In environments with high spatiotemporal variability in resources, animals
may exhibit nomadic movements for resource tracking as opposed to long-term
area fidelity. Polar bears (Ursus maritimus) inhabit the dynamic sea ice,
preying on seals, and demonstrate considerable intraspecific variation in s
pace use. We studied patterns of fidelity and annual range size for 74 adul
t female polar bears captured in the Norwegian Arctic that were tracked for
up to 5 years using satellite telemetry data. We used the autocorrelation
structure of movements and distance between observations at a 1-year interv
al as measures of fidelity. The female polar bears had a circannual migrati
on pattern. Annual range size varied with reproductive state and geographic
location of the range. Females entering maternity dens had smaller annual
ranges than females not entering dens. Nearshore females had smaller annual
ranges than pelagic females, demonstrating different space-use strategies.
Repeatability of movement patterns indicated strategy specialization. We s
uggest that the different space-use strategies result from variation in hab
itat and prey selection and in sea-ice dynamics. Factors affecting populati
on and predator-prey dynamics may interact differently with the different s
pace-use strategies and yield strategy-dependent outcomes, therefore a know
ledge of movement strategies may be important for understanding polar bear
population dynamics.