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Pechora-Ilych Nature Reserve

Pechora-Ilych Nature Reserve (Russian: Печоро-Илычский заповедник, Pechoro-Ilychsky zapovednik) is a Russian 'zapovednik' (strict nature reserve) in the Komi Republic, Russia. It currently occupies 7,213 square kilometers and forms the core of the World Heritage Site Virgin Komi Forests.

Pechora-Ilych Nature Reserve
Russian: Печоро-Илычский заповедник
Pechora-Ilych Zapovednik
Location of Reserve
LocationKomi Republic
Coordinates62°34′30″N 58°15′30″E / 62.575°N 58.2583°E / 62.575; 58.2583
Area721,300 hectares (1,782,371 acres; 2,785 sq mi)
Established1930 (1930)
Governing bodyMinistry of Natural Resources and Environment (Russia)

Topography Edit

The nature reserve is located in the south-eastern corner of the Komi Republic (Troitsko-Pechorsky District), on the western slopes of the Ural Mountains and the adjacent foothills and lowlands. The area is drained by the upper course of the Pechora River and its tributary the Ilych, from whose names the name of the reserve is derived.

History Edit

The idea of the creation of a nature reserve in the upper Pechora, as a sable zakaznik (sanctuary), was proposed in 1915 by S. T. Nat, the Chief Forester of Vologda Guberniya, in his article in Lesnoy Zhurnal (Forest Journal). The nature reserve was created on May 4, 1930, originally occupying 11,350 square kilometers. The borders of the reserve were set on July 30, 1931.

Originally, the reserve's main office was built in the village of Ust-Ilych, at the fall of the Ilych into the Pechora. Access to that location being extremely difficult, the main office was moved in 1935 to the village of Yaksha, further upstream on the Pechora, but closer to the Kama River basin, via which the area communicated with the outside world in those days.

In 1951 the reserve was greatly reduced in size, to a mere 930 km2; its area became non-contiguous, with a small lowland section near Yaksha being separated from the highland part. In 1959 the area of the reserve was increased to its current size (7,213 km2), but it still remains non-contiguous. To better protect the reserve, in 1973 a buffer area of 324 km2 (similar in status to a national forest in the United States) was created outside of the reserve; the size of the buffer area size was increased in 1984 by additional 330 km2.

Since 1986 reserve has been listed by UNESCO as one of the biosphere reserves of the World Network of Biosphere Reserves. In 1995 the forest area including the Pechora-Ilych Nature Reserve and its northern neighbor, the Yugyd Va National Park, were recognized by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site, under the name Virgin Komi Forests.

Ecoregion and climate Edit

Pechora-Ilych is in the Urals montane tundra and taiga ecoregion, a region that covers the main ridge of the Ural Mountains (both sides) - a 2,000 km (north-south) by 300 km (west-east) region. The region is on the divide between European and Asian ecoregions, and also the meeting point of tundra and taiga.[1]

The climate of Pechora-Ilych is Humid continental climate, cool summer (Köppen climate classification Subarctic climate (Dfc)). This climate is characterized by mild summers (only 1-3 months above 10 °C (50.0 °F)) and cold, snowy winters (coldest month below −3 °C (26.6 °F)).[2][3]

Landscape and vegetation Edit

Russian geographer A.A. Korchagin divided the area of the reserve into five natural regions:

  • The Pechora lowlands: pine forests, pine forested swamps, and moss swamps. There are few spruce forests in that area. This region includes the Gusinoe Bolota (Goose Swamp), a peat bog that occupies around 3 km2, with the peat deposits some 5–6 meters deep.
  • The piedmont (foothills) region, dominated by forests of shade-loving species: Siberian spruce, Siberian pine, and Siberian fir. There are abundant forested swamps there, but hardly any moss swamps.
  • The Upper Ilych lowland: this region is surrounded by the Urals highlands and mountains and has particularly severe climate. The slow-growing forest there is classified as boreal taiga.
 
Upper Pechora River and Bear Stone Mountain; Pechora-Ilych Reserve
  • The Ural Mountains, the area that is the least studied but has the greatest variety of landscapes. It includes the piedmont forest belt (fir and spruce), up to 300–350 meters in elevation. Above it, up to 600 m elevation, is the subalpine forest belt, where firs and spruces are gradually replaced with birch forests and subalpine meadows. The tree line is at 550–650 m elevation, although there are occasional firs at the elevations as high as 800 m or even higher. Above the tree line, alpine meadows and then tundra are found.
  • The valleys of the Pechora, Ilych, and their tributaries.

Wildlife Edit

Moose, beavers, squirrels, pine martens are abundant in the reserve. Sables are known to live in the piedmont forest region of the reserve. The wild reindeer have almost disappeared after the loss of the pine forest section of the reserve in 1951, and consequent habitat destruction.

The large predators include brown bears, wolves, and wolverines. Ten mustelid species make the reserve their home, from the largest, the wolverine, to the least weasel, as well as the ermine, the American and European mink, the pine marten, the sable, and the Siberian weasel.

Research work Edit

Over the years, scientific research in many areas of biology and ecology was conducted in the reserve. Topics of research ranged from ants to squirrels to fish. The moose was a particularly important topic of research in the reserve.

Moose domestication experiments Edit

The moose (Alces alces) has long been an object of research at the Pechora-Ilych Nature Reserve.

In the late 1940s, the management of the reserve encountered the problem of unsustainable growth of the moose population. By the early 1950s, pastures in the reserve started to be exhausted. To handle the problem, in 1956 a moose hunting enterprise (лосепромысловое хозяйство) was instituted. The enterprise was affiliated with the reserve, but located outside of its territory. It has been economically successful. Between 1956 and 1968, 1000 moose were taken, providing 200 tons of meat. At the same time, hunting operations allowed the collection of valuable statistics on the biology of the Pechora moose population.

Besides moose hunting, in 1949 the reserve staff created the facility they referred to as a "moose farm" (лосеферма, loseferma) to study the feasibility of moose domestication. The first director of this project was Yevgeny Knorre. After he moved to the Volga-Kama Nature Reserve in 1962, his student M. V. Kozhukhov became the director.

The main objectives of the farm were to learn more about moose biology and to use this knowledge to develop suitable food rations for the moose and techniques for caring for them; to study the feasibility of raising a farm-bred population; and to explore the possibilities of the use of the moose in the national economy.

 
Three moose in the corral, March 2012

Over the first 40-plus years of the project, six generations of moose were raised on the farm, with some 30–35 animals at the farm in any given year. About 15 moose calves were raised at the farm in a good spring. The total number of the animals raised over the year is said to have exceeded 500.

The farm's adult moose would spend most of the time browsing in the forest; however, a pregnant moose cow would always come back to the farm to give birth. Then, during the lactation period of three to five months, the moose cow would come to the farm several times a day, at the same hours, to be milked. The milk production of a moose is small compared to a dairy cow: over the lactation season, a total of 300–500 liters (75–125 gallons) of milk is obtained from a moose. However, the milk has a high (12–14%) fat content, and is rich in vitamins and micronutrient elements; it is said to have medicinal properties.

A farm-raised moose can live as long as 18 years, although few reached that age because of the depredations of wolves, bears, and poachers on the free-ranging population.

Among the potential productive uses of the moose, the milk production was found the most promising. However, riding a moose and using it to pull a sleigh were tried at the farm as well.

Over the years, a number of research articles dealing with the physiology, ethology, and ecology of the moose were published by the biologists from the reserve, as well as from the research institutes in Syktyvkar and Moscow (e.g.[4][5][6])

Knorre's and his associates' moose domestication work at Pechora Ilych, as well as somewhat similar Muskox Domestication Project at the University of Alaska's Institute of Northern Agricultural Research, also provided valuable insights in the general theory of animal domestication.[7][8]

The facility, located in the remote Northern Urals taiga, was never meant to turn a profit, and found itself in a difficult situation after the government funding cutbacks of the early 1990s. According to a recent trip report, the moose farm operations have been greatly reduced; the remaining buildings are in a poor conditions, and only a few animals remain. A Moscow teacher visiting in 2003 reported that there were only five left.[9] However, moose domestication experiments in Russia continue at the more favorably located Kostroma Moose Farm.

See also Edit

Sources Edit

  • moose-farm.ru (in English)
  • (in Russian)
  • (in Russian)
  • (1988) (in Russian)
  • Pechora Ilych Reserve "moose farm", a recent trip report (in Russian)
  • T.Lecomte, "La réintroduction de l'Elan (Alces alces) dans les zones humides: Un projet dans le cadre du développement durable des zones humides éfavorisées" (Nov-1998) (in French)
  • E.P. Knorre. "Change in the behavior of moose with age during the domestication", Le Naturaliste Canadien, volume 101 (1974), No. 1-2, p. 371-377. (in English)

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ "Map of Ecoregions 2017". Resolve, using WWF data. Retrieved September 14, 2019.
  2. ^ Kottek, M., J. Grieser, C. Beck, B. Rudolf, and F. Rubel, 2006. "World Map of Koppen-Geiger Climate Classification Updated" (PDF). Gebrüder Borntraeger 2006. Retrieved September 14, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ "Dataset - Koppen climate classifications". World Bank. Retrieved September 14, 2019.
  4. ^ Aleksandr V. Chalyshev, "Nutrient composition of milk from domesticated taiga moose during the lactation period", Alces, 01-JAN-2002 (in English)
  5. ^ , Alces Supplement 2: pp. 93-97 (2002) (in English)
  6. ^ Kochan, T. I. (2001). "Seasonal Adaptation of Metabolism and Energy in the Pechora Taiga Moose Alces alces". Journal of Evolutionary Biochemistry and Physiology. 37 (3): 246–251. doi:10.1023/A:1012615222837. S2CID 2215206.
  7. ^ Wilkinson, Paul F. (1972). "Oomingmak: A Model for Man-Animal Relationships in Prehistory". Current Anthropology. 13 (1): 23–44. doi:10.1086/201247. JSTOR 2741071. S2CID 143803920.
  8. ^ Robbins, Charles T.; Robbins, Barbara L. (1979). "Fetal and Neonatal Growth Patterns and Maternal Reproductive Effort in Ungulates and Subungulates". The American Naturalist. 114 (1): 101–116. doi:10.1086/283456. JSTOR 2460291. S2CID 84537447.
  9. ^ Vladimir Golovner (Владимир ГОЛОВНЕР) "Primaeval forest, White nights, Dwarfed birches: Second Inter-Regional Schoolchildren's Expedition to the Northern Urals" (Лес первобытный, ночь белая, береза угнетенная: Вторая межрегиональная экологическая экспедиция школьников на Северный Урал) 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine. Uchitelskaya Gazeta (Учительская газета), 07-Oct-2003 (in Russian)

pechora, ilych, nature, reserve, russian, Печоро, Илычский, заповедник, pechoro, ilychsky, zapovednik, russian, zapovednik, strict, nature, reserve, komi, republic, russia, currently, occupies, square, kilometers, forms, core, world, heritage, site, virgin, ko. Pechora Ilych Nature Reserve Russian Pechoro Ilychskij zapovednik Pechoro Ilychsky zapovednik is a Russian zapovednik strict nature reserve in the Komi Republic Russia It currently occupies 7 213 square kilometers and forms the core of the World Heritage Site Virgin Komi Forests Pechora Ilych Nature ReserveRussian Pechoro Ilychskij zapovednikIUCN category Ia strict nature reserve Pechora Ilych ZapovednikLocation of ReserveLocationKomi RepublicCoordinates62 34 30 N 58 15 30 E 62 575 N 58 2583 E 62 575 58 2583Area721 300 hectares 1 782 371 acres 2 785 sq mi Established1930 1930 Governing bodyMinistry of Natural Resources and Environment Russia Contents 1 Topography 2 History 3 Ecoregion and climate 4 Landscape and vegetation 5 Wildlife 6 Research work 7 Moose domestication experiments 8 See also 9 Sources 10 FootnotesTopography EditThe nature reserve is located in the south eastern corner of the Komi Republic Troitsko Pechorsky District on the western slopes of the Ural Mountains and the adjacent foothills and lowlands The area is drained by the upper course of the Pechora River and its tributary the Ilych from whose names the name of the reserve is derived History EditThe idea of the creation of a nature reserve in the upper Pechora as a sable zakaznik sanctuary was proposed in 1915 by S T Nat the Chief Forester of Vologda Guberniya in his article in Lesnoy Zhurnal Forest Journal The nature reserve was created on May 4 1930 originally occupying 11 350 square kilometers The borders of the reserve were set on July 30 1931 Originally the reserve s main office was built in the village of Ust Ilych at the fall of the Ilych into the Pechora Access to that location being extremely difficult the main office was moved in 1935 to the village of Yaksha further upstream on the Pechora but closer to the Kama River basin via which the area communicated with the outside world in those days In 1951 the reserve was greatly reduced in size to a mere 930 km2 its area became non contiguous with a small lowland section near Yaksha being separated from the highland part In 1959 the area of the reserve was increased to its current size 7 213 km2 but it still remains non contiguous To better protect the reserve in 1973 a buffer area of 324 km2 similar in status to a national forest in the United States was created outside of the reserve the size of the buffer area size was increased in 1984 by additional 330 km2 Since 1986 reserve has been listed by UNESCO as one of the biosphere reserves of the World Network of Biosphere Reserves In 1995 the forest area including the Pechora Ilych Nature Reserve and its northern neighbor the Yugyd Va National Park were recognized by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site under the name Virgin Komi Forests Ecoregion and climate EditPechora Ilych is in the Urals montane tundra and taiga ecoregion a region that covers the main ridge of the Ural Mountains both sides a 2 000 km north south by 300 km west east region The region is on the divide between European and Asian ecoregions and also the meeting point of tundra and taiga 1 The climate of Pechora Ilych is Humid continental climate cool summer Koppen climate classification Subarctic climate Dfc This climate is characterized by mild summers only 1 3 months above 10 C 50 0 F and cold snowy winters coldest month below 3 C 26 6 F 2 3 Landscape and vegetation EditRussian geographer A A Korchagin divided the area of the reserve into five natural regions The Pechora lowlands pine forests pine forested swamps and moss swamps There are few spruce forests in that area This region includes the Gusinoe Bolota Goose Swamp a peat bog that occupies around 3 km2 with the peat deposits some 5 6 meters deep The piedmont foothills region dominated by forests of shade loving species Siberian spruce Siberian pine and Siberian fir There are abundant forested swamps there but hardly any moss swamps The Upper Ilych lowland this region is surrounded by the Urals highlands and mountains and has particularly severe climate The slow growing forest there is classified as boreal taiga nbsp Upper Pechora River and Bear Stone Mountain Pechora Ilych ReserveThe Ural Mountains the area that is the least studied but has the greatest variety of landscapes It includes the piedmont forest belt fir and spruce up to 300 350 meters in elevation Above it up to 600 m elevation is the subalpine forest belt where firs and spruces are gradually replaced with birch forests and subalpine meadows The tree line is at 550 650 m elevation although there are occasional firs at the elevations as high as 800 m or even higher Above the tree line alpine meadows and then tundra are found The valleys of the Pechora Ilych and their tributaries Wildlife EditMoose beavers squirrels pine martens are abundant in the reserve Sables are known to live in the piedmont forest region of the reserve The wild reindeer have almost disappeared after the loss of the pine forest section of the reserve in 1951 and consequent habitat destruction The large predators include brown bears wolves and wolverines Ten mustelid species make the reserve their home from the largest the wolverine to the least weasel as well as the ermine the American and European mink the pine marten the sable and the Siberian weasel Research work EditOver the years scientific research in many areas of biology and ecology was conducted in the reserve Topics of research ranged from ants to squirrels to fish The moose was a particularly important topic of research in the reserve Moose domestication experiments EditThe moose Alces alces has long been an object of research at the Pechora Ilych Nature Reserve In the late 1940s the management of the reserve encountered the problem of unsustainable growth of the moose population By the early 1950s pastures in the reserve started to be exhausted To handle the problem in 1956 a moose hunting enterprise losepromyslovoe hozyajstvo was instituted The enterprise was affiliated with the reserve but located outside of its territory It has been economically successful Between 1956 and 1968 1000 moose were taken providing 200 tons of meat At the same time hunting operations allowed the collection of valuable statistics on the biology of the Pechora moose population Besides moose hunting in 1949 the reserve staff created the facility they referred to as a moose farm loseferma loseferma to study the feasibility of moose domestication The first director of this project was Yevgeny Knorre After he moved to the Volga Kama Nature Reserve in 1962 his student M V Kozhukhov became the director The main objectives of the farm were to learn more about moose biology and to use this knowledge to develop suitable food rations for the moose and techniques for caring for them to study the feasibility of raising a farm bred population and to explore the possibilities of the use of the moose in the national economy nbsp Three moose in the corral March 2012Over the first 40 plus years of the project six generations of moose were raised on the farm with some 30 35 animals at the farm in any given year About 15 moose calves were raised at the farm in a good spring The total number of the animals raised over the year is said to have exceeded 500 The farm s adult moose would spend most of the time browsing in the forest however a pregnant moose cow would always come back to the farm to give birth Then during the lactation period of three to five months the moose cow would come to the farm several times a day at the same hours to be milked The milk production of a moose is small compared to a dairy cow over the lactation season a total of 300 500 liters 75 125 gallons of milk is obtained from a moose However the milk has a high 12 14 fat content and is rich in vitamins and micronutrient elements it is said to have medicinal properties A farm raised moose can live as long as 18 years although few reached that age because of the depredations of wolves bears and poachers on the free ranging population Among the potential productive uses of the moose the milk production was found the most promising However riding a moose and using it to pull a sleigh were tried at the farm as well Over the years a number of research articles dealing with the physiology ethology and ecology of the moose were published by the biologists from the reserve as well as from the research institutes in Syktyvkar and Moscow e g 4 5 6 Knorre s and his associates moose domestication work at Pechora Ilych as well as somewhat similar Muskox Domestication Project at the University of Alaska s Institute of Northern Agricultural Research also provided valuable insights in the general theory of animal domestication 7 8 The facility located in the remote Northern Urals taiga was never meant to turn a profit and found itself in a difficult situation after the government funding cutbacks of the early 1990s According to a recent trip report the moose farm operations have been greatly reduced the remaining buildings are in a poor conditions and only a few animals remain A Moscow teacher visiting in 2003 reported that there were only five left 9 However moose domestication experiments in Russia continue at the more favorably located Kostroma Moose Farm See also EditList of Russian Nature Reserves class 1a zapovedniks WikiCommons gallery Manpupuner rock formationsSources Editmoose farm ru in English Pechora Ilych Nature Reserve in Russian Pechora Ilych National Biosphere Nature Reserve in Russian D V Zhitnev D V Zhitenev M M Serebryanny M M Serebryannyj Research Activities in Pechora Ilych Nature Reserve World s First Experimental Moose Farm Nauchnaya deyatelnost v Pechoro Ilychskom zapovednike Pervaya v mire opytnaya loseferma 1988 in Russian Pechora Ilych Reserve moose farm a recent trip report in Russian T Lecomte La reintroduction de l Elan Alces alces dans les zones humides Un projet dans le cadre du developpement durable des zones humides efavorisees Nov 1998 in French E P Knorre Change in the behavior of moose with age during the domestication Le Naturaliste Canadien volume 101 1974 No 1 2 p 371 377 in English Footnotes Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pechora Ilych Nature Reserve Map of Ecoregions 2017 Resolve using WWF data Retrieved September 14 2019 Kottek M J Grieser C Beck B Rudolf and F Rubel 2006 World Map of Koppen Geiger Climate Classification Updated PDF Gebruder Borntraeger 2006 Retrieved September 14 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Dataset Koppen climate classifications World Bank Retrieved September 14 2019 Aleksandr V Chalyshev Nutrient composition of milk from domesticated taiga moose during the lactation period Alces 01 JAN 2002 in English Nelly A Moyseenko Components of red blood in young moose Alces Supplement 2 pp 93 97 2002 in English Kochan T I 2001 Seasonal Adaptation of Metabolism and Energy in the Pechora Taiga Moose Alces alces Journal of Evolutionary Biochemistry and Physiology 37 3 246 251 doi 10 1023 A 1012615222837 S2CID 2215206 Wilkinson Paul F 1972 Oomingmak A Model for Man Animal Relationships in Prehistory Current Anthropology 13 1 23 44 doi 10 1086 201247 JSTOR 2741071 S2CID 143803920 Robbins Charles T Robbins Barbara L 1979 Fetal and Neonatal Growth Patterns and Maternal Reproductive Effort in Ungulates and Subungulates The American Naturalist 114 1 101 116 doi 10 1086 283456 JSTOR 2460291 S2CID 84537447 Vladimir Golovner Vladimir GOLOVNER Primaeval forest White nights Dwarfed birches Second Inter Regional Schoolchildren s Expedition to the Northern Urals Les pervobytnyj noch belaya bereza ugnetennaya Vtoraya mezhregionalnaya ekologicheskaya ekspediciya shkolnikov na Severnyj Ural Archived 2007 09 28 at the Wayback Machine Uchitelskaya Gazeta Uchitelskaya gazeta 07 Oct 2003 in Russian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pechora Ilych Nature Reserve amp oldid 1167794213, 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