Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus): management plan progress report, July 2025
The Polar Bear (Ursus maritimus) was listed as a species of Special Concern under the federal Species at Risk Act (SARA) in 2011. A Special Concern designation is used for species that may become threatened or endangered as a result of a combination of biological characteristics and identified threats.
In accordance with SARA, a management plan must be developed in cooperation with others and published on the Species at Risk Public Registry for all species of Special Concern. A management plan sets goals and objectives for maintaining sustainable population levels of the species.
Publication of proposed Polar Bear management plan and public comment period
The proposed Polar Bear management plan was published on July 25, 2025, opening a 90-day public consultation period. You may access the plan at:
Information on how to submit comments may also be found on that page. Comments on the proposed plan may be submitted until October 23, 2025.
The National Polar Bear Management Plan includes key aspects of the National Polar Bear Conservation Strategy for Canada Footnote 1. It is comprised of a federal addition (Part 1), and a compendium of jurisdictional management plans and recovery strategies (Parts 2 to 7). Incorporation of the jurisdictional management plans and recovery strategies reflects the reality of Polar Bear management in Canada and will result in appropriate and effective delivery of conservation measures while helping to ensure that Indigenous rights holders will continue to have harvest opportunities. The development of the federal addition and the completion of a National Management Plan that meets SARA requirements are dependent on the completion of the jurisdictional management plans and recovery strategies.
ECCC has worked in collaboration with all the co-management partners (for example provincial and territorial governments, Wildlife Management Boards, Indigenous organizations, etc.) in the development of the proposed National Management Plan. A description of the work done by all jurisdictions is detailed below.
Inuvialuit Settlement Region (Northwest Territories and Yukon)
The Inuvialuit Settlement Region (ISR) Polar Bear Joint Management Plan (PDF, 1,203 KB) was completed in 2017.
The purpose of the joint management plan is to describe and enhance the existing management system in the ISR in order to achieve the management goal of ensuring the long-term persistence of healthy polar bears in the ISR while maintaining traditional Inuvialuit use. The plan presents five recommended management objectives for polar bears in the ISR, including:
- collect traditional knowledge, scientific knowledge and monitoring information in a timely manner to inform management decisions
- adaptively co-manage polar bears and their habitat in accordance with the best information available
- encourage wise use of polar bear populations and all polar bear products
- minimize detrimental effects of human activities on polar bears and their habitat
- communicate and share information on polar bears and impacts of climate change on polar bears
Nunavut
The Nunavut Polar Bear Co-Management Plan (PDF, 1,310 KB) was completed in 2019.
The two intents of the Nunavut Polar Bear Co-Management Plan include:
- identify goals and objectives for polar bear management; and
- guide co-management partners in decision-making
The goal of Nunavut Polar Bear Co-Management Plan is to maintain viable and healthy polar bear subpopulations capable of sustaining harvesting needs for current and future generations, and to ensure that polar bears remain an integral and functioning part of the ecosystem while monitored, sustainable harvests occur.
Manitoba
The Polar Bear was listed as a threatened species in Manitoba in 2008 under the Manitoba Endangered Species and Ecosystems Act. As a result of the listing, the province is preparing a provincial Polar Bear Conservation and Recovery Strategy. Manitoba gathered Indigenous Knowledge from communities in April 2024 and is planning to conduct public engagement on the Engage Manitoba website in spring 2025 while continuing to seek input from Indigenous partners and interest holders as a provincial strategy is drafted. The Conservation and Recovery Strategy will be finalized after the public comment period is complete.
Ontario
Ontario Polar Bear recovery strategy
The Ontario Polar Bear Recovery Strategy was completed in 2011.
The Recovery Strategy, which provides scientific advice to the government on the biological needs of the species and the suggested approaches to support recovery, indicates that the recovery goal for the Polar Bear in Ontario is to have a viable sub-population that can persist in a changing environment and supports traditional uses of Polar Bears by coastal Cree communities.
The recovery objectives are to:
- reduce the impact of global climate change within Ontario
- identify, protect and adaptively co-manage Polar Bear habitat in Ontario
- conduct research to fill knowledge gaps that will aid in the recovery and protection of Polar Bears and their habitat
- maximize Cree and Ontario’s participation in inter-jurisdictional Polar Bear management and research in the Hudson and James Bay eco-region
- develop and implement effective monitoring strategies for Polar Bear, including community-based monitoring
- minimize incidental mortalities of Polar Bears
- enhance communication and information sharing with coastal Cree communities and stakeholder groups on Polar Bear biology and management; and
- explore viable, sustainable and complementary activities to existing traditional harvesting of Polar Bear
Ontario Polar Bear Government Response Statement (GRS)
The Ontario Polar Bear Government Response Statement was completed in 2016.
The GRS is the government’s policy response to the scientific advice provided in the recovery strategy. The Ontario government’s recovery goal for Polar Bear, as stated in the GRS, is to extend the length of time that the species persists in Ontario to the extent possible, and to collaborate with other jurisdictions, including Indigenous communities and organizations, to increase the likelihood of the species' persistence within Canada.
The GRS lays out three focus areas and associated objectives.
- Focus area: Climate change mitigation and habitat management
- Objective: Work collaboratively to maintain suitable habitat conditions for Polar Bear in Ontario, to the extent possible
- Focus area: Monitoring and research
- Objective: Monitor trends in Polar Bear populations and implement actions to manage the detected impacts
- Focus area: Inter-jurisdictional management
- Objective: Collaborate with other jurisdictions to increase the likelihood of the persistence of Polar Bears in Ontario and Canada
Québec
Three of Canada's Polar Bear subpopulations (Southern Hudson Bay, Foxe Basin and Davis Strait) occur in northern Québec and its adjacent waters.
In accordance with the Act Respecting Threatened or Vulnerable Species, the Québec government listed the Polar Bear as a vulnerable species in 2009. In northern Québec, provisions dealing with threatened or endangered species (for example, Polar Bear) are subject to the terms of the Act Respecting Hunting and Fishing Rights in the James Bay and New Québec Territories.
A Québec - Eeyou Marine Region - Nunavik Marine Region (QC-EMR-NMR) Polar Bear Management Plan was drafted in a collaborative approach, was adopted in 2023 and was published in 2024.
The management plan will be in effect for a period of 10 years (2023 to 2033), subject to ongoing monitoring of its effectiveness and a full review and assessment after 5-years. Prior to the end of this 10-year period, a new management plan will be tabled for adoption, in accordance with applicable Land Claims Agreements.
The plan is based on the following guiding principles:
- recognition and respect for the roles, responsibilities and authority of each organization involved
- taking the best available traditional knowledge and scientific data
- taking the protection of human life and property into consideration
- compliance with wildlife management principles set out in existing land claims agreements
- engagement and participation of Nunavik Inuit and Crees of Eeyou Istchee in all stages of development and implementation
- adaptability of management measures in response to new knowledge and changing conditions
The objectives of the plan are:
Objective 1: Establish a management system based on the best available information which reflects Inuit and Cree values and adapt it as necessary to ensure the long-term persistence of polar bears in the management plan area.
Objective 2: Collect traditional knowledge and scientific information related to polar bears to inform management decisions.
Objective 3: Establish strategies to minimize the effects of human activities on polar bears and their habitat, and to reduce human- bear conflicts.
Objective 4: Collaborate, coordinate, communicate and promote the exchange of knowledge and information related to polar bears.
One of the main approaches of this management plan is to register all polar bear harvests carried out in its territory of application.
Newfoundland and Labrador
Polar Bears are listed as vulnerable under the Newfoundland and Labrador Endangered Species Act. Polar Bears range along the entire northern Labrador coast, with southerly winter movements extending to the western side of the Northern Peninsula and east coast of Newfoundland, and with summer movements extending to the northernmost portions of the Labrador Peninsula and Baffin Island. Under the Newfoundland and Labrador Endangered Species Act, a management plan is required within three years of listing. A Newfoundland and Labrador Endangered Species Act Management Plan is required to identify measures for the conservation of a species, these are generally outlined in terms of goals, objectives and actions. The first Polar Bear Management Plan was developed collaboratively by Newfoundland and Labrador Wildlife Division and Nunatsiavut Government, Department of Lands and Natural Resources, and released in 2006.
Although the first Polar Bear Management Plan outlined conservation measures over a five-year timeframe, moving forward management plans under the ESA will be considered living documents to be updated as required. Recognizing the contribution of other agencies to Polar Bear conservation and shared management responsibilities, Wildlife Division formed an ad hoc working group in 2012, consisting of Nunatsiavut Government (NG), Wildlife Division (WD), Torngat Wildlife and Plants Co-Management Board (TWPCB), and Parks Canada Agency (PCA) to update the 2006 plan. In 2016, the group was broadened to include the Canadian Wildlife Service (CWS) in Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC).
A draft plan has been prepared collaboratively by the ad hoc working group. The working group has reviewed and revised the Goals, Objectives and Actions in this updated draft and included new information from the recent mark-recapture survey of the Davis Strait Polar Bear subpopulation. Indigenous consultation on the draft management plan began in October 2022, and will continue into early 2023. Once Indigenous consultation is complete, the management plan will be finalized.
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