Abstract

<p>Intensive reindeer grazing and the increase of other land use forms have caused a decline in the amount of arboreal (Alectoria, Bryoria spp.) and reindeer (Cladina spp.) lichens in the Finnish reindeer management area during the last few decades. Supplementary feeding of reindeer has increasingly compensated for the lack of natural winter fodder. The amount of the supplementary feeding and the quantity and quality of summer pastures should therefore have an increasing effect on the productivity of reindeer stock. In order to outline better the present carrying capacity problems on pastures in the Finnish reindeer management area we focused some of the most important productivity factors of Finnish reindeer stock from 1993 to 1999. The results showed that the productivity of reindeer stock in Finland was dependent especially on two main elements: amount of reindeer feeding and reindeer densities on summer pastures. Winter pastures had no clear effect on productivity when analysing the entire management area. High productivity figures in reindeer stock (calf production, carcass mass and meat production per reindeer) were reached in the management districts where winter feeding was the most abundant, reindeer densities relatively low and summer pastures abundant. An increase in reindeer density on summer pastures raised meat production per total summer pasture area but decreased carcass mass of reindeer calves and meat production per reindeer. It seems that the fundamental factor for keeping the reindeer stock productivity sustainable at a high enough level is to optimize the longterm reindeer densities on pastures. Summer pastures may gradually become a limiting factor for reindeer stock productivity in some areas if overgrazed and decreased winter pastures are only compensated for by winter feeding of reindeer.</p><p> </p>

Highlights

  • Wide fluctuations in stock numbers are very typical for several reindeer and caribou populations (Rangifer tarandus) belonging to the genus Rangifer (Klein, 1968; Henry & Gunn, 1991; Messier et al, 1988; Post & Klein, 1999)

  • Based upon inventories of reindeer pastures and population parameters we analysed the effect of reindeer densities and reindeer feeding on calf production, carcass mass of calves and meat production per reindeer in the period 1993-99 in step-wise regression models

  • Our results showed that the productivity of reindeer stock in the Finnish reindeer management area in the period 1993-99 was dependent on two main factors: the amount of reindeer feeding and rein

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Summary

Introduction

Wide fluctuations in stock numbers are very typical for several reindeer and caribou populations (Rangifer tarandus) belonging to the genus Rangifer (Klein, 1968; Henry & Gunn, 1991; Messier et al, 1988; Post & Klein, 1999). McLeod (1997) concluded that the interactive carrying capacity model (Caughley, 1976; 1979; Caughley & Lawton, 1981) was suitable for calculating carrying capacity in both deterministic and stochastic environments According to this model there are several equilibria between herbivore population and its food resource but only the economic carrying capacity equilibrium gives the highest sustained yield in animal production. The amount of reindeer lichens (Cladina spp.) and arboreal lichens (Alectoria, Bryoria spp.) on reindeer pastures has decreased markedly in Finland According to their model Kumpula et al (2000) estimated that the average lichen biomass in lichen ranges in the whole management area in the middle of 1990s was only 13% of the optimum and 5% of the climax stage lichen biomass. Effects of reindeer densities on lichen, arboreal lichen and summer pastures, the amount of summer fodder and supplementary feeding per reindeer on stock productivity were analysed

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