Ae. Derocher et I. Stirling, ESTIMATION OF POLAR BEAR POPULATION-SIZE AND SURVIVAL IN WESTERN HUDSON-BAY, The Journal of wildlife management, 59(2), 1995, pp. 215-221
Using Jolly-Seber mark-recapture models with data from 1977-92, we est
imated size and survival rates of the polar bear (Ursus maritimus) pop
ulation in western Hudson Bay to facilitate harvest management. Female
s fit mark-recapture models better than males. Population size showed
no clear trend with estimates between 537 and 1,268 bears and a mean o
f 1,000 bears of all ages in autumn 1978-92. Mark-recapture estimates
of survival for 1977-92 and 1987-89 data were 0.900 and 0.908 for fema
les and 0.774 and 0.839 for males, respectively. Recruitment to the po
pulation in autumn averaged 191 cubs (SE = 10). The population was ske
wed toward females, which averaged 58% (SE = 2) of the population betw
een 1978 and 1992. Mean age of both sexes increased over the study pos
sibly because harvest quotas implemented in the 1960s limited harvest
size and provided protection for females. Harvest levels appear sustai
nable for consumptive and nonconsumptive uses of the population. Given
that the western Hudson Bay polar bear population was the most intens
ively studied in the world and that we had difficulty applying Jolly-S
eber models to data for males, these models may not prove applicable t
o other polar bear populations unless large and unbiased samples are o
btained.