White fur, blubbery skin, sharp claws. Polar bears seem perfectly adapted to their frigid habitat up north.
Now, researchers have discovered the bears have another unexpected Arctic adaptation: greasy fur. It’s a trait that might help us find alternatives to “forever chemicals,” a class of widely used compounds that are linked to a range of health problems in people.
An oily substance secreted by glands in polar bears’ skin helps keep their fur from freezing in subzero temperatures, according to a study published Wednesday.
The anti-icing ability of their naturally greasy pelts rivals that of some of the most advanced human-made fibers coated with those chemicals, which are used to repel oil, heat, water and ice.
By re-creating the bears’ ability to resist icing, researchers hope to develop healthier alternatives to these toxic chemicals.
“If we do it in the right way, we have a chance of making them environmentally friendly,” said Bodil Holst, a researcher at the University of Bergen in Norway who co-wrote the study published in the journal Science Advances. “That is certainly the inspiration here.”
‘How can this be?’
A physicist, Holst normally doesn’t think about polar bears. But about five years ago, she was watching a German television program that mentioned the Arctic animals that got her wondering how their fur managed to stay free of ice even after diving into the water.
Their slippery skin is a huge advantage as hunters. Polar bears lurk near holes in sea ice until a seal surfaces and — snap — they’ve caught their next meal. The bears’ ability to slide on their bellies with minimal friction between fur and ice helps prevent the seals from taking notice. Inuit people made sandals from polar bear pelts to move in almost complete silence across the ice.