An American proposal to offer more protection to polar bears by prohibiting trade in their skins has failed at a major conservation conference.
The United States' attempt to ban the trade was fiercely opposed by Canada, whose Inuit peoples shoot several hundred bears a year. The Canadians claim that climate change, rather than hunting is the major threat to the animals.
Canada is home to around two-thirds of the estimated 20,000 to 25,000 polar bears in the world and its Government contends that populations are stable.
At the conference of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (Cites) in Bangkok, Thailand, the American proposal failed to gain enough support to be passed. The US had contended that global warming, melting the Arctic sea ice, was shrinking the polar bear's range, numbers were declining and pre-emptive action was needed.
The call was backed by a number of wildlife groups.