Polar Bears International

Conservation through research and education.

PBI Advisory Council Scientists

Dr. Steven C. Amstrup

Dr. Steven C. Amstrup is a Research Wildlife Biologist with the United States Geological Survey at the Alaska Science Center, Anchorage, AK. He is also an adjunct professor at the University of Wyoming in Laramie, and an associate professor at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks. He earned a B.S. in Forestry from the University of Washington (1972), a M.S. in Wildlife Management from the University of Idaho (1975), and a Ph.D. in Wildlife Management from the University of Alaska Fairbanks (1995). He has been conducting research on all aspects of polar bear ecology in the Beaufort Sea since 1980. He is a past chairman of the IUCN Polar Bear Specialist Group and has been an active member of the group for 28 years. His interests include distribution and movement patterns as well as population dynamics of wildlife, and how information on those topics can be used to assure wise stewardship. He is particularly interested in how science can help to reconcile the ever enlarging human footprint on our environment with the needs of other species for that same environment. Prior work experiences include studies of black bears in central Idaho, and pronghorns and grouse in Wyoming. On their honeymoon in New Zealand, Steve and his wife Virginia helped in a tagging study of little blue penguins. That experience gave Steve the honor of being one of the very few people ever to have been bitten by both polar bears, which occur only in the northern hemisphere, and penguins, which occur only in the southern hemisphere. Dr. Amstrup has authored or coauthored over 60 peer reviewed articles on movements, distribution and population dynamics of large mammals, and is the senior editor of a recent text on population estimation methods. Dr. Amstrup led the international team of researchers which prepared 9 reports that became the basis for the recent decision, by the Secretary of Interior, to list polar bears as a threatened species.

Scientific Papers by Dr. Steven C. Amstrup (Expand)

Dr. Andrew Derocher

Dr. Andrew Derocher (left) chairs the IUCN’s Polar Bear Specialist Group and teaches biology at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada. He holds a B.S. from the University of British Columbia (1983), a M.S. from the University of Alberta (1987), and a Ph.D. from the University of Alberta (1991). His field research focuses on polar bears in the Canadian Arctic and the polar bears of Hudson Bay. He has also worked with polar bears in Svalbard, Norway, through the Norwegian Polar Institute. Over the course of 20 years of studying polar bears, Dr. Derocher’s research has focused on the limiting and regulating factors of polar bear populations including habitat use, harvest effects, and predator-prey relationships. His current work includes assessment of the effects of climate change and toxic chemicals on polar bears.

Scientific Papers by Dr. Andrew Derocher (Expand)

Dr. Nick Lunn

Dr. Nick Lunn is a research scientist with the Canadian Wildlife Service who specializes in polar bear ecology and Arctic marine ecosystems. He holds a M.S. from the University of Alberta (1985) and a Ph.D. from the British Antarctic Survey and Open University (1993). Lunn began working with polar bears in 1981, when, as a university student, he answered a job posting at the University of Alberta to work in Dr. Ian Stirling's lab analyzing the age of polar bear teeth. He went on to study the behavior of polar bears frequenting Churchill's dump site (now closed). For more than a decade, his research work with the Canadian Wildlife Service has focused on the condition of the Western Hudson Bay population of polar bears in relation to environmental change.

Scientific Papers by Dr. Nick Lunn (Expand)

Dr. Nikita Ovsyanikov

Dr. Nikita Ovsyanikov has studied the population, condition, and behavior of polar bears on Russia's Wrangel Island for more than 15 years. The remote island is one of the largest polar bear denning sites in the world and has seen significant changes in the sea ice in recent years. He is the author of "Polar Bears: Living with the White Bears."

Scientific Papers by Dr. Nikita Ovsyanikov (Expand)

Scott Schliebe

Scientist Scott Schliebe is the Polar Bear Project Leader for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Anchorage, Alaska. He has studied polar bears for more than 20 years and is the former chair of the IUCN's Polar Bear Specialist Group. His most recent work has focused on the Chukchi population of polar bears, which is shared by the U.S. and Russia. He was also involved with determining whether the polar bear should be listed as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act.

Scientific Papers by Scott Schliebe (Expand)

Dr. Don Moore

Dr. Donald Moore is the Associate Director for Animal Care at the Smithsonian's National Zoo in Washington, D.C., and Founding Vice-Chair and Current Advisor of Animal Welfare for the American Zoo & Aquarium Association (AZA). Moore holds a B.S., M.S. and Ph.D. from Syracuse University. He is a zoo and animal-behavior professional, wildlife biologist, and educator. He has worked closely with polar bears in zoos during the course of his career, including his present position with the Smithsonian's National Zoo and his previous work with the Wildlife Conservation Society's zoos in New York City. He helped spearhead a nationwide effort to reduce stereotypic behavior (stress) in polar bears in zoos. Dr. Moore has published over four dozen papers or manuals on animal husbandry and behavior; serves as a peer-reviewer for several scientific journals; and has received national and local awards for excellence in the interpretation of natural history and behavior of wildlife. He recently wrote the children’s natural history book, “Disney’s Wonderful World of Animals” (2006), based on questions about animals that kids ask him most frequently.

Scientific Papers by Dr. Don Moore (Expand)

Dr. Tom S. Smith

Dr. Tom Smith is an associate professor and research wildlife biologist in the Department of Plant and Wildlife Sciences at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah. He holds a B.S. in Zoology from Brigham Young University (1982), a M.S. in Wildlife Management from the University of Alaska – Fairbanks (1987) and a Ph.D. in Wildlife Ecology from Brigham Young University (1992). His work over the past 15 years has been mainly focused on North American bear conservation and conflict management. His current studies with polar bears focus on den emergence ecology and response to human activities on the North Slope of Alaska.

Scientific Papers by Dr. Tom S. Smith (Expand)

Dr. Ian Stirling

Dr. Ian Stirling is a Scientist Emeritus with the Canadian Wildlife Service and an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Alberta. He holds a B.S. and M.S. from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver and a Ph.D. from the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand, where he studied the population ecology of Weddell seals in Antarctica. He has studied polar bears throughout the Canadian Arctic for over 37 years. His long-term studies of polar bears in Western Hudson Bay, one of the world's most southerly populations, confirmed the negative effects of climate warming. Bears of all ages and sex classes are losing condition as the ice breaks up progressively earlier, shortening their ability to feed at the best time of year, before fasting for several months on land. The population has dropped 22% since 1987. Dr. Stirling has also studied the bears of the Southern Beaufort Sea and Canadian High Arctic for several decades as well their interrelationships with seals and sea ice. He is the author of three books for the public on bears, including Polar Bears, considered the definitive work on the biology of the polar bear.

Scientific Papers by Dr. Ian Stirling (Expand)

Dr. Ronald R. Swaisgood

Dr. Swaisgood is a scientist with the San Diego Zoo and the associate director of the zoo's Center for Reproductive Studies (CRES). He has worked with a number of species including giant pandas, rhinoceros, and, of course, polar bears. He has authored or co-authored more than 40 scientific papers and has received numerous grants and awards. The major focus of Dr. Swaisgood's current research is on scent communication, which plays a major role in solitary species like polar bears in terms of finding and competing for a mate and other aspects of social and reproductive behavior. He is also studying maternal behavior in several bear species.

Scientific Papers by Dr. Ronald R. Swaisgood (Expand)

Dr. Jane Waterman

Dr. Jane Waterman of the University of Central Florida studies the behavior of the polar bears in the Churchill area and how that behavior may change in light of a progressively shorter hunting season. Her behavior studies have resulted in self-imposed guidelines for the Churchill bear-watching industry. She is also pioneering a whisker pattern identification technique, which is noninvasive, in addition to a way of determining a polar bear's weight through noninvasive digital photos.

Scientific Papers by Dr. Jane Waterman (Expand)

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