Wales On Sunday

Climate change is shrinking reindeer

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SANTA might need a few more reindeer to pull his sleigh this year – because of new evidence that the animals are shrinking.

Arctic reindeer are becoming smaller and lighter due to the impact of climate change on food supplies, say scientists.

Over a period of 16 years between 1994 and 2010 the weight of adult reindeer studied in Svalbard – a group of islands near the North Pole – fell by 12% from 55kg to just over 48kg.

Warm winters are producing more rain, which then freezes on snow, covering the pasture beneath with an impenetrab­le layer of ice that the deer cannot break through. As a result, female reindeer are going hungry and aborting their calves or giving birth to much lighter young, the scientists believe.

Lead researcher Professor Steve Albon, from the James Hutton Institute in Scotland, said: “The implicatio­ns are that there may well be more smaller reindeer in the Arctic in the coming decades but possibly at risk of catastroph­ic die-offs because of increased ice on the ground.”

Another factor is thought to be a doubling of reindeer numbers over the past 20 years, which has led to greater competitio­n for food.

Ecologists from the James Hutton Institute, the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research and the Norwegian University of Life Sciences have been studying reindeer in the high Arctic since 1994. Findings were presented at the British Ecological Society annual meeting.

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