Polar Bear Population Alliance

zoocentral

Well-Known Member
The Polar Bear Population Alliance: A New Chapter in North American Polar Bear Management

Over the past two decades, few species in North American zoos have experienced as dramatic a shift in their management philosophy as Ursus maritimus. Once housed in stark concrete grottoes, the species became the centerpiece of a new era in zoo design—one defined by immersion, storytelling, and expansive habitats meant to reflect the vastness of the Arctic itself. From 2000 to 2015, more than a dozen state-of-the-art polar bear exhibits opened across the United States, driven by enthusiasm for the Association of Zoos and Aquariums’ (AZA) Polar Bear Species Survival Plan (SSP) and its vision for a robust, self-sustaining population.

Between 2010 and 2015 alone, a “second golden age” of Arctic exhibits swept through the AZA landscape: Como Park Zoo and Conservatory’s Polar Bear Odyssey (2010), Columbus Zoo & Aquarium’s Polar Frontier (2010), Brookfield Zoo Chicago’s Great Bear Wilderness (2010), Kansas City Zoo’s Polar Bear Passage (2010), San Diego Zoo’s renovated Conrad Prebys Polar Bear Plunge (2010), Louisville Zoological Garden’s Glacier Run (2011), Utah’s Hogle Zoo’s Rocky Shores (2012), North Carolina Zoo’s renovated Rocky Coast (2014), Saint Louis Zoo’s Polar Bear Point (2015), Buffalo Zoo’s Arctic Edge (2015), and Henry Vilas Zoo’s Arctic Passage (2015). These joined early innovators like Toledo Zoological Gardens’ Arctic Encounter (2000), Detroit Zoological Park’s Arctic Ring of Life (2001), Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium’s Water’s Edge (2006), and Memphis Zoo’s Northwest Passage (2006) as well as later entrants such as Lincoln Park Zoo’s Arctic Tundra (2016) and Oregon Zoo’s Polar Passage (2021), creating a network of 17 modern facilities, each designed with the hope of hosting multiple bears and future generations.

Yet in hindsight, this boom proved premature. The number of polar bears available to populate these exhibits was far smaller than anticipated. Breeding success was inconsistent, rescue opportunities were tightly controlled, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service regulations severely limited the importation of wild-origin bears from Canada and abroad. As a result, many of these impressive new Arctic complexes housed just one polar bear. To maintain public appeal and justify their investment, several zoos turned to brown bears, a species more readily available and less restricted by international law, to fill the void. For years, grizzly or Kodiak bears became stand-ins for their Arctic counterparts, inhabiting rotational habitats within polar bear complexes.

Now, over a decade later, those same brown bears have become part of a new management dilemma. With the dissolution of the SSP and the creation of the Polar Bear Population Alliance, a federally coordinated effort between the AZA and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), the focus has shifted from simply maintaining polar bears to optimizing their breeding potential. A key tenet of this new approach is the concept of mate choice: the theory that polar bears may breed more successfully when housed in multi-bear social structures that allow for natural selection of compatible partners. This represents a major departure from the traditional one-pair-per-zoo model that defined the SSP era.

To achieve this, the Alliance aims to consolidate the population into a smaller number of large, flexible facilities capable of holding multiple bears. This is an approach that could improve social dynamics, reproductive success, and welfare outcomes. But in practice, that means many zoos currently housing brown bears within Arctic-themed habitats will need to make tough decisions. Institutions must phase out brown bears entirely to free up space for multi-polar bear groupings. The other option is to accept a new designation as “retirement” homes for older brown bears or non-breeding polar bears. In some cases, this may involve transferring long-term residents or even redesigning enclosures to better suit the complex needs of breeding-age polar bears.

Meanwhile, across the border, Canada plays a critical but constrained role in the continental picture. The three AZA-accredited Canadian zoos with polar bears (Assiniboine Park Zoo, Toronto Zoo, and the Wilder Institute/Calgary Zoo) are home to several rescued bears. However, Canadian federal law prevents the export of these rescued individuals to the United States, as they are considered wild-origin animals and are legally bound to remain in Canada for life. While these bears are invaluable for welfare research, education, and conservation messaging, they cannot contribute genetically to the greater North American population. This creates a geographic and genetic divide between the two countries, with each operating under separate but parallel systems of management and protection.

The formation of the Polar Bear Population Alliance represents a pragmatic response to these challenges. It acknowledges the reality that the North American polar bear population cannot be managed solely as a closed breeding network. Instead, it must function as a welfare- and rescue-driven system that prioritizes quality of care, social opportunity, and long-term population planning. The Alliance’s vision is one of strategic concentration rather than expansion: fewer institutions, larger spaces, and more cohesive coordination between federal authorities and accredited zoos.

This new model also forces zoos to confront their own future roles. Not every facility that built a polar bear exhibit in the early 2010s will remain part of the breeding population. Some may pivot toward Arctic education and climate advocacy; others may become permanent homes for geriatric or non-reproductive bears. The brown bears that once filled the gaps may either be phased out or given new, redefined spaces elsewhere in the zoo. In essence, the North American bear landscape is entering a process of realignment, a necessary evolution as institutions reconcile the limits of past optimism with the practicalities of future stewardship.

What’s unfolding now is less a contraction than a paradigm shift. The transition from the Polar Bear SSP to the Polar Bear Population Alliance marks a new era defined by the need to sustain a population through consolidated breeding, rather than every zoo needing its own polar bear exhibit. The focus is no longer on how many institutions can display the species, but on how well a smaller network can manage it for long-term viability. Consolidation, mate choice, and federal coordination reflect a move away from the showcase mentality of the 2000s toward a model centered on population health, behavioral compatibility, and future sustainability. It’s a recognition that resilience won’t come from expansion, but from cooperation. This will hopefully ensure that the bears we have today can form the foundation of a lasting, thriving population for generations to come.
 
Last edited:
Current AZA Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus) Population in the U.S.

San Diego Zoo – San Diego, California
  • 0.1 Chinook 1/1/1995 (Wild x Wild)
  • 0.1 Tatqiq 1/1/2000 (Wild x Wild)
Brookfield Zoo Chicago – Brookfield, Illinois
  • 1.0 Hudson 12/14/2006 (Aussie† x Arki†)
  • 0.1 Hope 12/3/2015 (Marty† x Crystal)
  • 0.1 Amelia Gray 11/8/2016 (Nanuq† x Anana†)
Lincoln Park Zoo – Chicago, Illinois
  • 0.1 Talini 11/22/2004 (Triton† x Bärle†)
  • 1.0 Siku 12/3/2009 (Marty† x Crystal)
Louisville Zoological Garden – Louisville, Kentucky
  • 0.1 Qannik 1/1/2011 (Wild x Wild)
  • 1.0 Borealis 12/9/2018 (Marty† x Crystal)
Detroit Zoological Park – Royal Oak, Michigan
  • 1.0 Nuka 11/25/2004 (Kavek† x Voda†)
  • 0.1 Suka 11/21/2012 (Marty† x Crystal)
Como Park Zoo and Conservatory – Saint Paul, Minnesota
  • 0.1 Nan 1/4/1995 (Wild x Wild)
  • 1.0 Neil 12/9/1995 (Irsinaki† x Skeena†)
  • 1.0 Kulu 11/28/2019 (Lee x Aurora)
  • 0.1 Astra 11/17/2020 (Nuka x Suka)
Kansas City Zoo – Kansas City, Missouri
  • 1.0 Nuniq 11/14/2016 (Nanuq† x Aurora)
Saint Louis Zoo – Saint Louis, Missouri
  • 1.0 Kallu 11/11/2022 (Nuka x Crystal)
Albuquerque Biological Park – Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • 1.0 Kiska 11/19/1996 (Andy† x Chinook†)
Buffalo Zoo – Buffalo, New York
  • 1.0 Sakari 11/21/2012 (Marty† x Crystal)
  • 0.1 Luna 11/27/2012 (Nanuq† x Anana†)
Seneca Park Zoo – Rochester, New York
  • 0.1 Anoki 11/20/1996 (Yukon† x Aurora†)
North Carolina Zoo – Asheboro, North Carolina
  • 0.1 Anana 11/27/1999 (Yukon† x Aurora†)
Columbus Zoo & Aquarium – Powell, Ohio
  • 1.0 Lee 11/27/1999 (Yukon† x Aurora†)
  • 0.1 Aurora 11/25/2006 (Marty† x Crystal)
Toledo Zoological Gardens – Toledo, Ohio
  • 0.1 Crystal 11/10/1998 (Orca† x Saski†)
  • 1.0 Kali 11/15/2012 (Wild x Wild)
Oregon Zoo – Portland, Oregon
  • 1.0 Kallik 11/11/2022 (Nuka x Crystal)
Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium – Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
  • 0.1 Snowflake 11/28/1995 (Herman II† x Becky†)
Memphis Zoo – Memphis, Tennessee
  • 1.0 Koda 11/25/2004 (Kavek† x Voda†)
  • 0.1 Haley 11/15/2002 (Yukon† x Aurora†)
Utah’s Hogle Zoo – Salt Lake City, Utah
  • 1.0 Nikita 11/21/2006 (Marty† x Nan)
  • 0.1 Neva 11/14/2016 (Nanuq† x Aurora)
Point Defiance Zoo and Aquarium – Tacoma, Washington
  • 0.1 Laerke 11/17/2020 (Nuka x Suka)
Henry Vilas Zoo – Madison, Wisconsin
  • 0.1 Berit 12/28/1998 (Olaf† x Ulu†)
  • 0.1 Nora 11/6/2015 (Nanuq† x Aurora)
TOTAL POPULATION: 15.20 (35) at 20 institutions
 
Last edited:
Current AZA Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus) Population in Canada

Assiniboine Park Zoo – Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
  • 0.1 Agee 1/3/1995 (UND x UND)
  • 1.0 Storm 1/1/2013 (Wild x Wild)
  • 0.1 Kaska 1/8/2013 (Wild x Wild)
  • 0.1 Star 12/15/2013 (Wild x Wild)
  • 1.0 Nanuq 11/15/2014 (Wild x Wild)
  • 1.0 York 12/15/2014 (Wild x Wild)
  • 0.1 Willow 12/15/2016 (Wild x Wild)
Toronto Zoo – Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • 0.1 Nakita 12/1/2000 (Wild x Wild)
  • 0.1 Aurora 12/1/2000 (Wild x Wild)
  • 1.0 Hudson 10/11/2011 (Inukshuk† x Aurora)
  • 0.1 Juno 11/11/2015 (Inukshuk† x Aurora)
Wilder Institute/Calgary Zoo – Calgary, Alberta, Canada
  • 1.0 Siku 12/15/2015 (Wild x Wild)
TOTAL POPULATION: 5.7 (12) at 3 institutions
 
Current Non-AZA Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus) Population in North America

Alaska Zoo – Anchorage, Alaska
  • 0.1 Cranbeary 11/21/2001 (Kavek† x Voda†)
  • 0.1 Kova 2022 (Wild x Wild)
Aquarium du Quebec – Quebec City, Quebec, Canada
  • 1.0 Humphrey 11/9/2013 (Inukshuk† x Aurora)
  • 1.0 Kinuk 11/27/2018 (Yellé x Aisaqvak)
  • 1.0 Shouka 12/11/2018 (Yellé x Milak)
Cochrane Ecological Institute – Cochrane, Alberta, Canada
  • 1.0 Ganuk 11/30/2009 (Inukshuk† x Aisaqvak)
  • 1.0 Henry 1/1/2013 (Nelson x Liya†)
Zoo Sauvage de Saint-Félicien – Saint-Félicien, Quebec, Canada
  • 0.1 Aisaqvak 12/1/2002 (Wild x Wild)
  • 1.0 Yellé 12/26/2005 (Victor† x Huggies)
  • 0.1 Milak 12/7/2008 (Felix x Victoria†)
TOTAL POPULATION: 6.4 (10) at 4 institutions
 
Former U.S. Holders:
  • Birmingham Zoo – Birmingham, Alabama
  • Reid Park Zoo – Tucson, Arizona
  • Little Rock Zoological Gardens – Little Rock, Arkansas
  • Fresno Chaffee Zoo – Fresno, California
  • Los Angeles Zoo – Los Angeles, California
  • Micke Grove Zoo – Lodi, California (Non-AZA)
  • Sacramento Zoo – Sacramento, California
  • San Francisco Zoological Gardens – San Francisco, California
  • SeaWorld San Diego – San Diego, California
  • Cheyenne Mountain Zoological Park – Colorado Springs, Colorado
  • Denver Zoo Conservation Alliance – Denver, Colorado
  • Pueblo Zoo – Pueblo, Colorado
  • Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute – Washington, District of Columbia
  • Jacksonville Zoo and Botanical Gardens – Jacksonville, Florida
  • SeaWorld Orlando – Orlando, Florida
  • Silver Springs Park – Silver Springs, Florida (Non-AZA)
  • Zoo Atlanta – Atlanta, Georgia
  • Miller Park Zoo – Bloomington, Illinois
  • Indianapolis Zoological Society, Inc. – Indianapolis, Indiana
  • Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden, Inc. – Evansville, Indiana
  • Potawatomi Zoo – South Bend, Indiana
  • Lee Richardson Zoo – Garden City, Kansas
  • Topeka Zoo and Conservation Center – Topeka, Kansas
  • Audubon Zoo – New Orleans, Louisiana
  • BREC’s Baton Rouge Zoo – Baton Rouge, Louisiana
  • Catoctin Wildlife Preserve – Thurmont, Maryland (Non-AZA)
  • Maryland Zoo in Baltimore – Baltimore, Maryland
  • Capron Park Zoo – Attleboro, Massachusetts
  • EcoTarium – Worcester, Massachusetts (Non-AZA)
  • Southwick’s Zoo – Mendon, Massachusetts (Non-AZA)
  • Franklin Park Zoo – Boston, Massachusetts
  • Walter D. Stone Memorial Zoo – Stoneham, Massachusetts
  • The Zoo in Forest Park & Education Center – Springfield, Massachusetts (Non-AZA)
  • John Ball Zoo – Grand Rapids, Michigan
  • Lake Superior Zoo – Duluth, Minnesota
  • Hattiesburg Zoo – Hattiesburg, Mississippi
  • Jackson Zoo – Jackson, Mississippi (Non-AZA)
  • Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo & Aquarium – Omaha, Nebraska
  • Space Farms Zoo & Museum – Wantage, New Jersey (Non-AZA)
  • Bronx Zoo – New York City, New York
  • Central Park Zoo – New York City, New York
  • Prospect Park Zoo – New York City, New York
  • Utica Zoo – Utica, New York
  • Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden – Cincinnati, Ohio
  • Cleveland Metroparks Zoo – Cleveland, Ohio
  • Oklahoma City Zoo and Botanical Garden – Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
  • Tulsa Zoo – Tulsa, Oklahoma
  • Erie Zoo – Erie, Pennsylvania (Non-AZA)
  • Philadelphia Zoo – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • Roger Williams Park Zoo – Providence, Rhode Island
  • Slater Memorial Park Zoo – Pawtucket, Rhode Island (Non-AZA)
  • Riverbanks Zoo and Garden – Columbia, South Carolina
  • Zoo Knoxville – Knoxville, Tennessee
  • Memphis Zoo – Memphis Tennessee
  • Dallas Zoo – Dallas, Texas
  • Fort Worth Zoo – Fort Worth, Texas
  • Gladys Porter Zoo – Brownsville, Texas
  • Houston Zoo, Inc. – Houston, Texas
  • San Antonio Zoological Society – San Antonio, Texas
  • Olympic Game Farm – Sequim, Washington (Non-AZA)
  • Woodland Park Zoo – Seattle, Washington
  • Milwaukee County Zoological Gardens – Milwaukee, Wisconsin
  • Racine Zoo – Racine, Wisconsin
 
Last edited:
Former U.S. Holders:
  • Birmingham Zoo – Birmingham, Alabama
  • Reid Park Zoo – Tucson, Arizona
  • Little Rock Zoological Gardens – Little Rock, Arkansas
  • Fresno Chaffee Zoo – Fresno, California
  • Los Angeles Zoo – Los Angeles, California
  • Micke Grove Zoo – Lodi, California (Non-AZA)
  • Sacramento Zoo – Sacramento, California
  • San Francisco Zoological Gardens – San Francisco, California
  • SeaWorld San Diego – San Diego, California
  • Cheyenne Mountain Zoological Park – Colorado Springs, Colorado
  • Denver Zoo Conservation Alliance – Denver, Colorado
  • Pueblo Zoo – Pueblo, Colorado
  • Smithsonian's National Zoo and Conservation Biology Institute – Washington, District of Columbia
  • Jacksonville Zoo and Botanical Gardens – Jacksonville, Florida
  • SeaWorld Orlando – Orlando, Florida
  • Silver Springs Park – Silver Springs, Florida (Non-AZA)
  • Zoo Atlanta – Atlanta, Georgia
  • Miller Park Zoo – Bloomington, Illinois
  • Indianapolis Zoological Society, Inc. – Indianapolis, Indiana
  • Mesker Park Zoo & Botanic Garden, Inc. – Evansville, Indiana
  • Potawatomi Zoo – South Bend, Indiana
  • Lee Richardson Zoo – Garden City, Kansas
  • Topeka Zoo and Conservation Center – Topeka, Kansas
  • Audubon Zoo – New Orleans, Louisiana
  • BREC’s Baton Rouge Zoo – Baton Rouge, Louisiana
  • Catoctin Wildlife Preserve – Thurmont, Maryland (Non-AZA)
  • Maryland Zoo in Baltimore – Baltimore, Maryland
  • Capron Park Zoo – Attleboro, Massachusetts
  • Southwick’s Zoo – Mendon, Massachusetts (Non-AZA)
  • Franklin Park Zoo – Boston, Massachusetts
  • Walter D. Stone Memorial Zoo – Stoneham, Massachusetts
  • John Ball Zoo – Grand Rapids, Michigan
  • Lake Superior Zoo – Duluth, Minnesota
  • Hattiesburg Zoo – Hattiesburg, Mississippi
  • Jackson Zoo – Jackson, Mississippi (Non-AZA)
  • Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo & Aquarium – Omaha, Nebraska
  • Space Farms Zoo & Museum – Wantage, New Jersey (Non-AZA)
  • Bronx Zoo – New York City, New York
  • Central Park Zoo – New York City, New York
  • Prospect Park Zoo – New York City, New York
  • Utica Zoo – Utica, New York
  • Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden – Cincinnati, Ohio
  • Cleveland Metroparks Zoo – Cleveland, Ohio
  • Oklahoma City Zoo and Botanical Garden – Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
  • Tulsa Zoo – Tulsa, Oklahoma
  • Erie Zoo – Erie, Pennsylvania (Non-AZA)
  • Philadelphia Zoo – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • Roger Williams Park Zoo – Providence, Rhode Island
  • Slater Memorial Park Zoo – Pawtucket, Rhode Island (Non-AZA)
  • Riverbanks Zoo and Garden – Columbia, South Carolina
  • Zoo Knoxville – Knoxville, Tennessee
  • Memphis Zoo – Memphis Tennessee
  • Dallas Zoo – Dallas, Texas
  • Fort Worth Zoo – Fort Worth, Texas
  • Gladys Porter Zoo – Brownsville, Texas
  • Houston Zoo, Inc. – Houston, Texas
  • San Antonio Zoological Society – San Antonio, Texas
  • Olympic Game Farm – Sequim, Washington (Non-AZA)
  • Woodland Park Zoo – Seattle, Washington
  • Milwaukee County Zoological Gardens – Milwaukee, Wisconsin
  • Racine Zoo – Racine, Wisconsin
In Massachusetts, The Zoo in FOrest Park (Non-AZA) and the Ecotarium (non-AZA) both have had polar bears in the last half-century
 
Memphis Zoo – Memphis Tennessee
The Memphis Zoo still has a polar bear.

Memphis Zoo – Memphis, Tennessee
1.0 Koda 11/25/2004 (Kavek† x Voda†)
0.1 Haley 11/15/2002 (Yukon† x Aurora†)
Haley is in Detroit now.

The Polar Bear Population Alliance: A New Chapter in North American Polar Bear Management

Over the past two decades, few species in North American zoos have experienced as dramatic a shift in their management philosophy as Ursus maritimus. Once housed in stark concrete grottoes, the species became the centerpiece of a new era in zoo design—one defined by immersion, storytelling, and expansive habitats meant to reflect the vastness of the Arctic itself. From 2000 to 2015, more than a dozen state-of-the-art polar bear exhibits opened across the United States, driven by enthusiasm for the Association of Zoos and Aquariums’ (AZA) Polar Bear Species Survival Plan (SSP) and its vision for a robust, self-sustaining population.

Between 2010 and 2015 alone, a “second golden age” of Arctic exhibits swept through the AZA landscape: Como Park Zoo and Conservatory’s Polar Bear Odyssey (2010), Columbus Zoo & Aquarium’s Polar Frontier (2010), Brookfield Zoo Chicago’s Great Bear Wilderness (2010), Kansas City Zoo’s Polar Bear Passage (2010), San Diego Zoo’s renovated Conrad Prebys Polar Bear Plunge (2010), Louisville Zoological Garden’s Glacier Run (2011), Utah’s Hogle Zoo’s Rocky Shores (2012), North Carolina Zoo’s renovated Rocky Coast (2014), Saint Louis Zoo’s Polar Bear Point (2015), Buffalo Zoo’s Arctic Edge (2015), and Henry Vilas Zoo’s Arctic Passage (2015). These joined early innovators like Toledo Zoological Gardens’ Arctic Encounter (2000), Detroit Zoological Park’s Arctic Ring of Life (2001), Pittsburgh Zoo & Aquarium’s Water’s Edge (2006), and Memphis Zoo’s Northwest Passage (2006) as well as later entrants such as Lincoln Park Zoo’s Arctic Tundra (2016) and Oregon Zoo’s Polar Passage (2021), creating a network of 17 modern facilities, each designed with the hope of hosting multiple bears and future generations.

Yet in hindsight, this boom proved premature. The number of polar bears available to populate these exhibits was far smaller than anticipated. Breeding success was inconsistent, rescue opportunities were tightly controlled, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service regulations severely limited the importation of wild-origin bears from Canada and abroad. As a result, many of these impressive new Arctic complexes housed just one polar bear. To maintain public appeal and justify their investment, several zoos turned to brown bears, a species more readily available and less restricted by international law, to fill the void. For years, grizzly or Kodiak bears became stand-ins for their Arctic counterparts, inhabiting rotational habitats within polar bear complexes.

Now, over a decade later, those same brown bears have become part of a new management dilemma. With the dissolution of the SSP and the creation of the Polar Bear Population Alliance, a federally coordinated effort between the AZA and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), the focus has shifted from simply maintaining polar bears to optimizing their breeding potential. A key tenet of this new approach is the concept of mate choice: the theory that polar bears may breed more successfully when housed in multi-bear social structures that allow for natural selection of compatible partners. This represents a major departure from the traditional one-pair-per-zoo model that defined the SSP era.

To achieve this, the Alliance aims to consolidate the population into a smaller number of large, flexible facilities capable of holding multiple bears. This is an approach that could improve social dynamics, reproductive success, and welfare outcomes. But in practice, that means many zoos currently housing brown bears within Arctic-themed habitats will need to make tough decisions. Institutions must phase out brown bears entirely to free up space for multi-polar bear groupings. The other option is to accept a new designation as “retirement” homes for older brown bears or non-breeding polar bears. In some cases, this may involve transferring long-term residents or even redesigning enclosures to better suit the complex needs of breeding-age polar bears.

Meanwhile, across the border, Canada plays a critical but constrained role in the continental picture. The three AZA-accredited Canadian zoos with polar bears (Assiniboine Park Zoo, Toronto Zoo, and the Wilder Institute/Calgary Zoo) are home to several rescued bears. However, Canadian federal law prevents the export of these rescued individuals to the United States, as they are considered wild-origin animals and are legally bound to remain in Canada for life. While these bears are invaluable for welfare research, education, and conservation messaging, they cannot contribute genetically to the greater North American population. This creates a geographic and genetic divide between the two countries, with each operating under separate but parallel systems of management and protection.

The formation of the Polar Bear Population Alliance represents a pragmatic response to these challenges. It acknowledges the reality that the North American polar bear population cannot be managed solely as a closed breeding network. Instead, it must function as a welfare- and rescue-driven system that prioritizes quality of care, social opportunity, and long-term population planning. The Alliance’s vision is one of strategic concentration rather than expansion: fewer institutions, larger spaces, and more cohesive coordination between federal authorities and accredited zoos.

This new model also forces zoos to confront their own future roles. Not every facility that built a polar bear exhibit in the early 2010s will remain part of the breeding population. Some may pivot toward Arctic education and climate advocacy; others may become permanent homes for geriatric or non-reproductive bears. The brown bears that once filled the gaps may either be phased out or given new, redefined spaces elsewhere in the zoo. In essence, the North American bear landscape is entering a process of realignment, a necessary evolution as institutions reconcile the limits of past optimism with the practicalities of future stewardship.

What’s unfolding now is less a contraction than a paradigm shift. The transition from the Polar Bear SSP to the Polar Bear Population Alliance marks a new era defined by the need to sustain a population through consolidated breeding, rather than every zoo needing its own polar bear exhibit. The focus is no longer on how many institutions can display the species, but on how well a smaller network can manage it for long-term viability. Consolidation, mate choice, and federal coordination reflect a move away from the showcase mentality of the 2000s toward a model centered on population health, behavioral compatibility, and future sustainability. It’s a recognition that resilience won’t come from expansion, but from cooperation. This will hopefully ensure that the bears we have today can form the foundation of a lasting, thriving population for generations to come.
I for one have very much appreciated your insights, but may I ask, what is the purpose of this thread when one already exists in the North America - General subforum?
 
Last edited:
It's kind of crazy to look at the AZA population of Polar Bears in the U.S. and consider that we are almost into 2026, when 18 of those 35 Polar Bears will be a minimum of 20 years of age or older. That's a ton of elderly bears! The list of 60+ zoos in the U.S. that have phased out Polar Bears will continue to grow as the years go by.
 
Lincoln Park and Brookfield both made a point during renovations about making their exhibits more breeding-friendly and adding maternity dens and so forth but Chicago has not had polar bear cubs since both facilities still had concrete grottos, which is particularly shocking as Brookfield had a very strong breeding record once upon a time.

Brookfield has room to hold and rotate multiple bears and the long-term plans suggest moving brown bears into a new exhibit and making alterations to Great Bear Wilderness into a polar habitat, so of the two Chicago facilities they seem more suited to go into breeding. They also have sloth bears and are committed to them so no questions about the polar, grizzly and sloth bears competing with each other here. ;) I could see Lincoln Park transitioning to holding elderly and non-breeding animals on the other hand.
 
Back
Top