Snow is a crucial part in the lives of Sámi reindeer herders, and changes in snow conditions can affect their well-being in multiple ways. However, meanings and emotions associated with snow are rarely considered in research on reindeer herding and climate change. Based on thematic interviews with reindeer herders in two reindeer herding co-operatives in the Sámi Homeland in Finland, we examined the roles and meanings of snow for Sámi reindeer herders and impacts of the extreme winter events of recent years on their well-being. In addition, based on a literature survey, we considered the role of reindeer herders’ snow knowledge in climate change research related to the Sámi area in Finland, Sweden, and Norway. Our results show that snow plays multiple roles in the lives of reindeer herders. The extreme snow conditions of recent years have had a significant negative impact on reindeer herder well-being, and at the same time, snow is connected to happiness, sense of place, and cultural continuity. The embeddedness of snow with different kinds of cultural and intrinsic meanings should receive more attention in research on the impacts of climate change on the lives of Sámi and other Arctic peoples. In the literature we analyzed, the snow knowledge of Sámi reindeer herders was constructed in multiple ways. This practical knowledge system informing, as it does, daily activities and assessments of the future, is not only crucial for reindeer herders themselves, but also for society at large, as it can enhance education and bring important insights into climate change research and adaptation.
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Ways of identifying lichen and plant species by the Nenets reindeer herders in Yamal
Yamal Nenets herders have historically developed a rich knowledge of lichens and vascular plants, which feature in the diet of their migratory reindeer herds in the tundra zone of northwest Siberia. In the Nenets language there are native names for certain species of lichens and other reindeer forage plants, including graminoids, herbs, shrubs, berries, and mushrooms. During participant fieldwork together with nomadic tundra Nenets herders, we documented names and definitions of reindeer food on herding territories during their long migration routes from the northern forest-tundra transition zone to the northern coastal tundra. Like many other Indigenous peoples of Siberia, Nenets have noticed that the Arctic is changing and some of its recent dynamics are seriously affecting their livelihood. The degradation of some lichen composition and cover on tundra pastures has also contributed to a decrease of herders’ linguistic palette for describing these losses in a concrete manner. Since the Nenets language is on the list of endangered languages of the world, this has an especially negative impact on the language skills and traditional knowledge of the younger generations of Nenets people, who may not know what these lichens look like and why they are important for the Nenets reindeer herding culture.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2126794
- PAR ID:
- 10554399
- Publisher / Repository:
- Canadian Science Publishing
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Arctic Science
- ISSN:
- 2368-7460
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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