The Borneo Post

Climate change forces Sami reindeer herders to adapt

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ÖRNSKÖLDSV­IK, Sweden: Once, the lynx, wolverines and eagles that preyed on their animals were the main concern for reindeer herders as they moved them to find food in the winter.

But now Margret Fjellstrom and Daniel Viklund, a married couple from Sweden’s indigenous Sami community with hundreds of tawny reindeer, worry about a new threat.

Shifting weather patterns in northern Sweden are forcing them to go further afield to find grazing for their hungry reindeer, pushing up costs and taking more time.

Dressed warmly in jackets and ski pants against the minus 17degree-Celsius (1.4 Fahrenheit) temperatur­es, the couple watched on a February morning as their animals pawed through deep snow for the lichen they eat.

It’s their main food source in winter on the hillsides near Sweden’s Baltic Sea coast.

Back when snowfall like this was a regular occurrence, Fjellstrom’s herder parents would follow the same migration routes year in, year out, stopping at tried-and-tested spots for food.

But that isn’t the case now. “It can rain in January, it can snow in May, there’s no logic to it any more,” Fjellstrom, 39, said, sitting with Viklund by their snowmobile­s.

Between 1991 and 2019, parts of northern and eastern Sweden saw a rise in average temperatur­e of nearly two degrees C compared to the 1860-1900 period, Sweden’s meteorolog­ical institute said in a report.

For several days in early January, temperatur­es in the north climbed about 10 degrees

C more than normal, the institute said.

And on Jan 2, three weather stations in central Sweden reported their highest temperatur­es for the month since 1971.

Unseasonab­ly high temperatur­es cause the snow to thaw and freeze again when the cold returns, building up thicker layers of ice that prevent the reindeer from digging down through the snow to the lichen.

GPS, drones

To ensure they will find food during the migration, the couple spends two months taking turns to scout out unfamiliar areas, before setting off with the animals.

Moving the reindeer from their summer pasture now often involves navigating them around motorways, windfarms or hydroelect­ric projects.

The journey this year took nearly twice as long as it would have done in predictabl­e weather, Fjellstrom said.

“The biggest problem today is climate change,” she bemoaned.

The Sami have herded reindeer across areas of northern Sweden, Norway, Finland and Russia for generation­s and are thought to number between 80,000 and 100,000, with many living above the Arctic Circle.

In Sweden, only the Sami are allowed to herd the animals, raised for their meat, pelts and antlers.

Fjellstrom and Viklund annually move their herd from Dikanas, a village 800 kilometres north of Stockholm, to the plains near Ornskoldsv­ik.

They transport them first by lorry, then release them and follow by snowmobile, tracking them using GPS collars.

Adapting

Viklund watched as the reindeer disappeare­d into the snow-dusted forest, before launching a drone with a speaker attached into the freezing air above.

It allows him to keep track of the animals when poor snowfall makes travel by snowmobile impossible.

He can also herd them on with recordings of his dog barking when they head to areas with little food or hazards like roads or windfarms whose turbine noise scares the reindeer.

“We’re getting more and more days that don’t look like this, the snow is just a few centimetre­s,” he said.

“It’s a way to adapt.” Concerned that the animals get enough to eat, the couple split their herd and asked Fjellstrom’s cousin to move the other half.

It’s an added expense for 31year- old Neila Fjellstrom but he understand­s the need.

“The unusual winter is a normal winter,” he said.

‘Vulnerabil­ity’

The Sami peoples and their reindeer are especially vulnerable to the effects of climate change, according to research.

A “warming climate alters the vegetation conditions and threatens the reindeer’s wellbeing and access to food,” Finland’s University of Oulu and its Center for Environmen­tal and Respirator­y Health Research said in a study last year.

Many Sami are more worried about fluctuatin­g temperatur­es now, than encroachin­g infrastruc­ture, said Gunhild Rosqvist, a Stockholm University researcher into the effects of climate change in mountain and polar environmen­ts.

“I think their awareness of their vulnerabil­ity has increased a lot,” she told AFP.

It can rain in January, it can snow in May, there’s no logic to it any more. — Margret Fjellstrom, indigenous Sami community

Future in peril?

At the annual Sami market in Jokkmokk above the Arctic Circle in early February, thousands of Sami mixed with tourists, just weeks before the new coronaviru­s forced countries around the world to introduce lockdowns.

Reindeer products were proudly on display, from steaming pots of reindeer stew to soft pelts and knives with handles carved from antlers.

“Reindeer herding has been practised for many hundreds of years and it’s an important part of Sami culture,” Kjell-Ake Aronsson, a researcher at the local museum, said.

“Reindeer meat is an important product,” he also added.

“A lot of people are related indirectly to reindeer herding.”

Sweden’s Sami parliament estimates around 2,000 people are directly dependent on herding the country’s 250,000 animals for a living.

Away from the crowds, young Sami activists, in traditiona­l outfits embroidere­d in blues and reds, gathered for a “climate strike” attended by Greta Thunberg.

Fjellstrom and Viklund’s 17-year- old daughter Alva also spoke at the event and hopes to become a herder herself.

But the increased effort needed for herding reindeer now makes Viklund worry about the future.

“I want to give my children the opportunit­y to do it,” he said, the sun casting long, blue shadows across the snow.

“Climate change could destroy that dream.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Aerial view shows reindeers move at their winter season location near Örnsköldsv­ik in Northern Sweden.
Aerial view shows reindeers move at their winter season location near Örnsköldsv­ik in Northern Sweden.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? Reindeers from the Vilhelmina Norra Sameby are pictured at their winter season location near Ornskoldsv­ik in northern Sweden.
— AFP photos Reindeers from the Vilhelmina Norra Sameby are pictured at their winter season location near Ornskoldsv­ik in northern Sweden.
 ??  ?? Margret Fjellstrom rides her snow scooter in the area where her reindeers herd is located during the winter season.
Margret Fjellstrom rides her snow scooter in the area where her reindeers herd is located during the winter season.
 ??  ?? Daniel Viklund flies his drone in the area where his reindeers herd.
Daniel Viklund flies his drone in the area where his reindeers herd.
 ??  ?? A herd of reindeers walk through snow forest.
A herd of reindeers walk through snow forest.

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