Ursus americanus kermodei) is a rare and elusive subspecies of the North American black bear in which approximately one in every 10 bears is white or cream-coloured. The Kermode bear is endemic only to the unique temperate rainforest region off the Pacific coast of British Columbia, Canada. Biologists estimate a population of 1,200 kermode bears, of which less then 400 are white phased. These white phased bears are known locally as “spirit bears”
The kermode bear faces extinction due to habitat loss as a result of logging and mismanagement, restricted range, low and declining population numbers; and hybridization with mainland subspecies of black bear which do not carry the unique genetics that produce the rare white “spirit” bear. Under the provisions of Canada’s Species At Risk Act which became a law in June 2003, the kermode bear meets all requirements to be listed as endangered. The Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) is federal Cabinet that decides whether a species should get legal protection under the Act. U. a. kermodei meets all of the provisions under the Eligibility of a Candidate Species and needs further protection to ensure this unique subspecies survival.
Welcome to our new Member of the Month section. This new feature is aimed to provide some recognition with the fame that so many deserve. This page will display a member of the Spirit Bear Conservation Society and tell why that member deserves to be recognized.