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  Msg # 1957 of 2222 on ZZCA4347, Monday 7-14-24, 8:35  
  From: ABC  
  To: ALL  
  Subj: Global warming a growing threat to Arcti  
 XPost: soc.culture.can, soc.culture.canada, soc.culture.canadian 
 From: abc@123.cl 
  
 Global warming a growing threat to Arctic reindeer 
  
  
 November 15, 2009 
  
  
 A reindeer herd walks on the beach in Jarfjord, Norway on November 11. 
 On Norway's border with Russia, the consequences of climate change are 
 affecting the reindeer population as rising temperatures hit food 
 stocks and industry growth eats into vital grazing land. 
  
 A reindeer herd walks on the beach in Jarfjord, Norway on November 11. 
 On Norway's border with Russia, the consequences of climate change are 
 affecting the reindeer population as rising temperatures hit food 
 stocks and industry growth eats into vital grazing land. 
 Photograph by: Thomas Nilsen, AFP 
  
 JARFJORD, Norway € On Norway's border with Russia, the consequences of 
 climate change are affecting the reindeer population as rising 
 temperatures hit food stocks and industry growth eats into vital 
 grazing land. 
  
 "Over the past three years, I've had to give some hay to my 800 
 reindeer during the coldest months. It's more expensive and it gives me 
 more work," said Jan Egil Trasti, a reindeer herder from the native 
 Sami people. 
  
 The reason: the lichen his animals graze on has become tougher to find 
 as winter temperatures rise. The snow thaws, and along with rain, then 
 freezes anew -- covering the ground in layers impervious to all but the 
 most tenacious reindeer. 
  
 Grazing land is also disappearing under the weight of industry as 
 buildings, pipelines, roads and other infrastructure increasingly dot 
 old pastures. 
  
 Trasti's nomadic ancestors have raised these beasts for hundreds of 
 years. His grandfather worked the Russian tundra before moving to the 
 Norwegian coast. 
  
 "I have it in my blood. I hope one of my sons will take over," the 
 herder said. He has, though, a hint of doubt in his eyes, his meagre 
 earnings well below the average Norwegian salary. 
  
 Only a minority of Sami -- some 3,000 -- make their living raising and 
 herding in Norway, home to around 240,000 reindeer. 
  
 In this month of November, just weeks ahead of a key UN climate summit 
 in Denmark, snow has not yet blanketed the flora in the Far North. 
  
 Indeed temperatures in this region near the Barents Sea are 
 unseasonably mild, above zero degrees Celsius. 
  
 In the past, when the snows have come, they have generally fallen on 
 dry ground, whereas now they fall on lichen engorged with water. 
  
 Trasti is no scientist, and environmental experts hesitate to link 
 specific weather events to long-term climate change, but trends over 
 the last several decades have clearly shown the Arctic hit hard by 
 global warming. 
  
 In September, a study in the journal Science reported dramatic effects 
 on animals in the Arctic due to a one-degree Celsius warming over the 
 past 150 years. 
  
 The Arctic tends to warm three times faster than elsewhere in the 
 Northern Hemisphere because of a phenomenon called Arctic amplification 
 -- a separate study in the same journal noted that summer temperatures 
 were some 1.4 degrees Celsius warmer than they should have been by the 
 year 2000. 
  
 Jonathan Colman, specialist in "reindeer ecology" at the University of 
 Oslo, explained that sometimes "there's wet ice in the lichen." 
  
 "It gets into their stomachs and they can't digest the food." 
  
 To avoid losing precious livestock, the Sami are forced to move 
 reindeer to drier ground, meaning it is more important than ever to 
 respect the tradition of driving herds across the entire north of the 
 nation. 
  
 An animal can sell for 240 euros (359 dollars), and its meat for around 
 seven euros a kilogramme (10.46 dollars per 2.2 pounds). 
  
 Trasti can make extra money selling the hides or antlers to tourists, 
 and also gets compensation if his animals are killed by predators. 
  
 Norwegian Sami follow the herd with vehicles, but their cousins in 
 Russia still accompany the animals with sleds, camping as they go. 
  
 But the drive, and the ability to follow the reindeer, has been 
 increasingly hampered by industrialisation. 
  
 An iron ore mine which was closed down 15 years ago has re-opened 
 nearby, while elsewhere liquid gas terminals, wind farms and roads are 
 dotted across, or separate, traditional pastures. 
  
 The International Centre for Reindeer Husbandry has expressed regret 
 that "the herders have only a marginal influence on the development of 
 their own traditional lands." 
  
 That's despite a law that "Norway was built on the territory of two 
 people, the Sami and the Norwegians," said Christina Henriksen, a Sami 
 who coordinates an aid programme for native peoples in the Arctic 
 region. 
  
 "For me, being a Sami means herding reindeer," said Trasti, who does 
 not speak his native language. 
  
 "My parents weren't allowed to speak Sami at school in the 60's," he 
 said, and out of guilt, they "didn't teach us the language." 
  
 For the moment though, reindeer numbers are holding up under the strain 
 of global warming, but that's a fact Colman puts down to their very 
 resilience. 
  
 "If reindeer weren't as adaptable, there wouldn't be any left," he 
 said. 
  
 --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05 
  * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2) 

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