Look! A polar bear meanders alone in a snowy small town in Canada

Look! A polar bear meanders alone in a snowy small town in Canada

The bear – whose species has become a symbol of the dangers of global warming – was seen in the morning hours in Madeleine-Centre in the Gaspesia region, a peninsula along the south bank of the Saint Lawrence River, witnesses said.

As of Saturday afternoon, officials were still trying to find the animal.

“The dog was barking and I heard my partner yell, ‘There’s a bear, there’s a bear!’” said Sophie Bonneville, who lives in the town of 2 000 people located 800 kilometers east of Montreal.

Sophie Bonneville

Quebec provincial police put out a tweet warning people about the bear sighting and urging them to stay indoors.

A POLAR BEAR HAS NEVER BEEN SEEN THAT FAR SOUTH

Bonneville said nobody in town had ever seen a polar bear so far south, not even wildlife officials.

“People thought it was a joke,” she told AFP.

“How could a bear cross the ice pack, swim and make it here? Even people on the north bank have not seen such a thing,” she said.

Sophie Bonneville

PEOPLE TOLD TO STAY INDOORS TO AVOID THE POLAR BEAR

Police patrolled the region, where hiking is popular.

“We went door to door to tell people to stay indoors,” Quebec provincial police spokesman Stephane Tremblay told AFP. He said he had never seen a polar bear in this area, either.

“With climate change, anything is possible,” said Bonneville, who managed to snap a couple of photos of the bear before it wandered off into a wooded area.

“What is worrisome is, why did it come here? Was it global warming? Or was it just a mistake of nature?” she mused.

Sophie Bonneville

POLAR BEARS ARE LISTED AS VULNERABLE SPECIES

In Canada, polar bears – the planet’s largest land carnivores – are listed as a “vulnerable” species.

A 2020 study published in Nature Climate Change said climate change could lead to their extinction as global warming causes the gradual melting of the Arctic ice pack.

In these images courtesy of Sophie Bonneville, a polar bear roams a field in Madeline-Centre, Quebec, Canada, on 30 April 2022. A polar bear was spotted Saturday in a region of Quebec south of the St Lawrence River, leading wildlife officers and police to alert residents of Madeline-Centre in the Gaspé Peninsula, more than 800kms east of Montreal, to the highly unusual visit. ‘How did a bear cross over the ice pack, swim and get here? People don’t even see them on the north coast!’, Sophie Bonneville wondered. Image: Sophie Bonneville / AFP

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