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| - To many people, Joey might just be the "unluckiest bear in the world." Depending on the source, the "albino brown bear" or "albino grizzly bear" has repeatedly been transported to the Arctic after mistakenly being identified as an out-of-place polar bear.
The online posts making this claim date back at least to 2021, and it has continued to resurface year after year since then. A video shared to TikTok in April 2023, for example, told more than 4.2 million viewers the story of the purportedly unfortunate bear.
Snopes did not find any credible reports to corroborate the tale, though. Furthermore, wildlife expert Geoff York, the senior director of research and policy at Polar Bears International, a nonprofit polar bear conservation organization, told us this story likely "originated as a spoof."
Why? For one thing, the light-phase bear ("phase" refers to color variations in bears) shown in the video is "clearly not a polar bear," York said.
According to the wildlife educational facility North American Bear Center, black bears can appear in more colors than any other North American mammals, from black and brown to cinnamon, blond, blue-gray or even white. East of the Great Plains, nearly all black bear (Ursus americanus) individuals are black.
"The melanin in black fur makes the fur resistant to abrasion in the brushy understory of eastern forests," writes the organization. But in western states with mountain meadows, over half of the black bears are brown, cinnamon or blond.
"Light-colored fur reduces heat stress in open sunlight and allows the bears to feed longer in open, food-rich habitats. The lighter-colored fur may also camouflage them from predators in those open areas," adds the North American Bear Center.
Similarly, brown or grizzly bears may also exhibit a wide variety of hair coloration, according to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Coat coloring is determined by genetics, which some experts speculate could have led to white-colored brown bears. (This is not the same as albinism, a condition in which the absence of melanin in the body results in white skin and hair.)
Another strike against the "mistaken for a polar bear" tale is the fact that relocating a bear from North America to the Arctic would be an effort requiring unrealistic international coordination and resources.
"Broadly speaking, animal welfare groups do not engage in relocation efforts and typically lack the management authority and funding necessary to capture and transport animals nationally, let alone across international borders," explained York.
"As we all understand, transporting a bear the distances mentioned would be dramatically expensive and require international collaboration — the likes of which we have not seen for some time. Having been to the North Pole, I can also say it is among the last places you would attempt to re-home anything."
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