Snow-turning held for polar bear centre in Winnipeg - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 09:42 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Snow-turning held for polar bear centre in Winnipeg

Officials held a "snow-turning" in Winnipeg at the site of what will be a world-class international polar bear conservation centre.

Officials held asnow-turning in Winnipeg at the site of what will be a world-class international polar bear conservation centre and Arctic exhibit.

Artificial snow was brought in for officials to shovel as a symbolicstart tothe construction.

The facility at the Assiniboine Park Zoo, first announced in December, will provide a home for orphaned, injured or problem polar bears.

There will also be an educational and environmental research component.

The Manitoba government is putting up a total of $31 million for the project.

Of that,$4.5 million is earmarked for the conservation centre which will serve as the headquarters of Polar Bears International while more than $26 million will go to construction of the polar-bear Arctic exhibit.

The exhibit willincludea polar bearenclosurelarge enough for six bears, and featureunderwater and above-ground viewing opportunities.

It will be 20 times larger than the current enclosure, which became vacant when the zoo's popular polar bear, Debby, died in 2008 at age 42.

The zoo has not been able to get another polar bear because its enclosure no longer met provincial standards.

Renovations to that enclosure, as well as thezoo's black bear enclosure, will beginthis month. Those spaces will be turned into an orphaned polar-bear cub rescue centre, while theblack bears will be relocated to a new enclosure elsewhere in the zoo.

The renovationsare scheduled be completed by the end of 2010 while thegoal is to have the new polar bear conservation centre and exhibit open by 2013.

There are about 935 polar bears living in the western Hudson Bay area. Climate change is being blamed for a declining population because warmer weather means the bears have less time on the ice to feed on seals.

Manitoba declared polar bears an endangered species two years ago.

With files from The Canadian Press