Role of supplementary feeding in reindeer husbandry

The chapter discusses the practice of providing reindeer with supplementary feed in winter as part of reindeer husbandry in Finland, Sweden and Norway. It describes how feeding is practised, and the benefits and problems connected with this practice, as perceived in the scientific literature and by...

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Main Authors: Åhman, Birgitta, Turunen, Minna, Kumpula, Jouko, Risvoll, Camilla, Horstkotte, Tim, Lépy, Élise, Eilertsen, Svein Morten
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/29144/
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author Åhman, Birgitta
Turunen, Minna
Kumpula, Jouko
Risvoll, Camilla
Horstkotte, Tim
Lépy, Élise
Eilertsen, Svein Morten
author_facet Åhman, Birgitta
Turunen, Minna
Kumpula, Jouko
Risvoll, Camilla
Horstkotte, Tim
Lépy, Élise
Eilertsen, Svein Morten
author_sort Åhman, Birgitta
collection Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive
description The chapter discusses the practice of providing reindeer with supplementary feed in winter as part of reindeer husbandry in Finland, Sweden and Norway. It describes how feeding is practised, and the benefits and problems connected with this practice, as perceived in the scientific literature and by herders. It also reflects on the possible future role of feeding. Feeding of reindeer is more common in Finland than in the other two countries but seems to be gradually increasing across all Fennoscandia. The main reason is the continuing loss and deterioration of winter pastures due to expanding land use by forestry, mineral and energy production and other industrial and infrastructure schemes, leading to increased grazing pressure on the remaining land. Climate change increases the frequency of difficult winter grazing conditions, and growing predator populations restrict the use of pastures for reindeer grazing. Reduced access to natural pasture can be counteracted by supplementary feeding, but at high costs and risks of impaired animal health and welfare. Herders are also concerned that increased use of feeding may threaten land rights, transfer of traditional knowledge between generations and the ability of reindeer to make use of natural pasture resources, and thereby the traditional management system as a whole.
format Book Part
genre Fennoscandia
reindeer husbandry
genre_facet Fennoscandia
reindeer husbandry
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
id ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:29144
institution Open Polar
language English
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op_relation https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/29144/1/ahman-b-et-al-20221006.pdf
Åhman, Birgitta and Turunen, Minna and Kumpula, Jouko and Risvoll, Camilla and Horstkotte, Tim and Lépy, Élise and Eilertsen, Svein Morten (2022). Role of supplementary feeding in reindeer husbandry. I/In: Reindeer Husbandry and Global Environmental Change : pastoralism in Fennoscandia. Sid./p. 233-247. Earthscan Studies in Natural Resource Management . Earthscan [Book Chapter]
publishDate 2022
record_format openpolar
spelling ftslunivuppsala:oai:pub.epsilon.slu.se:29144 2025-04-27T14:28:42+00:00 Role of supplementary feeding in reindeer husbandry Åhman, Birgitta Turunen, Minna Kumpula, Jouko Risvoll, Camilla Horstkotte, Tim Lépy, Élise Eilertsen, Svein Morten 2022 application/pdf https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/29144/ en eng eng https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/29144/1/ahman-b-et-al-20221006.pdf Åhman, Birgitta and Turunen, Minna and Kumpula, Jouko and Risvoll, Camilla and Horstkotte, Tim and Lépy, Élise and Eilertsen, Svein Morten (2022). Role of supplementary feeding in reindeer husbandry. I/In: Reindeer Husbandry and Global Environmental Change : pastoralism in Fennoscandia. Sid./p. 233-247. Earthscan Studies in Natural Resource Management . Earthscan [Book Chapter] Climate Research Animal and Dairy Science Book Chapter NonPeerReviewed 2022 ftslunivuppsala 2025-03-28T11:17:59Z The chapter discusses the practice of providing reindeer with supplementary feed in winter as part of reindeer husbandry in Finland, Sweden and Norway. It describes how feeding is practised, and the benefits and problems connected with this practice, as perceived in the scientific literature and by herders. It also reflects on the possible future role of feeding. Feeding of reindeer is more common in Finland than in the other two countries but seems to be gradually increasing across all Fennoscandia. The main reason is the continuing loss and deterioration of winter pastures due to expanding land use by forestry, mineral and energy production and other industrial and infrastructure schemes, leading to increased grazing pressure on the remaining land. Climate change increases the frequency of difficult winter grazing conditions, and growing predator populations restrict the use of pastures for reindeer grazing. Reduced access to natural pasture can be counteracted by supplementary feeding, but at high costs and risks of impaired animal health and welfare. Herders are also concerned that increased use of feeding may threaten land rights, transfer of traditional knowledge between generations and the ability of reindeer to make use of natural pasture resources, and thereby the traditional management system as a whole. Book Part Fennoscandia reindeer husbandry Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU): Epsilon Open Archive Norway
spellingShingle Climate Research
Animal and Dairy Science
Åhman, Birgitta
Turunen, Minna
Kumpula, Jouko
Risvoll, Camilla
Horstkotte, Tim
Lépy, Élise
Eilertsen, Svein Morten
Role of supplementary feeding in reindeer husbandry
title Role of supplementary feeding in reindeer husbandry
title_full Role of supplementary feeding in reindeer husbandry
title_fullStr Role of supplementary feeding in reindeer husbandry
title_full_unstemmed Role of supplementary feeding in reindeer husbandry
title_short Role of supplementary feeding in reindeer husbandry
title_sort role of supplementary feeding in reindeer husbandry
topic Climate Research
Animal and Dairy Science
topic_facet Climate Research
Animal and Dairy Science
url https://pub.epsilon.slu.se/29144/