A polar bear which was found roaming around a village in eastern Russia, hundreds of miles away from its usual habitat, has been airlifted back home.
The exhausted-looking animal apparently traveled on an ice floe from the remote, sparsely populated Chukotka to a village on Kamchatka, about 700 kilometers (434 miles) south when it was found.
Russian emergency authorities on Monday mounted an operation to repatriate the bear. A member of the response team shot a tranquilizer at the bear and put it in a container and onto a helicopter which flew to the snow-covered Chukotka. The bear was then released into the wild.
Environmentalists say that wild animals such as polar bear are suffering from the shrinking hunting environment and the receding ice as the Arctic is getting warmer.
Frantic bid to save Umka the lost polar bear who travelled at least 700 kilometres in the wrong direction on ice floe. Exhausted and confused he seeks out help from the local police in Tilichiki, north of Kamchatka
Pics: Leonid Shelapugin and Alina Ukolovahttps://t.co/raPfRfbCjN pic.twitter.com/TwM078nR0c— The Siberian Times (@siberian_times) April 18, 2019