Tuesday, October 28, 2025

 

Polar bears act as crucial providers for Arctic species



New study shows polar bears annually provide millions of kilograms of food, supporting a vast Arctic scavenger network



San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance

Polar bears providing carrion for vast network of arctic scavengers 

image: 

Two-year-old polar bears with bearded seal carcass and ivory gulls

Image Credit: Wayne Lynch

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Credit: Photo Credit: Wayne Lynch





Photos: here

SAN DIEGO (Oct. 28, 2025) – A new study published in the scientific journal Oikos reveals for the first time the critical role polar bears play as carrion providers for Arctic species. Researchers from University of Manitoba and San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance, alongside researchers from Environment and Climate Change Canada, and the University of Alberta, have estimated that polar bears leave behind approximately 7.6 million kilograms of their prey annually, creating a massive and vital food source for a wide network of arctic scavenger species. 

This research demonstrates that these apex predators are a crucial link between the marine and terrestrial ecosystems. By hunting seals on the sea ice and abandoning the remains, polar bears transfer a substantial amount of energy from the ocean to the ice surface, making it accessible to other animals. The study identifies at least 11 vertebrate species known to benefit from this carrion, including Arctic foxes and ravens, with an additional eight potential scavenger species. 

“Our findings quantify for the first time, the sheer scale of polar bears as a food provider to other species and the interconnectedness of their ecosystem,” says Holly Gamblin, lead author of the study and PhD Candidate in the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Manitoba. “What is apparent from this review is that there is no other species that adequately replaces how a polar bear hunts, in which they drag their prey from the water to the sea ice and leave substantial remains for other species to access.” 

Past research has emphasized that continued warming in the Arctic and the resulting loss of sea ice directly endanger polar bear populations. However, this new research highlights that a decline in polar bears would not only impact the species itself but the loss of the carrion they provide could have significant consequences for the entire Arctic ecosystem. 

“Our research highlights the important role of polar bears as carrion providers,” says Dr. Nicholas Pilfold, Scientist in Population Sustainability at San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance. “The sea ice acts as a platform for many species to access scavenging resources provided by polar bears, and ultimately, declines in sea ice will reduce access to this energy source. Our findings indicate that documented declines in polar bear abundance in two subpopulations have already resulted in the loss of more than 300 tonnes of food resources for scavengers annually.” 

These findings highlight the interdependence of arctic wildlife species and their shared vulnerabilities in the face of rapid environmental change. With polar bear populations continuing to decline, this research underscores the urgency of conservation efforts to protect them, not only for their own sake but for the species that rely on them. 

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About San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance  
San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance, a nonprofit conservation leader, inspires passion for nature and collaboration for a healthier world. The Alliance supports innovative conservation science through global partnerships and groundbreaking efforts at the world-famous San Diego Zoo and San Diego Zoo Safari Park, both leading zoological institutions and accredited botanical gardens. Through wildlife care expertise, cutting-edge science and continued collaboration, more than 44 endangered species have been reintroduced to native habitats. The Alliance reaches over 1 billion people annually through its two conservation parks and media channels in 170 countries, including San Diego Zoo Wildlife Explorers television, available in children’s hospitals across 14 countries. Wildlife Allies—members, donors and guests—make success possible.  

About University of Manitoba 
The University of Manitoba (UM) is recognized as Western Canada's first university. It is part of the U15, ranking among Canada’s top research-intensive universities and provides exceptional undergraduate and graduate liberal arts, science and professional programs of study.  

UM campuses and research spaces are located on original lands of Anishinaabeg, Ininiwak, Anisininewuk, Dakota Oyate, Dene and Inuit, and on the National Homeland of the Red River Métis. UM recognizes that the Treaties signed on these lands are a lifelong, enduring relationship, and we are dedicated to upholding their spirit and intent. We acknowledge the harms and mistakes of the past and the present. With this understanding, we commit to supporting Indigenous excellence through active Reconciliation, meaningful change, and the creation of an environment where everyone can thrive. Our collaboration with Indigenous communities is grounded in respect and reciprocity and this guides how we move forward as an institution. For more information, please visit umanitoba.ca.    

 

Link includes:  

  • B-roll and photos of polar bears 

Environmental shifts are pushing endangered reptiles to the brink of extinction


Climate change is driving many of Australia’s native reptiles toward extinction, and the answers to their future survival may lie in the fossil record


Museum Victoria

Rankinia diemensis, Mountain Dragon (Grampians National Park 2012) 

image: 

Rankinia diemensis, Mountain Dragon (Grampians National Park 2012). Photographer: Heath Warwick. Source: Museums Victoria

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Credit: Photographer: Heath Warwick. Source: Museums Victoria






Climate change is driving many of Australia’s native reptiles toward extinction, and the answers to their future survival may lie in the fossil record.

New research published today in Current Biology originates from an international collaboration with Museums Victoria Research Institute and the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin. The study reveals that the endangered Australian Mountain Dragon (Rankinia diemensis) has been driven into increasingly smaller and more isolated populations over thousands of years as a result of changing climate conditions.

The study combines fossil evidence from natural history museums with genetic data from preserved specimens to uncover how the species has responded to major environmental changes in the past and what this means for its future.

Dr Jane Melville, senior curator of terrestrial vertebrates at Museums Victoria Research Institute, said the research shows the species has been pushed up the mountains by climate change.

‘About 20,000 years ago during the last glacial period, Mountain Dragons occupied a much wider range across southeastern Australia, including regions such as Kangaroo Island and Naracoorte in South Australia,’ said Dr Melville.

‘Today, those populations have vanished. The remaining populations in Victoria, New South Wales and Tasmania have a reduced distribution and are more genetically isolated than in the past, and if global temperatures continue to rise, these lizards will eventually have nowhere left to go.’

By using advanced micro-CT imaging to identify tiny fossil fragments and combining this information with genomic data from modern specimens, the team was able to track long-term shifts in the species’ range and genetic diversity.

The findings suggest that low-altitude populations have already suffered genetic decline, while cooler, high-altitude habitats are becoming less suitable due to global warming. This makes Rankinia diemensis a clear warning sign for other reptiles that share the same ecosystem.

Reptiles are particularly vulnerable to climate change because they cannot actively regulate their body temperature. Similar distribution and genetic patterns have been observed in other species, such as the blotched Blue-Tongue Lizard, Tiliqua nigrolutea, suggesting that multiple reptile species across southeastern Australia may face the same fate.

Natural history museum collections proved essential to this discovery. Fossils, bones, and preserved specimens housed at Museums Victoria and other institutions offer an unparalleled record of Australia’s biodiversity over time, making it possible to link the past, present, and future of threatened species.

Lead author Dr Till Ramm, former PhD student at Museums Victoria Research Institute, said the study underscores the value of the new research field ‘conservation paleobiology’ and the urgent need to update conservation strategies to account for climate-driven habitat loss.

‘By learning from the past, we can make better predictions and decisions for the future,’ said Dr Ramm. ‘Our findings show just how fast climate change can disrupt biodiversity and why protecting habitats now is more critical than ever.’

‘By studying specimens and fossils preserved in museum collections, we can see how species have responded to past environmental challenges and use those insights to inform future conservation,’ said Dr Nurin Veis, Director of Museums Victoria Research Institute. ‘The past holds critical lessons for protecting the biodiversity we have today.’

Visitors to Melbourne Museum can see 3D models of the Mountain Dragon in the Research Institute Gallery and explore Our Wondrous Planet, Museums Victoria’s newest science and biodiversity gallery, which inspires visitors to care for our planet for generations to come.

--ENDS --

  

Rankinia diemensis, Mountain Dragon (Grampians National Park 2012). 

Photographer: David Paul. Source: Museums Victoria

Monday, October 27, 2025

Amazon targets as many as 30,000 corporate job cuts, sources tells Reuters

WHITE, BLUE, PINK 
THE COLOR OF YOUR COLLAR DOESN'T MATTER, 
WE ARE ALL PROLETARIANS NOW


By Reuters
Published: October 27, 2025 



Amazon is planning to cut as many as 30,000 corporate jobs beginning on Tuesday, as the company works to pare expenses and compensate for overhiring during the peak demand of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to three people familiar with the matter.

The figure represents a small percentage of Amazon’s 1.55 million total employees, but nearly 10 per cent of the company’s roughly 350,000 corporate employees. This would represent the largest job cut at Amazon since around 27,000 jobs were eliminated starting in late 2022.

An Amazon spokesperson declined to comment.

Amazon has been trimming smaller numbers of jobs over the past two years across multiple divisions, including devices, communications, podcasting and others. The cuts beginning this week may impact a variety of divisions within Amazon, including human resources, known as People Experience and Technology, devices and services and operations, among others, the people said.

Managers of impacted teams were asked to undergo training on Monday for how to communicate with staff following email notifications that will start going out on Tuesday morning, the people said.

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy is undertaking an initiative to reduce what he has described as an excess of bureaucracy at the company, including by reducing the number of managers. He installed an anonymous complaint line for identifying inefficiencies that has elicited some 1,500 responses and over 450 process changes, he said earlier this year.

 Andy Jassy, Amazon president and CEO, attends the premiere of "The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power" at The Culver Studios on Monday, Aug. 15, 2022, in Culver City, Calif. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File)

Jassy said in June that the increased use of artificial intelligence tools would likely lead to further job cuts, particularly through automating repetitive and routine tasks.

“This latest move signals that Amazon is likely realizing enough AI-driven productivity gains within corporate teams to support a substantial reduction in force,” said Sky Canaves, an eMarketer analyst. “Amazon has also been under pressure in the short-term to offset the long-term investments in building out its AI infrastructure.”

The full scope of this round of job cuts was not immediately clear. The people familiar with the matter said the number could change over time, as Amazon’s financial priorities shift. Fortune earlier reported that the human resources division could be targeted with a cut of roughly 15 per cent.

Layoffs.fyi, a website tracking tech job cuts, estimated that about 98,000 jobs have been lost so far this year among 216 companies. For all of 2024, the figure was 153,000.

Amazon’s largest profit center, cloud computing unit Amazon Web Services, reported sales in the second quarter of US$30.9 billion, a 17.5 per cent increase that was well below the sales gains for Microsoft’s Azure and Google Cloud, which gained 39 per cent and 32 per cent, respectively. Google Cloud is owned by Alphabet.

Estimates indicate that AWS will have boosted third-quarter sales by about 18 per cent to $32 billion, a slight slowdown from last year’s 19 per cent increase. AWS is still reeling from a roughly 15-hour internet outage last week that felled many of the most popular online services, like Snapchat and Venmo.

Indications are that Amazon is expecting another big holiday selling season. The company said it plans to offer 250,000 seasonal jobs to help staff warehouses, among other needs, the same as in the prior two years.

Amazon shares were up 1.3 per cent at $227.11 near the close of trading on Monday. The company plans to report third-quarter earnings on Thursday.


Greg Bensinger, Reuters
Canada’s exports drop as tariffs weigh heavy on economy: Statistics Canada

By Anam KhanOpens in new window

Updated: October 27, 2025 
Statistics Canada released employment figures for September. Workers inspect sheets of stainless steel after being pressed from coils, at Magna Stainless and Aluminum in Montreal on Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christopher Katsarov

U.S. tariffs on key Canadian goods and weakening global demand triggered a sharp pullback in exports in the second quarter of 2025, according to new data released by Statistics Canada.

Exports dropped 7.5 per cent in Q2 after the U.S. implemented tariffs on key Canadian goods like steel, aluminum, automobiles and other goods not compliant with the Canada-United States-Mexico Agreement.

“This was the largest quarterly decline since 2009, excluding the COVID-19 pandemic period,” according to the report released Monday.

The slump extended to manufacturing, wholesaling and employment, all of which posted declines or stalled growth.

“Prices for various consumer goods have been directly or indirectly affected by U.S. tariffs and Canada’s tariff countermeasures, including new cars, clothing and footwear, certain household appliances, a range of grocery items, and travel services,” according to the report.

Manufacturing and employment decline

The report states businesses which engage in cross-border trade with the U.S. are looking for mitigation strategies to deal with the tariff caused disruptions.

Fifty four per cent of manufacturers and 44 per cent of wholesalers say they have been impacted by tariffs in May.

The report also states there was no net employment growth from February to August this year.

Employment growth in the public sector has slowed this year. The pace of growth in the private sector slowed before trade tensions began and has been below two per cent for the last 17 months.

A third of businesses reported passing cost increases caused by tariffs to the customer in the last six months while two fifth of businesses say they are likely to follow suit within the next year,


Anam Khan

Journalist, BNNBloomberg.ca

DUMB AND DUMBER
Bank of Canada expected to cut key rate despite mixed inflation, jobs data


By The Canadian Press
Updated: October 27, 2025 

A cyclist rides past the Bank of Canada in Ottawa, Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2025.
 THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

OTTAWA — Most economists expect the Bank of Canada will look past strong jobs data and signs of stubbornness on the inflation front to deliver a second consecutive interest rate cut this week.

BMO chief economist Doug Porter is among those expecting a second straight cut on Wednesday, but he admits recent economic data hasn’t perfectly lined up with that call.

“The two major economic reports we’ve had since the Bank of Canada last decided on interest rates were a strong jobs report and a bit higher than expected inflation report,” he said in an interview.

“Taken in isolation, you would think there’s no reason for the bank to be cutting interest rates.”

The Bank of Canada lowered its benchmark interest rate by a quarter point to 2.5 per cent in late September, snapping a streak of three consecutive rate holds since March.


As of Friday, LSEG Data & Analytics put financial market odds at more than 80 per cent in favour of a second quarter-point cut at the central bank’s decision on Wednesday.

Earlier this month, Statistics Canada reported a surprise gain of roughly 60,000 jobs in September. Inflation data for that month also accelerated to 2.4 per cent, up half a percentage point from August, with the Bank of Canada’s preferred measures of core inflation holding above three per cent.

The central bank uses various definitions of “core” inflation to strip out volatile influences on the consumer price index and get a better sense of where inflation is headed.

Porter said the firm September inflation report “did make it a little tougher to cut rates.”

He said the Bank of Canada could still surprise with a hold this week, but he’s putting more stock in the broader economic context to inform BMO’s rate call for a cut.

Despite the surprise employment gain in September, the labour market has barely posted any job growth since January as U.S. trade uncertainty restrains businesses’ hiring appetites.

Porter argued that Canada’s jobs market needs relief from lower rates with the unemployment rate still elevated at 7.1 per cent.

The Bank of Canada has also cast some doubt on the reliability of its own core inflation metrics, instead telling Canadians that monetary policymakers see inflation around 2.5 per cent right now. Porter said some other core inflation measures from September are in line with that reading.

“We think they should proceed carefully here, but ultimately they should proceed with lower rates,” he said.

Economists at RBC also believe the Bank of Canada has a tough call to make this week.

Economists Nathan Janzen and Claire Fan said in a note to clients that signs of weakness in the labour market and lower inflation expectations in the central bank’s business outlook survey published last week should give monetary policymakers confidence that inflation will cool further going forward.


“This essentially means more room and flexibility for the central bank to have looser monetary policy,” they wrote.

But to see further cuts past this, the economy would need to deteriorate more sharply than RBC is currently forecasting. Fan and Janzen argue fiscal policy from the federal government is best suited to address ongoing sectoral pain from U.S. tariffs.

The Bank of Canada will have to make its rate decision before getting a sense of the federal government’s spending plans coming in the fall budget on Nov. 4.

BMO sees the Bank of Canada continuing to cut interest rates to a low of two per cent before finishing the current easing cycle -- among the lowest terminal rates currently expected by major forecasters.

Outside of the hard numbers, Porter said recent announcements that automakers Stellantis and GM are either pausing some Canadian production or moving it south of the border show what an “exceptionally challenging” time it is for the economy.

While he also expects stimulative government spending to come from the federal budget next month, he said Canada is grappling with “once in a lifetime uncertainty on the trade front,” warranting a strong response from both monetary and fiscal policy.

The Bank of Canada doesn’t know yet where government spending plans will end up — and how much the budget could fuel inflation — but Porter said it’s nonetheless appropriate for both monetary and fiscal policy to be rowing in the same direction.

“You don’t want to see those two policies working against each other usually. And I think that’s what we have here,” he said.

“A bit of support from the the fiscal oar and a little bit of support from lower interest rates, the monetary oar.”

The Bank of Canada has also signalled it will return to publishing a single, central forecast for the economy. In an updated monetary policy report accompanying the rate decision on Wednesday. The central bank had published illustrative scenarios for the past two quarters based on how U.S. tariff policy might evolve.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 27, 2025.
Craig Lord, The Canadian Press