Impacts of climate warming on reindeer herding require new land-use strategies |
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Authors: | Gunhild C. Rosqvist Niila Inga Pia Eriksson |
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Affiliation: | 1.Department of Physical Geography, Stockholm University, 106 91 Stockholm, Sweden ;2.Krokvik, 17, 981 95 Kiruna, Sweden |
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Abstract: | Climate in the Arctic has warmed at a more rapid pace than the global average over the past few decades leading to weather, snow, and ice situations previously unencountered. Reindeer herding is one of the primary livelihoods for Indigenous peoples throughout the Arctic. To understand how the new climate state forces societal adaptation, including new management strategies and needs for preserved, interconnected, undisturbed grazing areas, we coupled changes in temperature, precipitation, and snow depth recorded by automatic weather stations to herder observations of reindeer behaviour in grazing areas of the Laevas Sámi reindeer herding community, northern Sweden. Results show that weather and snow conditions strongly determine grazing opportunities and therefore reindeer response. We conclude that together with the cumulative effects of increased pressures from alternative land use activities, the non-predictable environmental conditions that are uniquely part of the warming climate seriously challenge future reindeer herding in northern Sweden. |
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Keywords: | Climate warming Indigenous knowledge Land use Northern Sweden Reindeer herding Snow conditions |
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