Oldest U.S. polar bear 'Klondike' dies at age 34

(Reuters) - The oldest polar bear living in the United States died at age 34 on Friday at its home in the Philadelphia Zoo, zoo officials said. Klondike, a female polar bear, was euthanised after weeks of worsening medical conditions that included mobility problems and infections, officials said. "There was no significant improvement in her condition, and given her advanced age and poor prognosis, zoo staff decided that the best decision would be to humanely euthanise her," Philadelphia Zoo said in a statement posted on Facebook. Klondike exceeded the typical lifespan for her species, which in captivity lives to about 30 years and generally no longer than 20 years in the wild, according to the Pittsburgh Zoo. The zoo's Coldilocks, also 34, has become the country's new oldest polar bear. Both bears arrived at the zoo in October 1981, the year after they were born in different parts of New York state. The world record-holding oldest polar bear, named Debby, died at age 42 seven years ago at Canada's Assiniboine Park Zoo. Polar bears, which can stand as high as 11 feet (3.35 meters) tall and weigh as much as 1,400 pounds (635 kg), use floating sea ice as platforms for hunting, mating and traveling vast distances in the Arctic. They were listed as threatened under the U.S. Endangered Species Act in 2008 due to disappearing sea ice, becoming the first animals granted such protection because of conditions tied to global climate change. (Reporting by Laila Kearney; Editing by Sandra Maler)