• Timecircleline@sh.itjust.works
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    5 months ago

    Etymologists crying and shaking right now at the thought of Antarctica (meaning: without bears) gaining the one animal it’s not supposed to have

    • John_CalebBradberton@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      This comment sent me down a rabbit hole. I had no idea the arctic is called that because it was the Greek for ‘of the bear’ because they used Ursa Major to guide them north. And the the arctic is the most northerly point.

      Fucking wild. Mind blown.

    • KazuchijouNo@lemy.lol
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      5 months ago

      Listen to this. How about we get a big boat, put the surviving penguins inside and ship them to the Artic!

  • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Antarctica is generally colder than the Arctic. They would almost certainly be stuck along the coastlines of Antarctica like the penguins are, since the interior average temperatures rival the coldest ones ever recorded in the Arctic. They should be fine there, but then that means they have a very limited distribution and that penguins and seals consequently are always forced to share an environment with the polar bears. Because they’re not used to the polar bears, their populations would likely be destroyed, leaving the polar bears to starve. Unlike in the Arctic, too, they would have nowhere to retreat if their food supply ran out. Outward is hundreds of kilometers of ocean, and inward is hundreds of kilometers of unsurvivable desert.

    • Monument@lemmy.sdf.org
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      5 months ago

      they would have nowhere to retreat if their food supply ran out.

      Um. Hello? There are scientists there.


      Which means scientific papers, then tourists, then garbage and a symbiotic relationship, then the eventual domestication of polar bears.
      Not, you know, the international scientific community treating scientists like cats.