Collaboration between Reindeer Herders and Scientists Aims to Comprehend Arctic Warming

Collaboration between Reindeer Herders and Scientists Aims to Comprehend Arctic Warming



The spring 2014 ‌annual reindeer festival in Yar-Sale, a rural town ‍on the Yamal Peninsula in Western Siberia, was a grim ⁢affair.⁣ A rainstorm followed by a deep⁢ freeze the previous November had turned the normally snow-covered tundra into an ice shield. Reindeer could not paw through the thick ice to access lichen, their primary food⁢ source.⁣ In a region where⁤ winter⁤ temperatures can plunge​ below –50° Celsius, that ground remained frozen⁢ months later. Tens of thousands of ‌reindeer had already died of ⁣starvation. Thousands more were‍ on​ the brink of ⁣death.
To the scientists in attendance, the⁤ request felt like a call to action. Serotetto was ⁣basically saying: “You scientists, what’s⁢ causing this?”‌ says Bruce Forbes, a biogeographer at⁤ the University of Lapland in Rovaniemi, Finland.
The scientists ⁤possessed a trove of satellite images of the Russian⁤ Arctic to start tackling that question, Forbes knew. But without more detailed,‌ on-the-ground information from local inhabitants, such as the timing‍ of the event and where it occurred, they did not know where to begin looking in that ⁤massive amount of data.
Now the two groups have joined forces ⁣to try⁢ to understand a phenomenon that has crucial implications for a people’s way of life, as well as a ​world at large grappling with climate ​change. Besides preventing herbivores from accessing foliage underneath the ice, rain⁤ on snow has been​ shown to trigger slush avalanches, create surface conditions that warm permafrost, change soil​ and vegetation conditions⁢ and disrupt transportation and communications.

2023-11-27 08:00:00
Original from www.sciencenews.org

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