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Reindeer herding is when reindeer are herded by people in a limited area. Currently, reindeer are the only semi-domesticated animal which naturally belongs to the north. Reindeer herding is conducted in 9 countries; Norway, Finland, Sweden, Russia, Greenland, Alaska, Mongolia, China and Canada. A small herd is also maintained in Scotland.

Reindeer herding is conducted by individuals within some kind of cooperation, in forms such as families, districts, Sámi villages and sovkhozy (collective farms). A person who conducts reindeer herding is called a reindeer herder and approximately 100,000 people[1] are engaged in reindeer herding today around the circumpolar North.

Domestication

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Domestication of the reindeer does not lend itself to a simple explanation. There is no doubt that when a glacier retreated, a person followed the deer to the North, using traps during the reindeer hunt.[2] Modern archaeological data (rock art) suggest that domestication took place for the first time in the Sayan Mountains between Russia and Mongolia, possibly 2-3 thousand years ago. According to another theory, the Tungus (the ancestors of the present Evenks and Evens) independently domesticated the deer to the east of Lake Baikal, and that reindeer herding originated in several places simultaneously. New findings increasingly put the date of domestication in the past. Reindeer herders have their own stories about how deer were domesticated, and about the relationship between wild and domestic deer. Whatever the debate, the very fact of domination of a deer led to a deer revolution that spread to the North, East, and West. Dog sled (sleighs) with reindeers appeared here later by analogy with dog sleds. The reindeer sleds made accessible areas of the tundra and mountains, which even now can only be accessed by helicopter. The deer became the preferred vehicle on the expanses of Eurasia.

Sámi[3]

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The Sámi people lived and worked in so-called siiddat (reindeer herding groups) and reindeer where used for transport, milk and meat production. The Siida is an ancient Sámi community system within a designated area but it can also be defined as a working partnership where the members had individual rights to resources but helped each other with the management of the herds, or when hunting and fishing. The Siida could consist of several families and their herds.[4]

In the XIX and XX centuries, the traditional regions of Saami reindeer husbandry were divided by state borders between four states: Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Russia, which led to the destabilization of traditional reindeer husbandry practices. The state borders (in 1852 between Norway and Russia and in 1889 between Sweden and Finland, then owned by Russia) have divided the reindeer Siids.

Scandinavia

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In Scandinavia, about 6.5 thousands Saami are engaged in reindeer herding. In Norway and Sweden reindeer herding is characterized by large herds and a high degree of mechanization in all regions. The main product of reindeer herding is meat. However, skins, bones, and horns are important raw materials for making clothes and handicrafts. The involvement of young people in Norway and Sweden is hindered by legislative acts, and the lack of pastures and economic opportunities hamper the growth of the industry. The total number of reindeer in the Sami territory, with the exception of Russia, is privately owned, despite the fact that in many aspects the reindeer grazing is carried out collectively within the framework of the Siid.

Norway[5]

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In Norway, there are six pasture territories, divided into 77 pasture areas. Only ethnic Saami have the right to reindeer husbandry in these areas. The reindeer is also bred in southern Norway in special concession areas. There, reindeer herding can also be practiced by Norwegians. The reindeer graze on pastures with an area of approximately 146 thousand km2 in the provinces of Finnmark, Troms, Nordland and Trendelag, which is 40% of the mainland part of Norway. Reindeer herding is managed by the Norwegian Reindeer Husbandry Administration, which is directly subordinate to the Ministry of Agriculture of Norway. 2936 reindeer herders graze about 240 thousands deer, most of which are based in the province of Finnmark.

According to the New Norwegian Reindeer Herding Act from 2007[6], which regulates reindeer herding in Norway, only those who have the right to a reindeer earmark can conduct reindeer husbandry in the Sámi reindeer herding area. The right to a reindeer earmark requires that the person is a Sámi and themselves, their parents or their grandparents have or had reindeer herding as their primary occupation.

The number of reindeer in Norway, which are calculated after slaughtering reindeer has been drawn from the herd and before the calving starts in may, fluctuates but is normally around 200 000. In Norway the reindeer numbers where 242 000 year 1990, 172 000 year 2000 and 241 000 year 2007. The most common reasons for these fluctuations include for example difficult climatic situations during several winters, increasing predation levels and poor pasture conditions.[7]

The economic situation among reindeer herders in Norway varies greatly, and today’s reindeer herders have to adapt to a wide variety of changes in the local, regional and national economy. Reindeer herding is in terms of taxation seen as a for-profit-business and for a reindeer herder a common tax form is as a private entrepreneur.
Today, the income of individual reindeer herders consists of the production of meat and raw materials such as skins, bones and horns. Additional sources of income include financial subsidies and compensation.
More than 50% of the costs in the industry in all the six areas of reindeer husbandry are related to the costs of running and maintaining mechanical equipment. Other high costs are related to other equipment and constructions.[8]

Norway has since 1976 an agreement for reindeer husbandry which is called the “Reindeer Husbandry Agreement” (Norwegian: Reindriftsavtalen) and the main purpose of this is to preserve and develop reindeer husbandry based on its traditions. The agreement is a result of the Norwegian authorities’ views on reindeer herding and especially in relation to the support of the Sámi culture and reindeer husbandry as a Sámi industry. The agreement reflects the political objectives and guidelines for reindeer husbandry.

The economic support for the years 2008/2009 amounted to 97 million NOK (10.1 M Euro). The financial support agreement includes activity supports, production bonuses, early slaughter supplements, calf slaughter payments, district support, special transition assistances and other payments.[9]


Sweden

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Under kalvemerking i Gabna sameby i Nord-Sverige

In Sweden, reindeer herding is practiced almost everywhere in the provinces of Norrbotten, Västerbotten, and Jämtland, and in parts of the provinces of Dalarna, Västernorrland, and Västernorrland. Reindeer pastures occupy about one-third of the territory of Sweden.
Reindeer herding employs about 2500 people in Sweden and the number of reindeer owners is a total of about 4 600 people. According to figures from 2005, 77 % of the country’s reindeer are owned by men.[10]

The Saami Village (in Swedish: the Sameby), the structural unit of Sámi reindeer herding in Sweden is divided into 51 Sámi reindeer herding villages which are both economic associations and geographical areas. Of those are 33 mountain and 10 forest Sámi reindeer herding villages, and 8 concession Sámi reindeer herding villages.

Contemporary reindeer husbandry is regulated by the Swedish reindeer husbandry act[11]. According to this Act, the right to pursue reindeer herding only belongs to the Sámi people. Only a person who is member of Sámi reindeer herding village (Sameby) has reindeer herding rights, in other words, may engage in reindeer husbandry in the Sámi reindeer herding village to which she/he belongs. The only exception are concession villages, as they engage in reindeer husbandry with special permission from the County Administrative Board (in Swedish: Länsstyrelsen). The reindeer in the concession villages are owned by non Sámi who also often own the land on which their reindeer graze. However, according to the reindeer husbandry Act the actual reindeer herding in a concession village must be conducted by a Sámi. A reindeer owner in a concession village is not allowed to own more than 30 reindeer.
Concession villages exist only in the Torne Valley (the area on the Swedish on the river between Sweden and Finland).

Any reindeer has to be marked in the ears. A reindeer earmark is a combination of one to many cuts in a reindeer’s ears which all together tells who the reindeer owner is. There are around 20 different approved cuts and in addition some 30 different combinations of cuts, and all those cuts and combinations have their own name. All reindeer in the Sámi reindeer husbandry area shall be marked with the owner’s registered earmark by 31 October the same year as it is born. Before an earmark is implemented, it shall be approved by the earmark committee consisting of 3-5 members.[12][13]

The number of reindeer in Sweden fluctuates and during the 1900’s it has varied between 150,000 and 300,000 reindeer. In Sweden the reindeer numbers where 253,000 year 1995, 221,000 year 2000 and 220,000 year 2007. The number of reindeer is counted after slaughtered reindeer are withdrawn from the herd, and before the calving starts, which is usually in may. For each Sámi village, the maximum number of reindeer is decided by the County Administrative Board and the reindeer are counted each year by the reindeer herders themselves. On the individual level there are no maximum numbers for reindeer.[14]

Basic ear marks for marking finnish reindeers

Finland

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In Finland, reindeer husbandry is practiced through a system of reindeer herding districts (in Finish: paliskunta – bálgosat). There are 56 districts in the reindeer husbandry area, 41 of which are in the Province of Lapland and the remaining 15 are in the Province of Oulu. 13 of the districts are so called Sámi districts. The districts have strictly defined boundaries and they vary in size and number of reindeer.
The total area of reindeer husbandry in Finland is approximately 33% of the surface of the country or about 122,936 km2[15].

Reindeer herding in Finland is not the prerogative of only ethnic Saami, and any European Union citizen can engage in this type of farm. However, there are some conditions. The owner of the reindeer must be approved as a member by a reindeer herding district (Finish: paliskunta – renbeteslag – bálggos) and must permanently reside in the municipality to which the district belongs.[16]
In total, there are about 5.6 thousand reindeer herders, most of whom are Finns by nationality. The number of reindeer owners in Finland is about 6,700.[17]

In the beginning of the 20th century, the number of reindeer in Finland was slightly over 100,000, and by 1959-1960 it had reached 140,000. During the 1970’s and 1980’s the number increased rapidly and reached over 250,000 reindeer at a maximum. The number of reindeer in Finland was about 207,000 reindeer in 2004/2005. The Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry (in Finish: Maa- ja metsätalousministeriö) regulates the number of reindeer by confirming the largest permissible numbers of living reindeer for each district. If the number of reindeer in a district exceeds the permitted level, the district must reduce the number of its reindeer to below the largest permissible number.[18] The largest permissible number of reindeer owned by a reindeer husbandry entrepreneur is 300 animals in the southern region of the reindeer husbandry area and 500 animals in the northern parts of the area.[19]

In Finland, reindeer husbandry at the individual level in terms of taxation is not treated as a for-profit-business. Instead the reindeer herding district serves as a joint company for the reindeer owners. The district reports all incomes and costs within the district.

The vast majority of reindeer owners in Finland practise reindeer husbandry as a supplement to agriculture and forestry. With regard to ethnic groups in Finland, reindeer herding is from the economic point of view the most important for Sámi people. The annual total revenue from reindeer husbandry in Finland is estimated to be 60 million Euro whit the main product being meat. In 1999-2000, 93,000 reindeer were slaughtered, producing 2.1 million kilos of meat.

In addition to meat production, reindeer are also an extremely valuable resource for both summer and winter tourism, as they are one of the main attractions for foreign tourists. Numbers from 1994-2000 show that 60-80% of reindeer husbandries income is from meat and about 10% from compensation and 10% from aid. Only a small part comes from investments and other incomes. Numbers from the same years show that about 40% of the costs are related to herding activities, about 20% of costs to cross country traffic and the rest to damages caused by reindeer, administrative costs, office supplies and equipment and other utilities.[20]

Russia

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Archangel reindeer

Reindeer breeding of the Kola Sami in the North-West of Russia underwent a transformation in the XIX century with the arrival of 65 Komi reindeer herders with their 600 deers. Reindeer herding on the basis of semi-grazing was transformed into large-scale farms with a focus on productivity. Collectivization in the 30s of the last century continued the further transformation of reindeer husbandry as the size of the herds increased. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, reindeer husbandry was neglected. Reindeer husbandry is managed by two state farms and reindeer herders are hired workers of these farms, as in the Soviet period.

In total, about 200 people are employed in Sami reindeer herding, still mostly Komi by nationality. The remaining smaller part of reindeer herders are of the Sami nationality, Russians and Ukrainians. Nowadays about 40-50 thousands of reindeers graze, this is less than half of the livestock that was grazed several decades ago. The share of private property in reindeer husbandry in the last decade has grown significantly.

Evenki

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Evenki are the most widespread of the Tungus speaking people and can be found through the Lower Yenisey valley through Evenk Autonomous Okrug, Irkutskaya and Amurskaya Obl. to Khabarovskiy Kray, Buryatiya, North-West and South Sakha (Yakutia); also in China and a small group in Mongolia.
Their number is probably 50 thousand people[21][22], most of whom live on the territory of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia). Being traditional nomads, they practice traditional types of economy, including reindeer herding and hunting.

Russia[23]

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Reindeer pulling sleigh, Russia

Summer pastures are located on watersheds, while winter pastures are located in river basins. Hunting for wild deer has traditionally served as a by-catch for reindeer herders and was conducted seasonally by small groups of hunters in river crossings. Nomadism is of key importance to the Evenk culture. As a result of Soviet collectivization, the nomads forcibly became sedentary, which resulted in the disintegration of social structures and cultural identity. Deer are used for riding and transporting loads and are grazed without dogs. Modern vehicles only partially replaced deer. Evenk reindeer herding serves as a model for small-scale reindeer herding where deer are used as vehicles for milk production.

Reindeer milking, Russia



Traditionally, the number of deer varied from several heads to two or three dozen heads per family. Relations with the deer were close, deer saddled and milked, and the process of domestication continued through the use of millennial techniques, such as the use of salt, smoke to control insects and protection from predators. Evenk reindeer herding is closely connected with the Sayan reindeer herding (Todzhans, Tofalars, Czataans). On the raindeer Evenks traveled along the whole Eastern Siberia, spread out on 7 million square kilometers. As a result, there are about 20 clearly defined Evenk subgroups, and reindeer herding has become an important indicator of the Evenk identity.

The industrial development of certain parts of Siberia had catastrophic consequences for some groups of Evenks, and recently this process is gaining momentum due to accelerated extraction of minerals, construction of pipelines and development of the timber industry complex. The fate of the Evenk reindeer herders in the Upper Bureisk district of the Amur Oblast serves as a reminder that reindeer husbandry in these regions may come to an end.

China[24]

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Reindeer husbandry in China is limited to the territory of one small area in the north-east of the country between 50° and 53° N. Currently 234 Evenks are employed in reindeer husbandry, distributed among 20 families, and about 1,000 deer grazing. These Evenks reindeer herders are what remained of the once large group of Evenks hunters who freely crossed the Russian-Chinese border. When military operations broke out on the Soviet-Chinese border in the 1960s, this group found itself in the territory of China. Intending to put an end to free migration across the state border, the Chinese authorities moved this people deep into the country: first to Alonsohn, then to Monkey, and finally to the settlement of Alougoya. The deer were collectivized in 1967. The state bought out all deer from the reindeer herders and began to pay the shepherds wages despite the fact that the deer continued to be under the care of their former owners and shepherds. Grazing of these deer is comparable to that of other peoples in the south of Siberia: The small number of reindeer that was owned by the families was milked and used as a means of transport. Deer were highly valued and were not slaughtered for meat.

Improving the health status and diversity of the herd, as well as the economic situation of reindeer herders, are the top priorities for this region. The production of antlers for marketing on the Asian pharmacological market is the main source of income, and attempts are being made to develop small-scale tourism in the tribal communities located near the largest city in the region, Genk.

Other reindeer herders

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Besides Sámi and Evenks reindeer herders there are also Nenets, Chukchi, Eveny, Eveny, Koryak, Khanty, Mansi, Dolgany, Dukha, Enets, Yukagir, Tozha Tuvans, Tofalar, Selkup, Nganasan, Scotland and Greenland herders, Chuvany, Inupiaq Eskimo, Inuvialuit / Sámi, Uil’ta, Kets, Negidal and Soyot.

References

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  1. ^ http://reindeerherding.org/olenevody/mirovoe-olenevodstvo/?lang=ru
  2. ^ http://reindeerherding.org/olenevody/mirovoe-olenevodstvo/?lang=ru
  3. ^ http://reindeerherding.org/olenevody/%d1%81%d0%b0%d0%b0%d0%bc%d1%8b-%d1%80%d0%be%d1%81%d1%81%d0%b8%d1%8f/?lang=ru
  4. ^ http://reindeerherding.org/herders/sami-norway/
  5. ^ http://reindeerherding.org/herders/sami-norway/
  6. ^ (Lov om reindrift 2007-06-15-40)
  7. ^ Resursregnskap for reindriftsnæringen, reindriftsåret 2006/2007, Reindriftsforvaltningen 2008
  8. ^ Dieđut, Analyse av den samiske reindriftens økonomiske tilpasning, nr 4, 2006, Sámi Instituhtta, Norden
  9. ^ Foreskrifter til Reindriftsavtalen 2008/2009 m.m., Reindriftsforvaltningen, Alta 2008
  10. ^ www.sametinget.se
  11. ^ Rennäringslagen 1971: 437 - http://www.notisum.se/Pub/Doc.aspx?url=/rnp/sls/lag/19710437.htm
  12. ^ Rennäringslagen 1971:437
  13. ^ www.sametinget.se
  14. ^ www.bd.lst.se
  15. ^ Renskötsellag 14.9.1990/848
  16. ^ Renskötsellag 14.9.1990/848
  17. ^ www.paliskunnat.fi
  18. ^ The Encycloapedia of Saami Culture
  19. ^ www.paliskunnat.fi
  20. ^ Sustainable Reindeer Husbandry – Arctic Council 2000-2002, J-L. Jernsletten, K. Klokov
  21. ^ http://nazaccent.ru/geo/evenk/
  22. ^ http://china.kulichki.net/figures/nationality/053.shtml
  23. ^ http://reindeerherding.org/herders/evenki-russia/
  24. ^ http://reindeerherding.org/herders/evenki-china/