Spirit Bears

by Kiran Jayasinghe

Imagine you’re taking a trip to the Great Bear Rainforest, on Canada’s West Coast. Suddenly, you see a white bear. “A polar bear in a rainforest?” you say to yourself. Isn’t that strange? Actually, it’s not any kind of polar bear, nor an albino bear (a bear with no pigment). It’s a black bear.  A white black bear, that is indeed strange!

Kermode bears
Kermode (also known as a spirit) bear (image: http://www.paulnicklen.com/)

These white black bears are most commonly known as the Kermode (pronounced Ker-mo-dee) bear. It is named after Francis Kermode of the Royal British Columbia Museum.  They are also known as spirit bears. Less than 400 hundred of these rare bears exist in the whole world. Many of them live in the Great Bear Rainforest. The spirit bears’ white fur comes from a recessive gene (DNA that determines somebody’s characteristics). This gene needs to be in both parents for a cub to have white fur, although the parents do not have to be white themselves (i.e. the parents can be carriers of the gene). Yes, I know, it’s a little confusing at first.

Though they are considered white, spirit bears don’t exactly have white fur, the fur is a little dirty. More like a carpet that needs to be cleaned. Because of their whitish fur they stand out from their surroundings, unlike their black relatives who blend in with their surroundings better.

kermode-bear-eating-160
Spirit bears are finicky eaters! (image: http://www.paulnicklen.com/)

An interesting fact is that spirit bears catch more fish during the day than black bears, although both types catch the same amount of fish at night.  Scientists think that this is because fish are less afraid of the white color than black when then look up out of the water during the day. Because spirit bears can catch more food they have a survival advantage, and therefore, some scientists think that the white-fur trait will continue in the black bear population.

When there is plenty to eat, spirit bears can be finicky eaters. Sometimes they eat only fish eggs, sometimes they’ll eat everything but the eggs. Some eat only the fish heads, while others eat only the tail .

Kermode bears
Spirit bear climbing a tree (image:http://www.paulnicklen.com/)

When they cannot find fish, they climb trees and eat nuts, and berries, and sometimes even small rodents!

 

 

 

To learn more, check out these links:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kermode_bear

ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2011/08/kermode-bear/barcott-text

www.bearlife.org/kermode-bear.html

ALMA

by Simran Jayasinghe

The ALMA telescope
ALMA Telescope (image: http://alma.mtk.nao.ac.jp/)

Do you ever look at the stars before you go to sleep? My sisters and I do. We have a star projector by “Museum Tour Toys”, that projects constellations, and stars on our bedroom ceiling.  Do you wish that you could see what stars look like up close? I wish I could. I would need a telescope to do that. Maybe I would need the worlds most powerful telescope!

The Atacama Desert in Chile
The Atacama Desert in Chile (image: http://alma.mtk.nao.ac.jp)

ALMA is the most powerful telescope in the world. It is 10 times better than the Hubble Space Telescope, which you have probably heard about. ALMA stands for Atacama Large Millimeter Array. As the name suggests the telescope is in the Atacama Desert in Chile a country in South America. The telescope is so powerful, and sensitive, that it needed to be in a very dry place, so there would be no interference from clouds. Scientists selected the Chajnantor Plateau  in the Atacama Desert to build ALMA. Chajnantor Plateau is 5,000 meters above sea level. It is very dry, with almost no rainfall the whole year so there are no clouds.

ALMA is made out of 66 antennas, or individual telescope parts. Each antenna dish has either a diameter of 12 meters or 7 meters. 25 antennas were provided by the European Southern observatory, 25 by the U.S. National Radio Astronomy observatory, and 16 antennas were provided by the National Astronomical observatory in Japan. It took 10 years to build ALMA and scientists began carrying out research at the telescope  in 2011. ALMA is controlled by a machine called the ALMA correlator. The correlator is a super computer that controls all the antennas, and records the information ALMA discovers. The correlator, does so much work that it needs an entire air-conditioned floor to keep it cool!

When the telescope only had 33 of its 66 antennas in place, ALMA took pictures of colliding galaxies, and sugar molecules circling a star! That’s really seeing things up close! Many scientists from around the world hope to see more extraordinary things from ALMA  now that all of the antennas are working.

 

For more information go to :

  1. The ALMA website
  2. Information from Space.com
  3. Information from the National Radio Astronomy Observatory
  4. Information from Sciencenode.org