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Who's Right About Polar Bear Photo?

As Experts Argue, the Photographer Tells Her Story

By STEVE PENDLEBURY
,
AOL News
posted: 126 DAYS 22 HOURS AGO
comments: 1317
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(July 2) -- Amanda Byrd's iconic photo of two polar bears perched atop a fragile-looking ice formation off Alaska is back in the news as the global warming debate flares up.
Former Vice President Al Gore and other environmentalists have used the image as a symbol of climate change's threat. This video posted on YouTube is one example. Those on the other side have also pointed to the "stranded polar bears" picture, arguing that it's been taken out of context.
A meeting of polar bear experts in Copenhagen this week put renewed focus on the message of the photo.
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Canadian biologist Mitchell Taylor reportedly was barred from the conference because he doesn't subscribe to the conventional view of global warming. He contends that Arctic warming is caused by nature, not humans, and polar bears aren't at risk.
"He has also observed, however, how the melting of Arctic ice, supposedly threatening the survival of the bears, has rocketed to the top of the warmists' agenda as their most iconic single cause," The Telegraph's Christopher Booker wrote this week, going on to cite the photo.
Byrd is pleased that the picture she took as a University of Alaska graduate student doing research at sea in the summer of 2004 still gets so much attention. But she never intended it to be taken as a statement one way or the other about global warming.
"It was just a photograph," she said Tuesday in a telephone interview from Fairbanks, Alaska. "I didn't really want to put an emotion onto the photograph."
"We just happened upon an iceberg floating in the middle of the ocean and the captain of the ship said, 'Hey, polar bear on the port side,'" Byrd recalled. "A few of us ran for our cameras and took the photos."
Byrd, now a research technician at the Alaska Center for Energy and Power, was studying zooplankton at the time. Neither she nor anyone else aboard the Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker was a polar bear expert.
"This was the top of the food chain," she said of the big, white carnivores on the iceberg. "I was studying the bottom of the food chain."
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The Effects of Global Warming
A new report examines the human cost of climate change, which it said causes more than 300,000 deaths per year. The report, released in May, shows the impact of climate change on population displacement, malnutrition and diseases, such as malaria. "Climate change is not something waiting to happen," said former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan.
David Longstreath, AP
David Longstreath, AP
Still, the researchers were curious about what they had seen in the Beaufort Sea.
"We talked on the ship for a few days about how the bears got there, why they were there and how they were going to get off. And we really didn't know," said Byrd. The bears might have been on the iceberg when it broke away from a glacier and floated out the sea. But Byrd thinks it's more likely the bears were making their way from Barrow to their hunting grounds -- a journey that's become much longer as the polar ice sheet shrinks.
They "were way out there" -- about 90 miles north of Barrow, the northernmost point in Alaska, and 70 or 80 miles from the polar ice cap -- but it was not clear if the bears were in danger, Byrd recalled.
While her photo was not meant to symbolize climate change, Byrd does have an opinion on the issue.
"I myself do happen to believe that global warming is a threat," she said.
But she doesn't mind her photo being cited by both sides to encourage debate.
"I think it's great," Byrd declared. "If you can't have people creating controversy then the argument would just be moot and you would not get the information that's needed to actually look at what's happening."
What did bother her was the way the picture reached the news media. She had given a CD of her photos to a fellow researcher aboard the ship, Canadian ice specialist Dan Crosbie, for his personal use. She said Crosbie gave the pictures to the Canadian Ice Service, which passed them on to Environment Canada, which eventually released them to news agencies without her knowledge or permission.
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Further muddying the water -- and fueling doubts among climate-change skeptics -- the photo of the two polar bears ran in newspapers worldwide in February 2007, on the day the United Nations issued report on global warming. The captions had incorrect information about when and where the shots were taken -- and by whom.
"It was amazing how someone can take my own photograph, call it their own and give it to a few news agencies and -- bam -- it's now around the world. But thankfully that's been settled," said Byrd.
Five years after her polar bear encounter, Byrd stays busy with her work at the university and the Center for Energy and Power. She also competes as a "sprint musher" in sled dog races.
"But I'm really trying to do more photography," she added. She got a big dose of encouragement in April, when another of her polar bear pictures -- taken a few weeks before her best-known photo -- was chosen for a Canadian postage stamp.
"How many people get a stamp? I was pretty blown away," Byrd exclaimed. "I thought that was awesome."
This time, there's no mistaking the message. The stamp showing a lone polar bear swimming through melting ice is part of Canada Post's campaign to raise awareness about the effects of global warming.
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Animals in the News
Chanel, a white dachshund who held the Guinness world record for oldest dog, died Aug. 28 at age 21. Earlier this year, her owners said she was in good health, with the exception of sunglasses she had to wear for cataracts.
Meredith Daniels, Newsday / MCT
Meredith Daniels, Newsday / MCT
2009 AOL LLC. All Rights Reserved.
2009-07-02 09:31:43

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runfreejtr

01:12 PMJul 07 2009

you know alaskaa is feeling effects of global warming . i live there see the change im not convinced we can reverse it but we must at least make an effort and definitely with that effort we can slow down global warming . giving extra time for different spieces to adapt .....

AVG RATING:
(2)

BOsAlpha1

01:34 AMJul 07 2009

How many people know, or knew, that Polar Bears can swim in excess of 50 miles if they so choose? Furthermore, Polar Bears have hunted, and taught their cubs to hunt, from the confines of small ice floats for thousands of years. Also, scientists have already disproved Osama and the Democrat's theory that the earth is warming, as they unequivically stated our planet's cooling.

AVG RATING:
(5)

BOsAlpha1

01:33 AMJul 07 2009

How many people know, or knew, that Polar Bears can swim in excess of 50 miles if they so choose? Furthermore, Polar Bears have hunted, and taught their cubs to hunt, from the confines of small ice floats. Also, scientists have already disproved Osama and the Democrat's theory that the earth is warming, as they unequivically stated our planet's cooling.

AVG RATING:
(5)

Mireles0345

12:52 AMJul 07 2009

Oh crap! Is the sky falling again?

AVG RATING:
(4)

Bogus Woody

12:42 AMJul 07 2009

Catroina2 "how the hell were they thought to be stranded ? they swim." ######## So they swim to the nearest land which is 80 miles away? How do they know which way that "nearby" land is which is 80 miles away? What if they guess wrong? What if they fail to swim in a straight line, and instead swim in a larg circle. If they were on a small block of ice 80 miles from the nearest land, and they don't where that land is, they're dead bears.

AVG RATING:
(4)

Angelsandpixies

12:31 AMJul 07 2009

They should have given the bears a lift back to the main land!

AVG RATING:
(4)

Catroina2

10:57 PMJul 07 2009

how the hell were they thought to be stranded ? they swim.

AVG RATING:
(5)

Wildwudy

10:05 PMJul 07 2009

JRedelfs "I wonder if Palin can see them Bears from her front porch? RUN Bears! Maybe that's why she's quite her various jobs." ############## You're referring to Sarah Palin's reference to Russia viewable from Alaskan land. Sarah Palin never said that one can see Russia from her house. Palin said "They're our next door neighbors and you can actually see Russia from land here in Alaska." She was referring to the island of Big Diomede 22 miles from Russia, and that area of Russia is mountainous. Palin is, of course, absolutely correct. You have mistaken Tina Fey's comedy routine as real, thus removing any semblance of credibility from your post.

AVG RATING:
(7)

Taconiccruiser

09:44 PMJul 07 2009

I don't care what the "opinions " of people whos livelihood depends on finding a cause to keep their jobs telling me that fossil fules are no good. Where does it come from ? Every thing else is no good if it's not natural or organic but with fossil fuels being natural is a negative. When they can they can make a battery operated car sound & move like a big block I'll be willing to change.

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(4)

Taconiccruiser

09:32 PMJul 07 2009

Yes the temperature changes we can see that even for the limited # of years mankind has been keeping records. The earth has gone thru many cycles and we will probably be wiped out by one, Do you want to live forever ? Where are the dinosaurs ? They got wiped out ! Continents have split & seperated by thousands of miles, flat land has become mountainous. And our " brightest minds" think that we control the earth ? We are vistiors and one day the earth will clense the land and things will start again or not. The inconvienent truth features the opening of the movie "The Day After Tomorrow" without any disclaimer so as not to mislead people that it was only c/g and not really happening and he got a nobel prize for bs ing his audience.

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(5)

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(July 2) -- Amanda Byrd\'s iconic photo of two polar bears perched atop a fragile-looking ice formation off Alaska is back in the news as the global warming debate flares up.