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Reindeer

The reindeer or caribou[a] (Rangifer tarandus)[5] is a species of deer with circumpolar distribution, native to Arctic, subarctic, tundra, boreal, and mountainous regions of Northern Europe, Siberia, and North America.[2] It is the only representative of the genus Rangifer. More recent studies suggest the splitting of reindeer and caribou into six distinct species over their range.

Reindeer
(Caribou)
Temporal range: Chibanian to present[1]
A reindeer in Norway

Secure (NatureServe)[3]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Family: Cervidae
Subfamily: Capreolinae
Tribe: Odocoileini
Genus: Rangifer
C. H. Smith, 1827
Species:
R. tarandus
Binomial name
Rangifer tarandus
(Linnaeus, 1758)
Species

See text, traditionally 1, but possibly up to 6

Reindeer range: North American (green), Eurasian (red), and Alaskan introduced (orange)

Reindeer occur in both migratory and sedentary populations, and their herd sizes vary greatly in different regions. The tundra subspecies are adapted for extreme cold, and some are adapted for long-distance migration.

Reindeer vary greatly in size and color from the smallest, the Svalbard reindeer (R. (t.) platyrhynchus), to the largest, Osborn's caribou (R. t. osborni). Although reindeer are quite numerous, some species and subspecies are in decline and considered vulnerable. They are unique among deer (Cervidae) in that females may have antlers, although the prevalence of antlered females varies by species and subspecies.

Reindeer are the only successfully semi-domesticated deer on a large scale in the world. Both wild and domestic reindeer have been an important source of food, clothing, and shelter for Arctic people from prehistorical times. They are still herded and hunted today.[6] In some traditional Christmas legends, Santa Claus's reindeer pull a sleigh through the night sky to help Santa Claus deliver gifts to good children on Christmas Eve.

Description edit

Names follow international convention[7][8] before the recent revision[9] (see Taxonomy below). Reindeer/caribou (Rangifer) vary in size from the smallest, the Svalbard reindeer (R. (t.) platyrhynchus), to the largest, Osborn's caribou (R. t. osborni). They also vary in coat color and antler architecture.

The North American range of caribou extends from Alaska through the Yukon, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut throughout the tundra, taiga and boreal forest and south through the Canadian Rocky Mountains.[10] Of the eight subspecies classified by Harding (2022) into the Arctic caribou (R. arcticus), the migratory mainland barren-ground caribou of Arctic Alaska and Canada (R. t. arcticus), summer in tundra and winter in taiga, a transitional forest zone between boreal forest and tundra; the nomadic Peary caribou (R. t. pearyi) lives in the polar desert of the High Arctic Archipelago and Grant's caribou (R. t. granti) lives in the western end of the Alaska Peninsula and the adjacent islands; the other four subspecies, Osborn's caribou (R. t. osborni), Stone's caribou (R. t. stonei), the Rocky Mountain caribou (R. t. fortidens) and the Selkirk Mountains caribou (R. t. montanus) are all montane. The extinct insular Queen Charlotte Islands caribou (R. t. dawsoni), lived on Graham Island in Haida Gwaii (formerly known as the Queen Charlotte Islands).

The boreal woodland caribou (R. t. caribou), lives in the boreal forest of northeastern Canada: the Labrador or Ungava caribou of northern Quebec and northern Labrador (R. t. caboti), and the Newfoundland caribou of Newfoundland (R. t. terranovae) have been found to be genetically in the woodland caribou lineage.[11][12]

In Eurasia, both wild and domestic reindeer are distributed across the tundra and into the taiga. Eurasian mountain reindeer (R. t. tarandus) are close to North American caribou genetically and visually, but with sufficient differences to warrant division into two species. The unique, insular Svalbard reindeer inhabits the Svalbard Archipelago. The Finnish forest reindeer (R. t. fennicus) is spottily distributed in the coniferous forest zones from Finland to east of Lake Baikal: the Siberian forest reindeer (R. t. valentinae, formerly called the Busk Mountains reindeer (R. t. buskensis) by American taxonomists) occupies the Altai and Ural Mountains.

Male ("bull") and female ("cow") reindeer can grow antlers annually, although the proportion of females that grow antlers varies greatly between populations.[7] Antlers are typically larger on males. Antler architecture varies by species and subspecies and, together with pelage differences, can often be used to distinguish between species and subspecies (see illustrations in Geist, 1991[13] and Geist, 1998).[14]

Status edit

About 25,000 mountain reindeer (R. t. tarandus) still live in the mountains of Norway, notably in Hardangervidda.[15] In Sweden there are approximately 250,000 reindeer in herds managed by Sami villages.[16] Russia manages 19 herds of Siberian tundra reindeer (R. t. sibiricus) that total about 940,000.[17] The Taimyr herd of Siberian tundra reindeer is the largest wild reindeer herd in the world,[18][19] varying between 400,000 and 1,000,000; it is a metapopulation consisting of several subpopulations — some of which are phenotypically different[20] — with different migration routes and calving areas.[21][22] The Kamchatkan reindeer (R. t. phylarchus), a forest subspecies, formerly included reindeer west of the Sea of Okhotsk which, however, are indistinguishable genetically from the Jano-Indigirka, East Siberian taiga and Chukotka populations of R. t. sibiricus.[23] Siberian tundra reindeer herds have been in decline but are stable or increasing since 2000.[17]

Insular (island) reindeer, classified as the Novaya Zemlya reindeer (R. t. pearsoni) occupy several island groups: the Novaya Zemlya Archipelago (about 5,000 animals at last count, but most of these are either domestic reindeer or domestic-wild hybrids), the New Siberia Archipelago (about 10,000 to 15,000), and Wrangel Island (200 to 300 feral domestic reindeer).[24]

What was once the second largest herd is the migratory Labrador caribou (R. t. caboti)[9] George River herd in Canada, with former variations between 28,000 and 385,000. As of January 2018, there are fewer than 9,000 animals estimated to be left in the George River herd, as reported by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.[25] The New York Times reported in April 2018 of the disappearance of the only herd of southern mountain woodland caribou in the contiguous United States, with an expert calling it "functionally extinct" after the herd's size dwindled to a mere three animals.[26] After the last individual, a female, was translocated to a wildlife rehabilitation center in Canada, caribou were considered extirpated from the contiguous United States.[27] The Committee on Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) classified both the Southern Mountain population DU9 (R. t. montanus) and the Central Mountain population DU8 (R. t. fortidens) as Endangered and the Northern Mountain population DU7 (R. t. osborni) as Threatened.[28]

Some species and subspecies are rare and three subspecies have already become extinct: the Queen Charlotte Islands caribou (R. t. dawsoni) from western Canada, the Sakhalin reindeer (R. t. setoni) from Sakhalin and the East Greenland caribou from eastern Greenland,[29][30][31] although some authorities believe that the latter, R. t. eogroenlandicus Degerbøl, 1957, is a junior synonym of the Peary caribou.[32][33][9] Historically, the range of the sedentary boreal woodland caribou covered more than half of Canada[34] and into the northern states of the contiguous United States from Maine to Washington. Boreal woodland caribou have disappeared from most of their original southern range and were designated as Threatened in 2002 by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC).[35] Environment Canada reported in 2011 that there were approximately 34,000 boreal woodland caribou in 51 ranges remaining in Canada (Environment Canada, 2011b),[36] although those numbers included montane populations classified by Harding (2022) into subspecies of the Arctic caribou.[9] Siberian tundra reindeer herds are also in decline, and Rangifer as a whole is considered to be Vulnerable by the IUCN.

Naming edit

Charles Hamilton Smith is credited with the name Rangifer for the reindeer genus,[37] which Albertus Magnus used in his De animalibus, fol. Liber 22, Cap. 268: "Dicitur Rangyfer quasi ramifer". This word may go back to the Sámi word raingo.[38] Carl Linnaeus chose the word tarandus as the specific epithet, making reference to Ulisse Aldrovandi's Quadrupedum omnium bisulcorum historia fol. 859–863, Cap. 30: De Tarando (1621). However, Aldrovandi and Conrad Gessner[39] thought that rangifer and tarandus were two separate animals.[40] In any case, the tarandos name goes back to Aristotle and Theophrastus.

The use of the terms reindeer and caribou for essentially the same animal can cause confusion, but the International Union for Conservation of Nature clearly delineates the issue: "Reindeer is the European name for the species of Rangifer, while in North America, Rangifer species are known as Caribou."[2][41] The word reindeer is an anglicized version of the Old Norse words hreinn (“reindeer”) and dýr (“animal”) and has nothing to do with reins.[42] The word caribou comes through French, from the Mi'kmaq qalipu, meaning "snow shoveler", and refers to its habit of pawing through the snow for food.[43]

Because of its importance to many cultures, Rangifer and some of its species and subspecies have names in many languages. Inuvaluit of the western Canadian Arctic and Inuit of the eastern Canadian Arctic, who speak different dialects of Inuktitut, both call the barren-ground caribou tuktu.[44][45][46] The Wekʼèezhìi people, a Dene (Athapascan) group, call the Arctic caribou Ɂekwǫ̀ and the boreal woodland caribou tǫdzı.[47] The Gwichʼin (also a Dene group) have over 24 distinct caribou-related words.[48]

Reindeer are also called tuttu by the Greenlandic Inuit[49] and hreindýr, sometimes rein, by the Icelanders.

Evolution edit

The "glacial-interglacial cycles of the upper Pleistocene had a major influence on the evolution" of Rangifer species and other Arctic and sub-Arctic species. Isolation of tundra-adapted species Rangifer in Last Glacial Maximum refugia during the last glacial – the Wisconsin glaciation in North America and the Weichselian glaciation in Eurasia – shaped "intraspecific genetic variability" particularly between the North American and Eurasian parts of the Arctic.[5]

Reindeer/caribou (Rangifer) are in the subfamily Odocoileinae, along with roe deer (Capreolus), Eurasian elk/moose (Alces), and water deer (Hydropotes). These antlered cervids split from the horned ruminants Bos (cattle and yaks), Ovis (sheep) and Capra (goats) about 36 million years ago.[50] The Eurasian clade of Odocoileinae (Capreolini, Hydropotini and Alcini) split from the New World tribes of Capreolinae (Odocoileini and Rangiferini) in the Late Miocene, 8.7–9.6 million years ago.[51] Rangifer “evolved as a mountain deer, ...exploiting the subalpine and alpine meadows...”.[14] Rangifer originated in the Late Pliocene and diversified in the Early Pleistocene, a 2+ million-year period of multiple glacier advances and retreats. Several named Rangifer fossils in Eurasia and North America predate the evolution of modern tundra reindeer.

Archaeologists distinguish “modern” tundra reindeer and barren-ground caribou from primitive forms — living and extinct — that did not have adaptations to extreme cold and to long distance migration. They include a broad, high muzzle to increase the volume of the nasal cavity to warm and moisten the air before it enters the throat and lungs, bez tines set close to the brow tines, distinctive coat patterns, short legs and other adaptations for running long distances, and multiple behaviors suited to tundra, but not to forest (such as synchronized calving and aggregation during rutting and post-calving).[52] As well, many genes, including those for vitamin D metabolism, fat metabolism, retinal development, circadian rhythm, and tolerance to cold temperatures, are found in tundra caribou that are lacking or rudimentary in forest types.[53][54] For this reason, forest-adapted reindeer and caribou could not survive in tundra or polar deserts. The oldest undoubted Rangifer fossil is from Omsk, Russia, dated to 2.1-1.8 Ma.[55] The oldest North American Rangifer fossil is from the Yukon, 1.6 million years before present (BP).[56] A fossil skull fragment from Süßenborn, Germany, R. arcticus stadelmanni,[57] (which is probably misnamed) with “rather thin and cylinder-shaped” antlers, dates to the Middle Pleistocene (Günz) Period, 680,000-620,000 BP.[58] Rangifer fossils become increasingly frequent in circumpolar deposits beginning with the Riss glaciations, the second youngest of the Pleistocene Epoch, roughly 300,000–130,000 BP. By the 4-Würm period (110,000–70,000 to 12,000–10,000 BP), its European range was extensive, supplying a major food source for prehistoric Europeans.[59] North American fossils outside of Beringia that predate the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) are of Rancholabrean age (240,000–11,000 years BP) and occur along the fringes of the Rocky Mountain and Laurentide ice sheets as far south as northern Alabama; and in Sangamonian deposits (~100,000 years BP) from western Canada.[60]

A R. t. pearyi-sized caribou occupied Greenland before and after the LGM and persisted in a relict enclave in northeastern Greenland until it went extinct about 1900 (see discussion of R. t. eogroenlandicus below). Archaeological excavations showed that larger barren-ground-sized caribou appeared in western Greenland about 4,000 years ago.[61]

The late Valerius Geist (1998)[14] dates the Eurasian reindeer radiation dates to the large Riss glaciation (347,000 to 128,000 years ago), based on the Norwegian-Svalbard split 225,000 years ago.[62] Finnish forest reindeer (R. t. fennicus) likely evolved from Cervus [Rangifer] geuttardi Desmarest, 1822, a reindeer that adapted to forest habitats in Eastern Europe as forests expanded during an interglacial period before the LGM (the Würmian or Weichsel glaciation);.[58] The fossil species geuttardi was later replaced by R. constantini, which was adapted for grasslands,[63] in a second immigration 19,000–20,000 years ago when the LGM turned its forest habitats into tundra, while fennicus survived in isolation in southwestern Europe.[58] R. constantini was then replaced by modern tundra/barren-ground caribou adapted to extreme cold, probably in Beringia, before dispersing west (R. t. tarandus in the Scandinavian mountains and R. t. sibiricus across Siberia) and east (R. t. arcticus in the North American Barrenlands) when rising seas isolated them. Likewise in North America, DNA analysis shows that woodland caribou (R. caribou) diverged from primitive ancestors of tundra/barren-ground caribou not during the LGM, 26,000–19,000 years ago, as previously assumed, but in the Middle Pleistocene around 357,000 years ago.[64][65] At that time, modern tundra caribou had not even evolved. Woodland caribou are likely more related to extinct North American forest caribou than to barren-ground caribou. For example, the extinct caribou Torontoceros [Rangifer] hypogaeus, had features (robust and short pedicles, smooth antler surface, and high position of second tine) that relate it to forest caribou.[66]

Humans started hunting reindeer in both the Mesolithic and Neolithic Periods, and humans are today the main predator in many areas. Norway and Greenland have unbroken traditions of hunting wild reindeer from the Last Glacial Period until the present day. In the non-forested mountains of central Norway, such as Jotunheimen, it is still possible to find remains of stone-built trapping pits, guiding fences and bow rests, built especially for hunting reindeer. These can, with some certainty, be dated to the Migration Period, although it is not unlikely that they have been in use since the Stone Age.

Cave paintings by ancient Europeans include both tundra and forest types of reindeer.[14]

A 2022 study of ancient environmental DNA from the Early Pleistocene (2 million years ago) Kap Kobenhavn Formation of northern Greenland identified preserved DNA fragments of Rangifer, identified as basal but potentially ancestral to modern reindeer. This suggests that reindeer have inhabited Greenland since at least the Early Pleistocene. Around this time, northern Greenland was 11–19 °C warmer than the Holocene, with a boreal forest hosting a species assemblage with no modern analogue. These are among the oldest DNA fragments ever sequenced.[67][68]

Taxonomy edit

Carl Linnaeus in 1758 named the Eurasian tundra species Cervus tarandus, the genus Rangifer being credited to Smith, 1827.[37]

Rangifer has had a convoluted history because of the similarity in antler architecture (brow tines asymmetrical and often palmate, bez tines, a back tine sometimes branched, and branched at the distal end, often palmate). Because of individual variability, early taxonomists were unable to discern consistent patterns among populations, nor could they, examining collections in Europe, appreciate the difference in habitats and the differing function they imposed on antler architecture. For example, woodland caribou males, rutting in boreal forest where only a few females can be found, collect harems and defend them against other males, for which they have short, straight, strong, much-branched antlers, beams flattened in cross-section, designed for combat — and not too large, so as not to impede them in forested winter ranges. By contrast, modern tundra caribou (see Evolution above) have synchronized calving as a predator-avoidance strategy, which requires large rutting aggregations. Males cannot defend a harem because, while he was busy fighting, they would disappear into the mass of the herd. Males therefore tend individual females; their fights are infrequent and brief.[60] Their antlers are thin, beams round in cross-section, sweep back and then forward with a cluster of branches at the top; these are designed more for visual stimulation of the females. Their bez tines are set low, just above the brow tine, which is vertically flattened to protect the eyes while the buck "threshes" low brush, a courtship display.[69] The low bez tines help the wide flat brow tines dig craters in the hard-packed tundra snow for forage, for which reason brow tines are often called "shovels" in North America and "ice tines" in Europe. The differences in antler architecture reflect fundamental differences in ecology and behavior, and in turn deep divisions in ancestry that were not apparent to the early taxonomists.

Similarly, working on museum collections where skins were often faded and in poor states of preservation, early taxonomists could not readily perceive differences in coat patterns that are consistent within a subspecies, but variable among them. Geist calls these "nuptial" characteristics: sexually selected characters that are highly conserved and diagnostic among subspecies.[14][60]

Towards the end of the 19th century, national museums began sending out biological exploration expeditions and collections accumulated. Taxonomists, usually working for the museums began naming subspecies more rigorously, based on statistical differences in detailed cranial, dental and skeletal measurements than antlers and pelage, supplemented by better knowledge of differences in ecology and behavior. From 1898 to 1937, mammalogists named 12 new species (other than barren-ground and woodland, which had been named earlier) of caribou in Canada and Alaska, and three new species and nine new subspecies in Eurasia, each properly described according to the evolving rules of zoological nomenclature, with type localities designated and type specimens deposited in museums (see table in Species and subspecies below).[9][70]

In the mid-20th century, as definitions of "species" evolved, mammalogists in Europe[71] and North America[72] made all Rangifer species conspecific with R. tarandus, and synonymized most of the subspecies. Banfield's often-cited A Revision of the Reindeer and Caribou, Genus Rangifer (1961),[73] eliminated R. t. caboti (the Labrador caribou), R. t. osborni (Osborn's caribou — from British Columbia) and R. t. terranovae (the Newfoundland caribou) as invalid and included only barren-ground caribou, renamed as R. t. groenlandicus (formerly R. arcticus) and woodland caribou as R. t. caribou. However, Banfield made multiple errors, eliciting a scathing review by Ian McTaggart-Cowan in 1962.[74] Most authorities continued to consider all or most subspecies valid; some were quite distinct. In his chapter in the authoritative 2005 reference work Mammal Species of the World,[7] referenced by the American Society of Mammalogists, English zoologist Peter Grubb agreed with Valerius Geist, a specialist on large mammals,[14][60] that these subspecies were valid (i.e., before the recent revision): In North America, R. t. caboti, R. t. caribou, R. t. dawsoni, R. t. groenlandicus, R. t. osborni, R. t. pearyi, and R. t. terranovae; and in Eurasia, R. t. tarandus, R. t. buskensis (called R. t. valentinae in Europe; see below), R. t. phylarchus, R. t. pearsoni, R. t. sibiricus and R. t. platyrhynchus. These subspecies were retained in the 2011 replacement work Handbook of Mammals of the World Vol. 2: Hoofed Mammals.[8] Most Russian authors also recognized R. t. angustirostris, a forest reindeer from east of Lake Baikal.[75][17][23]

However, since 1991, many genetic studies have revealed deep divergence between modern tundra reindeer and woodland caribou.[76][5][77][78][11] Geist (2007) and others continued arguing that the woodland caribou was incorrectly classified, noting that "true woodland caribou, the uniformly dark, small-maned type with the frontally emphasized, flat-beamed antlers", is "scattered thinly along the southern rim of North American caribou distribution". He affirms that the "true woodland caribou is very rare, in very great difficulties and requires the most urgent of attention."[79]

In 2011, noting that the former classifications of Rangifer tarandus, either with prevailing taxonomy on subspecies, designations based on ecotypes, or natural population groupings, failed to capture "the variability of caribou across their range in Canada" needed for effective subspecies conservation and management, COSEWIC developed Designatable Unit (DU) attribution,[35] an adaptation of "evolutionary significant units".[80] The 12 designatable units for caribou in Canada (that is, excluding Alaska and Greenland) based on ecology, behavior and, importantly, genetics (but excluding morphology and archaeology) essentially followed the previously-named subspecies distributions, without naming them as such, plus some ecotypes. Ecotypes are not phylogenetically based and cannot substitute for taxonomy.[81]

Meanwhile, genetic data continued to accumulate, revealing sufficiently deep divisions to easily separate Rangifer back into six previously named species and to resurrect several previously named subspecies. Molecular data showed that the Greenland caribou (R. t. groenlandicus) and the Svalbard reindeer (R. t. platyrhynchus), although not closely related to each other, were the most genetically divergent among Rangifer clades;[12] that modern (see Evolution above) Eurasian tundra reindeer (R. t. tarandus and R. t. sibiricus) and North American barren-ground caribou (R. t. arcticus), although sharing ancestry, were separable at the subspecies level; that Finnish forest reindeer (R. t. fennicus) clustered well apart from both wild and domestic tundra reindeer[23] and that boreal woodland caribou (R. t. caribou) were separable from all others.[82][83] Meanwhile, archaeological evidence was accumulating that Eurasian forest reindeer descended from an extinct forest-adapted reindeer and not from tundra reindeer (see Evolution above); since they do not share a direct common ancestor, they cannot be conspecific. Similarly, woodland caribou diverged from the ancestors of Arctic caribou before modern barren-ground caribou had evolved, and were more likely related to extinct North American forest reindeer (see Evolution above). Lacking a direct shared ancestor, barren-ground and woodland caribou cannot be conspecific.

Molecular data also revealed that the four western Canadian montane ecotypes are not woodland caribou: they share a common ancestor with modern barren-ground caribou/tundra reindeer, but distantly, having diverged > 60,000 years ago[84][64][12] — before the modern ecotypes had evolved their cold- and darkness-adapted physiologies and mass-migration and aggregation behaviors (see Evolution above). Before Banfield (1961), taxonomists using cranial, dental and skeletal measurements had unequivocally allied these western montane ecotypes with barren-ground caribou, naming them (as in Osgood 1909[85] Murie, 1935[86] and Anderson 1946,[87] among others) R. t. stonei, R. t. montanus, R. t. fortidens and R. t. osborni, respectively,[86][87] and this phylogeny was confirmed by genetic analysis.

DNA also revealed three unnamed clades that, based on genetic distance, genetic divergence and shared vs. private haplotypes and alleles, together with ecological and behavioral differences, may justify separation at the subspecies level: the Atlantic-Gaspésie caribou (COSEWIC DU11),[77][65] an eastern montane ecotype of the boreal woodland caribou, and the Baffin Island caribou.[88] Neither one of these clades has yet been formally described or named.

Jenkins et al. (2012) said that "[Baffin Island] caribou are unique compared to other Barrenground herds, as they do not overwinter in forested habitat, nor do all caribou undertake long seasonal migrations to calving areas." It also shares a mtDNA haplotype with Labrador caribou, in the North American lineage (i.e., woodland caribou).[82] Røed et al. (1991)[76] had noted:

Among Baffin Island caribou the TFL2 allele was the most common allele (p=0.521), while this allele was absent, or present in very low frequencies, in other caribou populations (Table 1), including the Canadian barren-ground caribou from the Beverly herd. A large genetic difference between Baffin Island caribou and the Beverly herd was also indicated by eight alleles found in the Beverly herd which were absent from the Baffin Island samples.

Jenkins et al. (2018)[88] also reported genetic distinctiveness of Baffin Island caribou from all other barren-ground caribou; its genetic signature was not found on the mainland or on other islands; nor were Beverly herd (the nearest mainly barren-ground caribou) alleles present in Baffin Island caribou, evidence of reproductive isolation.

These advances in Rangifer genetics were brought together with previous morphological-based descriptions, ecology, behavior and archaeology to propose a new revision of the genus.[9]

Species and subspecies edit

Extant species and subspecies of Rangifer
Species
(1-species taxonomy)
Species
(6-species taxonomy)[b]
Subspecies Common name Sedentary / migratory Range Weight of male Type locality / specimen
R. tarandus
(Linnaeus, 1758)
reindeer or caribou
R. arcticus
Richardson, 1829
Arctic caribou
 
R. t. arcticus or
R. a. articus
(Richardson, 1829)
barren-ground caribou migratory the High Arctic islands of Nunavut and the Northwest Territories, Canada and western Greenland (except for the southwestern region) 150 kg (330 lb) “Fort Enterprise, Winter Lake, Mackenzie District, N.W.T., Canada” given by Allen 1908; Neotype no. 22066 (for the species)
 
R. t. arcticus or
R. a. arcticus
(Richardson, 1829)
Porcupine caribou (an ecotype of the barren-ground caribou) migratory summers in the northern Yukon mountains and the coastal plains; winters in the boreal forests of Alaska and the Yukon the same as for the subspecies
R. t. fortidens or
R. a. fortidens
(Hollister, 1912)
Rocky Mountain caribou short migrations: summers in alpine forest and winters in lowland forest the Canadian Rocky Mountains "Largest of the caribou, exceeding in measurements the largest specimens of Rangifer osborni and Rangifer montanus." “head of Moose Pass branch of the Smoky River, Alberta (north-east of Mount Robson)”; USNM No. 174505
R. t. granti or
R. a. granti
(Allen, 1902)
Grant's caribou sedentary (makes short movements to seasonal habitats)[90]: 127  the western end of the Alaska Peninsula and the adjacent islands[90]: 127  “Western end of Alaska Peninsula, opposite Popoff Island, Alaska”; AMNH no. 17593[90]: 122 
 
R. t. montanus or
R. a. montanus
(Seton-Thompson, 1899)
Selkirk Mountains caribou twice-yearly altitudinal movements the Columbia Mountains (specifically the Selkirk, Purcell and Monashee Mountains) in British Columbia, Canada and Washington, Idaho and Montana, the United States no data "Illecillewaet watershed, near Revelstoke, Selkirk Range, B. C."; NMC no. 232
 
R. t. osborni or
R. a. osborni[c]
(Allen, 1902)[7][d][79]
Osborn's caribou short migrations: summers in alpine forest and winters in lowland muskeg British Columbia, Canada males up to 340 kg (750 lb) "Cassiar Mountains, British Columbia; AMNH no. 15714
 
R. t. pearyi or
R. a. pearyi
(Allen, 1902)[73]
Peary caribou an island population that makes local movements both within and among islands the High Arctic islands (except for Baffin Island) of Nunavut and the Northwest Territories, Canada[8] smallest North American subspecies: males average 70 kg (150 lb) “Ellesmere Land [Ellesmere Island], N. Lat. 79⁰”; AMNH no. 19231
R. t. stonei or
R. a. stonei
(Allen, 1901)
Stone's caribou altitudinal movements the mountains of southern Alaska and the southeastern Yukon no data "Kenai Peninsula, Alaska"; AMNH no. 16701
R. caribou
(Gmelin, 1788)
woodland caribou
 
R. t. caribou or
R. c. caribou
(Gmelin, 1788)
boreal woodland caribou

sedentary (makes short movements to seasonal habitats) the boreal forests of northeastern Canada[8] males average 180 kg (400 lb), up to 272 kg (600 lb) Type locality amended to “eastern Canada” (Miller Jr. 1912); NMC Neotype no. 4800
 
R. t. caboti or
R. c. caboti[c]
(G. M. Allen, 1914)[7][d][79]
Labrador caribou or Ungava caribou migratory (except for the Torngat Mountain population DU10) northern Quebec and northern Labrador, Canada no data “Thirty miles north of Nachvak [Torngat Mountains], northeast coast of Labrador”, MCZ No. 15,372
 
R. t. terranovae or
R. c. terranovae
(Allen, 1896)[7][d][79]
Newfoundland caribou Newfoundland, Canada 139.6 kg (3 adult males)[91] “Grand Lake, Newfoundland”; AMNH 11775
R. fennicus
Lönnberg, 1909
forest reindeer
 
R. t. fennicus or
R. f. fennicus
(Lönnberg, 1909)
Finnish forest reindeer migratory northwestern Russia and Finland[8][92] 150–250 kg (330–550 lb) “Torne District [in Enontekiö], Finnish Lappland”; NR No. 4661, Stockholm
R. t. valentinae or
R. f. valentinae[c]
(Flerov, 1933)[7]
Siberian forest reindeer altitudinal migration the Ural Mountains, Russia and the Altai Mountains, Mongolia[8] no data “Head of Chulyshman River, North-Eastern Altai, Siberia”; skin ZMASL no. 22599, skull no. 10214
R. groenlandicus
(Borowsky, 1780)
 
R. groenlandicus or
R. t. groenlandicus
(Borowsky, 1780)[e]
Greenland caribou or Greenland reindeer sedentary four small areas in southwestern Greenland[94] no data "Greenland"[clarification needed]
R. platyrhynchus
(Vrolik, 1829)
Svalbard reindeer
 
R. platyrhynchus or
R. t. platyrhynchus
(Vrolik, 1829)
Svalbard reindeer an island population that makes local movements both within and among islands the Svalbard Archipelago of Norway[8] smallest of the reindeer; has extremely short legs "Spitzbergen"; Neotype no. M2625, Oslo
R. tarandus
(Linnaeus, 1758)
tundra reindeer or mountain reindeer
R. t. pearsoni
(Lydekker, 1903)[7]
Novaya Zemlya reindeer an island population that makes local movements both within and among islands the Novaya Zemlya and New Siberia Archipelagoes of Russia and Wrangel Island, Russia[8] no data “Island of Novaya Zemlya”; type specimen “In the possession of H. J. Pearson, Esq., Bramcote, Nottinghamshire, England” (Flerov, 1933).
R. t. phylarchus
(Hollister, 1912)[7]
Kamchatkan reindeer restricted to the Kamchatka Peninsula, Russia, after those reindeer west of the Sea of Okhotsk were found to actually be R. t. sibiricus[8][23] no data “Southeastern Kamtchatka [Kamchatka]”; USNM No. 21343
R. t. sibiricus
(Murray, 1866)[7]
Siberian tundra reindeer long distance migrations Siberia, Russia,[8] Franz Josef Land during the Holocene from >6400–1300 cal. BP (from where it has been extirpated)[95] no data “Siberia. ...eastward of the River Lena”; Type specimen of sibiricus unknown; however, Jacobi (1931) deposited a type specimen of “asiaticus” in the Museum of Leningrad (ZMASL), Buturlin coll. no. 240-1908
 
R. t. tarandus
(Linnaeus, 1758)
mountain reindeer or Norwegian reindeer migratory the Arctic tundra of the Fennoscandian Peninsula in Norway[8][92] and the Austfirðir in Iceland (where it has been introduced)[96] no data Scandinavia

Abbreviations: AMNH the American Museum of Natural History; BCPM the British Columbia Provincial Museum (= RBCM the Royal British Columbia Museum), NHMUK the British Museum (Natural History) (originally the BMNH), DMNH the Denver Museum of Natural History, MCZ the Museum of Comparative Zoology, MSI the Museum of the Smithsonian Institution, NMC the National Museum of Canada (originally the CGS Canadian Geological Survey Museum, now the CMN Canadian Museum of Nature), NR the Naturhistoriska Riksmuseet, RSMNH the Royal Swedish Museum of Natural History, USNM, the U. S. National Museum, ZMASL the Zoological Museum of the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences (formerly the Zoological Museum of the Academy of Sciences), Leningrad

Extinct subspecies of Rangifer
Subspecies Common name Division Range Weight of male Extinct since
R. t. eogroenlandicus
(Degerbøl, 1957)[31]
†East Greenland caribou
or Arctic reindeer
tundra eastern Greenland no data 1900
R. t. dawsoni or
R. a. dawsoni
(Thompson-Seton, 1900)[73]
Queen Charlotte Islands caribou
or Dawson's caribou
woodland Graham Island of Haida Gwaii off the coast of British Columbia, Canada (formerly known as the Queen Charlotte Islands) no data 1908
R. t. setoni or
R. f. setoni
Flerov, 1933
†Sakhalin reindeer tundra Sakhalin in the Sea of Okhotsk, Russia no data 2007?

The table above includes, as per the recent revision, R. t. caboti (the Labrador caribou (the Eastern Migratory population DU4)), and R. t. terranovae (the Newfoundland caribou (the Newfoundland population DU5)), which molecular analyses have shown to be of North American (i.e., woodland caribou) lineage;[82] and four mountain ecotypes now known to be of distant Beringia-Eurasia lineage (see Taxonomy above).[82][5][64]

The scientific name Tarandus rangifer buskensis Millais, 1915 (the Busk Mountains reindeer) was selected as the senior synonym to R. t. valentinae Flerov, 1933, in Mammal Species of the World[7] but Russian authors[17] do not recognize Millais and Millais' articles in a hunting travelogue, The Gun at Home and Abroad,[97] seem short of a taxonomic authority.[9]

The scientific name groenlandicus is fraught with problems. Edwards (1743)[98] illustrated and claimed to have seen a male specimen (“head of perfect horns...”) from Greenland and said that a Captain Craycott had brought a live pair from Greenland to England in 1738. He named it Capra groenlandicus, Greenland reindeer. Linnaeus,[99] in the 12th edition of Systema naturae, gave grœnlandicus as a synonym for Cervus tarandus. Borowski[100] disagreed (and again changed the spelling), saying Cervus grönlandicus was morphologically distinct from Eurasian tundra reindeer. Baird[101] placed it under the genus Rangifer as R. grœnlandicus. It went back and forth as a full species or subspecies of the barren-ground caribou (R. arcticus) or a subspecies of the tundra reindeer (R. tarandus), but always as the Greenland reindeer/caribou. Taxonomists consistently documented morphological differences between Greenland and other caribou/reindeer in cranial measurements, dentition, antler architecture, etc.[102][103] Then Banfield (1961)[72] in his famously flawed revision, gave the name groenlandicus to all the barren-ground caribou in North America, Greenland included, because groenlandicus pre-dates Richardson’s[104] R. arctus,. However, because genetic data shows the Greenland caribou to be the most distantly related of any caribou to all the others (genetic distance, FST = 44%,[12] whereas most cervid (deer family) species have a genetic distance of 2% to 5%[89])--as well as behavioral and morphological differences—a recent revision returned it to species status as R. groenlandicus.[9] Although it has been assumed that the larger caribou that appeared in Greenland 4,000 years ago originated from Baffin Island (itself unique; see Taxonomy above), a reconstruction of LGM glacial retreat and caribou advance (Yannic et al. 2013)[12] shows colonization by NAL lineage caribou more likely. Their PCA and tree diagrams show Greenland caribou clustering outside of the Beringian-Eurasian lineage.

The scientific name R. t. granti has a very interesting history. Allen (1902)[90] named it as a distinct species, R. granti, from the "western end of Alaska Peninsula, opposite Popoff Island" and noting that:

Rangifer granti is a representative of the Barren Ground group of Caribou, which includes R. arcticus of the Arctic Coast and R. granlandicus of Greenland. It is not closely related to R. stonei of the Kenai Peninsula, from which it differs not only in its very much smaller size, but in important cranial characters and in coloration. ...The external and cranial differences between R. granti and the various forms of the Woodland Caribou are so great in almost every respect that no detailed comparison is necessary. ...According to Mr. Stone, Rangifer granti inhabits the " barren land of Alaska Peninsula, ranging well up into the mountains in summer, but descending to the lower levels in winter, generally feeding on the low flat lands near the coast and in the foothills...As regards cranial characters no comparison is necessary with R. montanus or with any of the woodland forms."

Osgood[85] and Murie (1935),[86] agreeing with granti's close relationship with the barren-ground caribou, brought it under R. arcticus as a subspecies, R. t. granti. Anderson (1946)[87] and Banfield (1961),[72] based on statistical analysis of cranial, dental and other characters, agreed. But Banfield (1961) also synonymized Alaska's large R. stonei with other mountain caribou of British Columbia and the Yukon as invalid subspecies of woodland caribou, then R. t. caribou. This left the small, migratory barren-ground caribou of Alaska and the Yukon, including the Porcupine caribou herd, without a name, which Banfield rectified in his 1974 Mammals of Canada [105] by extending to them the name "granti". The late Valerius Geist (1998), in the only error in his whole illustrious career, re-analyzed Banfield's data with additional specimens found in an unpublished report he cites as "Skal, 1982", but was "not able to find diagnostic features that could segregate this form from the western barren ground type." But Skal 1982 had included specimens from the eastern end of the Alaska Peninsula and the Kenai Peninsula, the range of the larger Stone's caribou. Later, geneticists comparing barren-ground caribou of Alaska with those of mainland Canada found little difference and they all became the former R. t. groenlandicus (now R. t. arcticus). R. t. granti was lost in the oblivion of invalid taxonomy until Alaskan researchers sampled some small, pale caribou from the western end of the Alaska Peninsula, their range enclosing the type locality designated by Allen (1902) and found them to be genetically distinct from all other caribou in Alaska.[106][107] Thus, granti was rediscovered, its range restricted to that originally described.

Stone's caribou (R. t. stonei),[108] a large montane type, was described from the Kenai Peninsula (where, apparently, it was never common except in years of great abundance),[86] the eastern end of the Alaska Peninsula, and mountains throughout southern and eastern Alaska.[108] It was placed under R. arcticus as a subspecies,[86] R. t. stonei, and later synonymised as noted above. The same genetic analyses mentioned above for R. t. granti[107] resulted in resurrecting R. t. stonei as well.[9]

The Sakhalin reindeer (R. t. setoni), endemic to Sakhalin, was described as Rangifer tarandus setoni Flerov, 1933, but Banfield (1961) brought it under R. t. fennicus as a junior synonym. The wild reindeer on the island are apparently extinct, having been replaced by domestic reindeer.

Some of the Rangifer species and subspecies may be further divided by ecotype depending on several behavioral factors – predominant habitat use (northern, tundra, mountain, forest, boreal forest, forest-dwelling, woodland, woodland (boreal), woodland (migratory) or woodland (mountain), spacing (dispersed or aggregated) and migration patterns (sedentary or migratory).[109][110][111] North American examples of this are the Torngat Mountain population DU10, an ecotype of R. t. caboti; a recently discovered and unnamed clade between the Mackenzie River and Great Bear Lake of Beringian-Eurasian lineage, an ecotype of R. t. osborni;[112] the Atlantic-Gaspésie population DU11, an eastern montane ecotype of the boreal woodland caribou (R. t. caribou);[113][65][114] the Baffin Island caribou, an ecotype of the barren-ground caribou (R. t. arcticus);[88] and the Dolphin-Union “herd”, another ecotype of R. t. arcticus.[115] The last three of these likely qualify as subspecies,[9] but they have not yet been formally described or named.

Physical characteristics edit

Naming in this and following sections follows the taxonomy in the authoritative 2011 reference work Handbook of Mammals of the World Vol. 2: Hoofed Mammals.[8]

Antlers edit

 
Losing the velvet layer under which a new antler is growing, an annual process

In most cervid species, only males grow antlers; the reindeer is the only cervid species in which females also grow them normally.[116] Androgens play an essential role in the antler formation of cervids. The antlerogenic genes in reindeer have more sensitivity to androgens in comparison with other cervids.[117][118]

There is considerable variation among species and subspecies in the size of the antlers (e.g., they are rather small and spindly in the northernmost species and subspecies),[119] but on average the bull's antlers are the second largest of any extant deer, after those of the male moose. In the largest subspecies, the antlers of large bulls can range up to 100 cm (39 in) in width and 135 cm (53 in) in beam length. They have the largest antlers relative to body size among living deer species.[116] Antler size measured in number of points reflects the nutritional status of the reindeer and climate variation of its environment.[120][121] The number of points on male reindeer increases from birth to 5 years of age and remains relatively constant from then on.[121]: 24  "In male caribou, antler mass (but not the number of tines) varies in concert with body mass."[122][123] While antlers of male woodland caribou are typically smaller than those of male barren-ground caribou, they can be over 1 m (3 ft 3 in) across. They are flattened in cross-section, compact and relatively dense.[36] Geist describes them as frontally emphasized, flat-beamed antlers.[79] Woodland caribou antlers are thicker and broader than those of the barren-ground caribou and their legs and heads are longer.[36] Quebec-Labrador male caribou antlers can be significantly larger and wider than other woodland caribou. Central barren-ground male caribou antlers are perhaps the most diverse in configuration and can grow to be very high and wide. Osborn's caribou antlers are typically the most massive, with the largest circumference measurements.[124]

The antlers' main beams begin at the brow "extending posterior over the shoulders and bowing so that the tips point forward. The prominent, palmate brow tines extend forward, over the face."[125] The antlers typically have two separate groups of points, lower and upper.

Antlers begin to grow on male reindeer in March or April and on female reindeer in May or June. This process is called antlerogenesis. Antlers grow very quickly every year on the bulls. As the antlers grow, they are covered in thick velvet, filled with blood vessels and spongy in texture. The antler velvet of the barren-ground caribou and the boreal woodland caribou is dark chocolate brown.[126] The velvet that covers growing antlers is a highly vascularised skin. This velvet is dark brown on woodland or barren-ground caribou and slate-grey on Peary caribou and the Dolphin-Union caribou herd.[125][127][128] Velvet lumps in March can develop into a rack measuring more than a meter in length (3 ft) by August.[129]: 88 

 
A R. tarandus skull

When the antler growth is fully grown and hardened, the velvet is shed or rubbed off. To the Inuit, for whom the caribou is a "culturally important keystone species", the months are named after landmarks in the caribou life cycle. For example, amiraijaut in the Igloolik region is "when velvet falls off caribou antlers."[130]

Male reindeer use their antlers to compete with other males during the mating season. Butler (1986) showed that the social requirements of caribou females during the rut determines the mating strategies of males and, consequently, the form of male antlers.[131] In describing woodland caribou, which have a harem-defense mating system, SARA wrote, "During the rut, males engage in frequent and furious sparring battles with their antlers. Large males with large antlers do most of the mating."[132] Reindeer continue to migrate until the bulls have spent their back fat.[130][133][134] By contrast, barren-ground caribou males tend individual females and their fights are brief and much less intense; consequently, their antlers are long, and thin, round in cross-section and less branched and are designed more for show (or sexual attraction) than fighting.

In late autumn or early winter after the rut, male reindeer lose their antlers, growing a new pair the next summer with a larger rack than the previous year. Female reindeer keep their antlers until they calve. In the Scandinavian and Arctic Circle populations, old bulls' antlers fall off in late December, young bulls' antlers fall off in the early spring, and cows' antlers fall off in the summer.[citation needed]

When male reindeer shed their antlers in early to mid-winter, the antlered cows acquire the highest ranks in the feeding hierarchy, gaining access to the best forage areas. These cows are healthier than those without antlers.[135] Calves whose mothers do not have antlers are more prone to disease and have a significantly higher mortality.[135] Cows in good nutritional condition, for example, during a mild winter with good winter range quality, may grow new antlers earlier as antler growth requires high intake.[135]

 
A R. t. platyrhynchus skull

According to a respected Igloolik elder, Noah Piugaattuk, who was one of the last outpost camp leaders,[136] caribou (tuktu) antlers[130]

...get detached every year...Young males lose the velvet from the antlers much more quickly than female caribou even though they are not fully mature. They start to work with their antlers just as soon as the velvet starts to fall off. The young males engage in fights with their antlers towards autumn...soon after the velvet had fallen off they will be red, as they start to get bleached their colour changes...When the velvet starts to fall off the antler is red because the antler is made from blood. The antler is the blood that has hardened; in fact, the core of the antler is still bloody when the velvet starts to fall off, at least close to the base.

— Elder Noah Piugaattuk of Igloolik cited in "Tuktu — Caribou" (2002) "Canada's Polar Life"

According to the Igloolik Oral History Project (IOHP), "Caribou antlers provided the Inuit with a myriad of implements, from snow knives and shovels to drying racks and seal-hunting tools. A complex set of terms describes each part of the antler and relates it to its various uses".[130] Currently, the larger racks of antlers are used by Inuit as materials for carving. Iqaluit-based Jackoposie Oopakak's 1989 carving, entitled Nunali, which means "place where people live", and which is part of the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Canada, includes a massive set of caribou antlers on which he has intricately carved the miniaturized world of the Inuit where "Arctic birds, caribou, polar bears, seals, and whales are interspersed with human activities of fishing, hunting, cleaning skins, stretching boots, and travelling by dog sled and kayak...from the base of the antlers to the tip of each branch".[137]

Pelt edit

The color of the fur varies considerably, both between individuals and depending on season and species. Northern populations, which usually are relatively small, are whiter, while southern populations, which typically are relatively large, are darker. This can be seen well in North America, where the northernmost subspecies, the Peary caribou, is the whitest and smallest subspecies of the continent, while the Selkirk Mountains caribou (Southern Mountain population DU9)[124] is the darkest and nearly the largest,[119] only exceeded in size by Osborn's caribou (Northern Mountain population DU7).[124]

The coat has two layers of fur: a dense woolly undercoat and a longer-haired overcoat consisting of hollow, air-filled hairs.[138][f] Fur is the primary insulation factor that allows reindeer to regulate their core body temperature in relation to their environment, the thermogradient, even if the temperature rises to 38 °C (100 °F).[140] In 1913, Dugmore noted how the woodland caribou swim so high out of the water, unlike any other mammal, because their hollow, "air-filled, quill-like hair" acts as a supporting "life jacket".[141]

A darker belly color may be caused by two mutations of MC1R. They appear to be more common in domestic reindeer herds.[142]

Heat exchange edit

Blood moving into the legs is cooled by blood returning to the body in a countercurrent heat exchange (CCHE), a highly efficient means of minimizing heat loss through the skin's surface. In the CCHE mechanism, in cold weather, blood vessels are closely knotted and intertwined with arteries to the skin and appendages that carry warm blood with veins returning to the body that carry cold blood causing the warm arterial blood to exchange heat with the cold venous blood. In this way, their legs for example are kept cool, maintaining the core body temperature nearly 30 °C (54 °F) higher with less heat lost to the environment. Heat is thus recycled instead of being dissipated. The "heart does not have to pump blood as rapidly in order to maintain a constant body core temperature and thus, metabolic rate." CCHE is present in animals like reindeer, fox and moose living in extreme conditions of cold or hot weather as a mechanism for retaining the heat in (or out of) the body. These are countercurrent exchange systems with the same fluid, usually blood, in a circuit, used for both directions of flow.[143]

Reindeer have specialized counter-current vascular heat exchange in their nasal passages. Temperature gradient along the nasal mucosa is under physiological control. Incoming cold air is warmed by body heat before entering the lungs and water is condensed from the expired air and captured before the reindeer's breath is exhaled, then used to moisten dry incoming air and possibly be absorbed into the blood through the mucous membranes.[144] Like moose, caribou have specialized noses featuring nasal turbinate bones that dramatically increase the surface area within the nostrils.

Hooves edit

The reindeer has large feet with crescent-shaped cloven hooves for walking in snow or swamps. According to the Species at Risk Public Registry (SARA), woodland[132]

"Caribou have large feet with four toes. In addition to two small ones, called "dew claws," they have two large, crescent-shaped toes that support most of their weight and serve as shovels when digging for food under snow. These large concave hooves offer stable support on wet, soggy ground and on crusty snow. The pads of the hoof change from a thick, fleshy shape in the summer to become hard and thin in the winter months, reducing the animal's exposure to the cold ground. Additional winter protection comes from the long hair between the "toes"; it covers the pads so the caribou walks only on the horny rim of the hooves."

— SARA 2014

Reindeer hooves adapt to the season: in the summer, when the tundra is soft and wet, the footpads become sponge-like and provide extra traction. In the winter, the pads shrink and tighten, exposing the rim of the hoof, which cuts into the ice and crusted snow to keep it from slipping. This also enables them to dig down (an activity known as "cratering") through the snow to their favourite food, a lichen known as reindeer lichen (Cladonia rangiferina).[145][146]

Size edit

The females (or "cows" as they are often called) usually measure 162–205 cm (64–81 in) in length and weigh 80–120 kg (180–260 lb).[147] The males (or "bulls" as they are often called) are typically larger (to an extent which varies between the different species and subspecies), measuring 180–214 cm (71–84 in) in length and usually weighing 159–182 kg (351–401 lb).[147] Exceptionally large bulls have weighed as much as 318 kg (701 lb).[147] Weight varies drastically between the seasons, with bulls losing as much as 40% of their pre-rut weight.[148]

The shoulder height is usually 85 to 150 cm (33 to 59 in), and the tail is 14 to 20 cm (5.5 to 7.9 in) long.

The reindeer from Svalbard are the smallest of all. They are also relatively short-legged and may have a shoulder height of as little as 80 cm (31 in),[149] thereby following Allen's rule.

Clicking sound edit

The knees of many species and subspecies of reindeer are adapted to produce a clicking sound as they walk.[150] The sounds originate in the tendons of the knees and may be audible from several hundred meters away. The frequency of the knee-clicks is one of a range of signals that establish relative positions on a dominance scale among reindeer. "Specifically, loud knee-clicking is discovered to be an honest signal of body size, providing an exceptional example of the potential for non-vocal acoustic communication in mammals."[150] The clicking sound made by reindeer as they walk is caused by small tendons slipping over bone protuberances (sesamoid bones) in their feet.[151][152] The sound is made when a reindeer is walking or running, occurring when the full weight of the foot is on the ground or just after it is relieved of the weight.[141]

Eyes edit

A study by researchers from University College London in 2011 revealed that reindeer can see light with wavelengths as short as 320 nm (i.e. in the ultraviolet range), considerably below the human threshold of 400 nm. It is thought that this ability helps them to survive in the Arctic, because many objects that blend into the landscape in light visible to humans, such as urine and fur, produce sharp contrasts in ultraviolet.[153] It has been proposed that UV flashes on power lines are responsible for reindeer avoiding power lines because "...in darkness these animals see power lines not as dim, passive structures but, rather, as lines of flickering light stretching across the terrain."[154]

In 2023, researchers studying reindeer living in Cairngorms National Park, Scotland, suggested that UV visual sensitivity in reindeer helps them detect UV-absorbing lichens against a background of UV-reflecting snows.[155]

The tapetum lucidum of Arctic reindeer eyes changes in color from gold in summer to blue in winter to improve their vision during times of continuous darkness, and perhaps enable them to better spot predators.[156]

Biology and behaviors edit

Seasonal body composition edit

 
Sweden

Reindeer have developed adaptations for optimal metabolic efficiency during warm months as well as for during cold months.[157] The body composition of reindeer varies highly with the seasons. Of particular interest is the body composition and diet of breeding and non-breeding females between the seasons. Breeding females have more body mass than non-breeding females between the months of March and September with a difference of around 10 kg (22 lb) more than non-breeding females. From November to December, non-breeding females have more body mass than breeding females, as non-breeding females are able to focus their energies towards storage during colder months rather than lactation and reproduction. Body masses of both breeding and non-breeding females peaks in September. During the months of March through April, breeding females have more fat mass than the non-breeding females with a difference of almost 3 kg (6.6 lb). After this, however, non-breeding females on average have a higher body fat mass than do breeding females.[158]

The environmental variations play a large part in reindeer nutrition, as winter nutrition is crucial to adult and neonatal survival rates.[159] Lichens are a staple during the winter months as they are a readily available food source, which reduces the reliance on stored body reserves.[158] Lichens are a crucial part of the reindeer diet; however, they are less prevalent in the diet of pregnant reindeer compared to non-pregnant individuals. The amount of lichen in a diet is found more in non-pregnant adult diets than pregnant individuals due to the lack of nutritional value. Although lichens are high in carbohydrates, they are lacking in essential proteins that vascular plants provide. The amount of lichen in a diet decreases in latitude, which results in nutritional stress being higher in areas with low lichen abundance.[160]: 6 

In a study of seasonal light-dark cycles on sleep patterns of female reindeer, researchers performed non-invasive electroencephalography (EEG) on reindeer kept in a stable at the UiT The Arctic University of Norway. The EEG recordings showed that: (1) the more time reindeer spend ruminating, the less time they spend in non-rapid eye movement sleep (NREM sleep); and (2) reindeer's brainwaves during rumination resemble the brainwaves present during NREM sleep. These results suggest that, by reducing the time requirement for NREM sleep, reindeer are able to spend more time feeding during the summer months, when food is abundant.[161][162]

Reproduction and life cycle edit

Reindeer mate in late September to early November, and the gestation period is about 228–234 days.[163] During the mating season, bulls battle for access to cows. Two bulls will lock each other's antlers together and try to push each other away. The most dominant bulls can collect as many as 15–20 cows to mate with. A bull will stop eating during this time and lose much of his body fat reserves.[164]

To calve, "females travel to isolated, relatively predator-free areas such as islands in lakes, peatlands, lake-shores, or tundra."[132] As females select the habitat for the birth of their calves, they are warier than males.[163] Dugmore noted that, in their seasonal migrations, the herd follows a female for that reason.[141] Newborns weigh on average 6 kg (13 lb).[148] In May or June, the calves are born.[163] After 45 days, the calves are able to graze and forage, but continue suckling until the following autumn when they become independent from their mothers.[164]

Bulls live four years less than the cows, whose maximum longevity is about 17 years. Cows with a normal body size and who have had sufficient summer nutrition can begin breeding anytime between the ages of 1 and 3 years.[163] When a cow has undergone nutritional stress, it is possible for her to not reproduce for the year.[165] Dominant bulls, those with larger body size and antler racks, inseminate more than one cow a season.

Social structure, migration and range edit

 
The size of the antlers plays a significant role in establishing the hierarchy in the herd[166]

Some populations of North American caribou; for example, many herds in the barren-ground caribou subspecies and some woodland caribou in Ungava and northern Labrador, migrate the farthest of any terrestrial mammal, traveling up to 5,000 km (3,000 mi) a year, and covering 1,000,000 km2 (400,000 sq mi).[2][167] Other North American populations, the boreal woodland caribou for example, are largely sedentary.[168] The European populations are known to have shorter migrations. Island populations, such as the Novaya Zemlya and Svalbard reindeer and the Peary caribou, make local movements both within and among islands. Migrating reindeer can be negatively affected by parasite loads. Severely infected individuals are weak and probably have shortened lifespans, but parasite levels vary between populations. Infections create an effect known as culling: infected migrating animals are less likely to complete the migration.[169]

Normally travelling about 19–55 km (12–34 mi) a day while migrating, the caribou can run at speeds of 60–80 km/h (37–50 mph).[2] Young calves can already outrun an Olympic sprinter when only 1 day old.[170] During the spring migration, smaller herds will group together to form larger herds of 50,000 to 500,000 animals, but during autumn migrations, the groups become smaller and the reindeer begin to mate. During winter, reindeer travel to forested areas to forage under the snow. By spring, groups leave their winter grounds to go to the calving grounds. A reindeer can swim easily and quickly, normally at about 6.5 km/h (4.0 mph) but, if necessary, at 10 km/h (6.2 mph) and migrating herds will not hesitate to swim across a large lake or broad river.[2]

The barren-ground caribou form large herds and undertake lengthy seasonal migrations from winter feeding grounds in taiga to spring calving grounds and summer range in the tundra. The migrations of the Porcupine herd of barren-ground caribou are among the longest of any mammal.[10] Greenland caribou, found in southwestern Greenland, are "mixed migrators" and many individuals do not migrate; those that do migrate less than 60 km.[171] Unlike the individual-tending mating system, aggregated rutting, synchronized calving and aggregated post-calving of barren-ground caribou, Greenland caribou have a harem-defense mating system and dispersed calving and they do not aggregate.[94]

Although most wild tundra reindeer migrate between their winter range in taiga and summer range in tundra, some ecotypes or herds are more or less sedentary. Novaya Zemlya reindeer (R. t. pearsoni) formerly wintered on the mainland and migrated across the ice to the islands for summer, but only a few now migrate.[24] Finnish forest reindeer (R. t. fennicus) were formerly distributed in most of the coniferous forest zones south of the tree line, including some mountains, but are now spottily distributed within this zone.

As an adaptation to their Arctic environment, they have lost their circadian rhythm.[172]

Ecology edit

Distribution and habitat edit

 
Sweden
 
Suomussalmi, Finland

Originally, the reindeer was found in Scandinavia, Eastern Europe, Greenland, Russia, Mongolia and northern China north of the 50th latitude. In North America, it was found in Canada, Alaska, and the northern contiguous United States from Maine to Washington. In the 19th century, it was still present in southern Idaho.[2] Even in historical times, it probably occurred naturally in Ireland, and it is believed to have lived in Scotland until the 12th century, when the last reindeer were hunted in Orkney.[173] During the Late Pleistocene Epoch, reindeer occurred further south in North America, such as in Nevada, Tennessee, and Alabama,[174] and as far south as Spain in Europe.[166][175] Today, wild reindeer have disappeared from these areas, especially from the southern parts, where it vanished almost everywhere. Large populations of wild reindeer are still found in Norway, Finland, Siberia, Greenland, Alaska and Canada.

According to Grubb (2005), Rangifer is "circumboreal in the tundra and taiga" from "Svalbard, Norway, Finland, Russia, Alaska (USA) and Canada including most Arctic islands, and Greenland, south to northern Mongolia, China (Inner Mongolia),[176] Sakhalin Island, and USA (northern Idaho and Great Lakes region)." Reindeer were introduced to, and are feral in, "Iceland, Kerguelen Islands, South Georgia Island, Pribilof Islands, St. Matthew Island";[7] a free-ranging semi-domesticated herd is also present in Scotland.[177]

There is strong regional variation in Rangifer herd size. There are large population differences among individual herds and the size of individual herds has varied greatly since 1970. The largest of all herds (in Taimyr, Russia) has varied between 400,000 and 1,000,000; the second largest herd (at the George River in Canada) has varied between 28,000 and 385,000.

While Rangifer is a widespread and numerous genus in the northern Holarctic, being present in both tundra and taiga (boreal forest),[166] by 2013, many herds had "unusually low numbers" and their winter ranges in particular were smaller than they used to be.[18] Caribou and reindeer numbers have fluctuated historically, but many herds are in decline across their range.[178] This global decline is linked to climate change for northern migratory herds and industrial disturbance of habitat for non-migratory herds.[179] Barren-ground caribou are susceptible to the effects of climate change due to a mismatch in the phenological process between the availability of food during the calving period.[160][180][181]

In November 2016, it was reported that more than 81,000 reindeer in Russia had died as a result of climate change. Longer autumns, leading to increased amounts of freezing rain, created a few inches of ice over lichen, causing many reindeer to starve to death.[182]

Diet edit

 
Two caribou licking salt from a roadway in British Columbia

Reindeer are ruminants, having a four-chambered stomach. They mainly eat lichens in winter, especially reindeer lichen (Cladonia rangiferina); they are the only large mammal able to metabolize lichen owing to specialised bacteria and protozoa in their gut.[183] They are also the only animals (except for some gastropods) in which the enzyme lichenase, which breaks down lichenin to glucose, has been found.[184] However, they also eat the leaves of willows and birches, as well as sedges and grasses.

Reindeer are osteophagous; they are known to gnaw and partly consume shed antlers as a dietary supplement and in some extreme cases will cannibalise each other's antlers before shedding.[185] There is also some evidence to suggest that on occasion, especially in the spring when they are nutritionally stressed,[186] they will feed on small rodents (such as lemmings),[187] fish (such as the Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus)), and bird eggs.[188] Reindeer herded by the Chukchis have been known to devour mushrooms enthusiastically in late summer.[189]

During the Arctic summer, when there is continuous daylight, reindeer change their sleeping pattern from one synchronised with the sun to an ultradian pattern, in which they sleep when they need to digest food.[190]

Predators edit

 
Standing on snow to avoid bloodsucking insects

A variety of predators prey heavily on reindeer, including overhunting by people in some areas, which contributes to the decline of populations.[132]

Golden eagles prey on calves and are the most prolific hunter on the calving grounds.[191] Wolverines will take newborn calves or birthing cows, as well as (less commonly) infirm adults.

Brown bears and polar bears prey on reindeer of all ages but, like wolverines, are most likely to attack weaker animals, such as calves and sick reindeer, since healthy adult reindeer can usually outpace a bear. The gray wolf is the most effective natural predator of adult reindeer and sometimes takes large numbers, especially during the winter. Some gray wolf packs, as well as individual grizzly bears in Canada, may follow and live off of a particular reindeer herd year-round.[109][192]

In 2020, scientists on Svalbard witnessed, and were able to film for the first time, a polar bear attack reindeer, driving one into the ocean, where the polar bear caught up with and killed it.[193] The same bear successfully repeated this hunting technique the next day. On Svalbard, reindeer remains account for 27.3% in polar bear scats, suggesting that they "may be a significant part of the polar bear's diet in that area".[194]

Additionally, as carrion, reindeer may be scavenged opportunistically by red and Arctic foxes, various species of eagles, hawks and falcons, and common ravens.

Bloodsucking insects, such as mosquitoes, black flies, and especially the reindeer warble fly or reindeer botfly (Hypoderma tarandi) and the reindeer nose botfly (Cephenemyia trompe),[179][195] are a plague to reindeer during the summer and can cause enough stress to inhibit feeding and calving behaviors.[196] An adult reindeer will lose perhaps about 1 L (0.22 imp gal; 0.26 US gal) of blood to biting insects for every week it spends in the tundra.[170] The population numbers of some of these predators is influenced by the migration of reindeer.[citation needed] Tormenting insects keep caribou on the move, searching for windy areas like hilltops and mountain ridges, rock reefs, lakeshore and forest openings, or snow patches that offer respite from the buzzing horde. Gathering in large herds is another strategy that caribou use to block insects.[197]

Reindeer are good swimmers and, in one case, the entire body of a reindeer was found in the stomach of a Greenland shark (Somniosus microcephalus), a species found in the far North Atlantic.[198]

Other threats edit

White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) commonly carry meningeal worm or brainworm (Parelaphostrongylus tenuis), a nematode parasite that causes reindeer, moose (Alces alces), elk (Cervus canadensis), and mule deer (Odocoileus hemionus) to develop fatal neurological symptoms[199][200][201] which include a loss of fear of humans. White-tailed deer that carry this worm are partially immune to it.[148]

Changes in climate and habitat beginning in the 20th century have expanded range overlap between white-tailed deer and caribou, increasing the frequency of infection within the reindeer population. This increase in infection is a concern for wildlife managers. Human activities, such as "clear-cutting forestry practices, forest fires, and the clearing for agriculture, roadways, railways, and power lines," favor the conversion of habitats into the preferred habitat of the white-tailed deer – "open forest interspersed with meadows, clearings, grasslands, and riparian flatlands."[148] Towards the end of the Soviet Union, there was increasingly open admission from the Soviet government that reindeer numbers were being negatively affected by human activity, and that this must be remediated especially by supporting reindeer breeding by native herders.[202]

Conservation edit

Current status edit

While overall widespread and numerous, some reindeer species and subspecies are rare and three subspecies have already become extinct.[29][30] As of 2015, the IUCN has classified the reindeer as Vulnerable due to an observed population decline of 40% over the last +25 years.[2] According to IUCN, Rangifer tarandus as a species is not endangered because of its overall large population and its widespread range.[2]

In North America, the Queen Charlotte Islands caribou[203][30][29] and the East Greenland caribou both became extinct in the early 20th century, the Peary caribou is designated as Endangered, the boreal woodland caribou is designated as Threatened and some individual populations are endangered as well. While the barren-ground caribou is not designated as Threatened, many individual herds — including some of the largest — are declining and there is much concern at the local level.[204] Grant's caribou, a small, pale subspecies endemic to the western end of the Alaska Peninsula and the adjacent islands,[90] has not been assessed as to its conservation status.

The status of the Dolphin-Union "herd" was upgraded to Endangered in 2017.[205] In NWT, Dolphin-Union caribou were listed as Special Concern under the NWT Species at Risk (NWT) Act (2013).

Both the Selkirk Mountains caribou (Southern Mountain population DU9) and the Rocky Mountain caribou (Central Mountain population DU8) are classified as Endangered in Canada in regions such as southeastern British Columbia at the Canada–United States border, along the Columbia and Kootenay Rivers and around Kootenay Lake. Rocky Mountain caribou are extirpated from Banff National Park,[206] but a small population remains in Jasper National Park and in mountain ranges to the northwest into British Columbia. Montane caribou are now considered extirpated in the contiguous United States, including Washington and Idaho. Osborn's caribou (Northern Mountain population DU7) is classified as Threatened in Canada.

In Eurasia, the Sakhalin reindeer is extinct (and has been replaced by domestic reindeer) and reindeer on most of the Novaya Zemlya islands have also been replaced by domestic reindeer, although some wild reindeer still persist on the northern islands.[24] Many Siberian tundra reindeer herds have declined, some dangerously, but the Taymir herd remains strong and in total about 940,000 wild Siberian tundra reindeer were estimated in 2010.[17]

There is strong regional variation in Rangifer herd size. By 2013, many caribou herds in North America had "unusually low numbers" and their winter ranges in particular were smaller than they used to be.[204] Caribou numbers have fluctuated historically, but many herds are in decline across their range.[178] There are many factors contributing to the decline in numbers.[179]

Boreal woodland caribou edit

Ongoing human development of their habitat has caused populations of boreal woodland caribou to disappear from their original southern range. In particular, boreal woodland caribou were extirpated in many areas of eastern North America in the beginning of the 20th century. Professor Marco Musiani of the University of Calgary said in a statement that "The woodland caribou is already an endangered subspecies in southern Canada and the United States...[The] warming of the planet means the disappearance of their critical habitat in these regions. Caribou need undisturbed lichen-rich environments and these types of habitats are disappearing."[207]

Boreal woodland caribou were designated as Threatened in 2002 by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada, (COSEWIC).[35] Environment Canada reported in 2011 that there were approximately 34 000 boreal woodland caribou in 51 ranges remaining in Canada (Environment Canada, 2011b).[36] "According to Geist, the "woodland caribou is highly endangered throughout its distribution right into Ontario."[7]

In 2002, the Atlantic-Gaspésie population DU11 of the boreal woodland caribou was designated as Endangered by COSEWIC. The small isolated population of 200 animals was at risk from predation and habitat loss.

Peary caribou edit

In 1991, COSEWIC assigned "endangered status" to the Banks Island and High Arctic populations of the Peary caribou. The Low Arctic population of the Peary caribou was designated as Threatened. In 2004, all three were designated as "endangered."[203] In 2015, COSEWIC returned the status to Threatened.

Relationship with humans edit

 
Pulling a sled in Russia

Arctic peoples have depended on caribou for food, clothing, and shelter. European prehistoric cave paintings represent both tundra and forest forms, the latter either the Finnish forest reindeer or the narrow-nosed reindeer, an eastern Siberia forest form.[14] Canadian examples include the Caribou Inuit, the inland-dwelling Inuit of the Kivalliq Region in northern Canada, the Caribou Clan in the Yukon, the Iñupiat, the Inuvialuit, the Hän, the Northern Tutchone, and the Gwichʼin (who followed the Porcupine caribou herd for millennia). Hunting wild reindeer and herding of semi-domesticated reindeer are important to several Arctic and sub-Arctic peoples such as the Duhalar for meat, hides [de], antlers, milk [ru], and transportation.[6]

Reindeer have been domesticated at least two and probably three times, in each case from wild Eurasian tundra reindeer after the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM).[208][50] Recognizably different domestic reindeer breeds include those of the Evenk, Even, and Chukotka-Khargin people of Yakutia and the Nenets breed from the Nenets Autonomous district and Murmansk region;[209] the Tuvans, Todzhans, Tofa (Tofalars in the Irkutsk Region), the Soyots (the Republic of Buryatia), and the Dukha (also known as Tsaatan, the Khubsugul) in the Province of Mongolia.[210] The Sámi (Sápmi) have also depended on reindeer herding and fishing for centuries.[211]: IV [212]: 16  In Sápmi, reindeer are used to pull a pulk, a Nordic sled.[92]

In traditional British and United States Christmas legend, Santa Claus's reindeer pull a sleigh through the night sky to help Santa Claus deliver gifts to good children on Christmas Eve.

The reindeer has an important economic role for all circumpolar peoples, including the Sámi, the Swedes, the Norwegians, the Finns and the Northwestern Russians in Europe, the Nenets, the Khanty, the Evenks, the Yukaghirs, the Chukchi and the Koryaks in Asia and the Inuit in North America. It is believed that domestication started between the Bronze and Iron Ages. Siberian reindeer owners also use the reindeer to ride on (Siberian reindeer are larger than their Scandinavian relatives). For breeders, a single owner may own hundreds or even thousands of animals. The numbers of Russian and Scandinavian reindeer herders have been drastically reduced since 1990. The sale of fur and meat is an important source of income. Reindeer were introduced into Alaska near the end of the 19th century; they interbred with the native caribou subspecies there. Reindeer herders on the Seward Peninsula have experienced significant losses to their herds from animals (such as wolves) following the wild caribou during their migrations.[citation needed]

Reindeer meat is popular in the Scandinavian countries. Reindeer meatballs are sold canned. Sautéed reindeer is the best-known dish in Sápmi. In Alaska and Finland, reindeer sausage is sold in supermarkets and grocery stores. Reindeer meat is very tender and lean. It can be prepared fresh, but also dried, salted and hot- and cold-smoked. In addition to meat, almost all of the internal organs of reindeer can be eaten, some being traditional dishes.[213] Furthermore, Lapin Poron liha, fresh reindeer meat completely produced and packed in Finnish Sápmi, is protected in Europe with PDO classification.[214][215]

Reindeer antlers are powdered and sold as an aphrodisiac, or as a nutritional or medicinal supplement, to Asian markets.

The blood of the caribou was supposedly mixed with alcohol as drink by hunters and loggers in colonial Quebec to counter the cold. This drink is now enjoyed without the blood as a wine and whiskey drink known as Caribou.[216][217]

Indigenous North Americans edit

Caribou are still hunted in Greenland and in North America. In the traditional lifestyles of some of Canada's Inuit peoples and northern First Nations peoples, Alaska Natives, and the Kalaallit of Greenland, caribou is an important source of food, clothing, shelter and tools.

 
An early 20th century Inuit parka made of caribou skin

The Caribou Inuit are inland-dwelling Inuit in present-day Nunavut's Kivalliq Region (formerly the Keewatin Region, Northwest Territories), Canada. They subsisted on caribou year-round, eating dried caribou meat in the winter. The Ahiarmiut are Caribou Inuit that followed the Qamanirjuaq barren-ground caribou herd.[218]

There is an Inuit saying in the Kivalliq Region:[183]

The caribou feeds the wolf, but it is the wolf who keeps the caribou strong.

— Kivalliq region

Elder Chief of Koyukuk and chair for the Western Arctic Caribou Herd Working Group Benedict Jones, or Kʼughtoʼoodenoolʼoʼ, represents the Middle Yukon River, Alaska. His grandmother was a member of the Caribou Clan, who travelled with the caribou as a means to survive. In 1939, they were living their traditional lifestyle at one of their hunting camps in Koyukuk near the location of what is now the Koyukuk National Wildlife Refuge. His grandmother made a pair of new mukluks in one day. Kʼughtoʼoodenoolʼoʼ recounted a story told by an elder, who "worked on the steamboats during the gold rush days out on the Yukon." In late August, the caribou migrated from the Alaska Range up north to Huslia, Koyukuk and the Tanana area. One year when the steamboat was unable to continue, they ran into a caribou herd estimated to number 1 million animals, migrating across the Yukon. "They tied up for seven days waiting for the caribou to cross. They ran out of wood for the steamboats, and had to go back down 40 miles to the wood pile to pick up some more wood. On the tenth day, they came back and they said there was still caribou going across the river night and day."[219]

The Gwichʼin, an indigenous people of northwestern Canada and northeastern Alaska, have been dependent on the international migratory Porcupine caribou herd for millennia.[220]: 142  To them, caribou — vadzaih — is the cultural symbol and a keystone subsistence species of the Gwich'in, just as the American buffalo is to the Plains Native Americans.[221] Innovative language revitalisation projects are underway to document the language and to enhance the writing and translation skills of younger Gwich'in speakers. In one project, lead research associate and fluent speaker Gwich'in elder Kenneth Frank works with linguists who include young Gwich'in speakers affiliated with the Alaska Native Language Center at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks to document traditional knowledge of caribou anatomy. The main goal of the research was to "elicit not only what the Gwich'in know about caribou anatomy, but how they see caribou and what they say and believe about caribou that defines themselves, their dietary and nutritional needs, and their subsistence way of life."[221] Elders have identified at least 150 descriptive Gwich'in names for all of the bones, organs and tissues. Associated with the caribou's anatomy are not just descriptive Gwich'in names for all of the body parts, including bones, organs, and tissues, but also "an encyclopedia of stories, songs, games, toys, ceremonies, traditional tools, skin clothing, personal names and surnames, and a highly developed ethnic cuisine."[221] In the 1980s, Gwich'in Traditional Management Practices were established to protect the Porcupine caribou, upon which the Gwich'in depend. They "codified traditional principles of caribou management into tribal law" which include "limits on the harvest of caribou and procedures to be followed in processing and transporting caribou meat" and limits on the number of caribou to be taken per hunting trip.[222]

Indigenous Eurasians edit

Reindeer herding has been vital for the subsistence of several Eurasian nomadic indigenous peoples living in the circumpolar Arctic zone such as the Sámi, Nenets, and Komi.[223] Reindeer are used to provide renewable sources and reliable transportation. In Mongolia, the Dukha are known as the reindeer people. They are credited as one of the world's earliest domesticators. The Dukha diet consists mainly of reindeer dairy products.[224]

Reindeer husbandry is common in northern Fennoscandia (northern Norway, Sweden and Finland) and the Russian North. In some human groups such as the Eveny, wild reindeer and domestic reindeer are treated as different kinds of beings.[225]

Husbandry edit

 
A team pulling a sled near Arkhangelsk, Russia, late 19th-century photochrom
 
Milking in Western Finnmark, Norway, 19th century

The reindeer is the only successfully semi-domesticated deer on a large scale in the world. Reindeer in northern Fennoscandia (northern Norway, Sweden and Finland) as well in the Kola Peninsula and Yakutia in Russia, are mostly semi-domesticated reindeer, ear-marked by their owners. Some reindeer in the area are truly domesticated, mostly used as draught animals (nowadays commonly for tourist entertainment and races, traditionally important for the nomadic Sámi). Domestic reindeer have also been used for milk, e.g., in Norway.

There are only two genetically pure populations of wild reindeer in Northern Europe: wild mountain reindeer (R. t. tarandus) that live in central Norway, with a population in 2007 of between 6,000 and 8,400 animals;[226] and wild Finnish forest reindeer (R. t. fennicus) that live in central and eastern Finland and in Russian Karelia, with a population of about 4,350, plus 1,500 in Arkhangelsk Oblast and 2,500 in Komi.[227] East of Arkhangelsk, both wild Siberian tundra reindeer (R. t. sibiricus) (some herds are very large) and domestic reindeer (R. t. domesticus) occur with almost no interbreeding by wild reindeer into domestic clades and none the other way (Kharzinova et al. 2018;[228] Rozhkov et al. 2020[229]).

DNA analysis indicates that reindeer were independently domesticated at least twice: in Fennoscandia and Western Russia (and possibly also Eastern Russia).[230] Reindeer have been herded for centuries by several Arctic and sub-Arctic peoples, including the Sámi, the Nenets and the Yakuts. They are raised for their meat, hides and antlers and, to a lesser extent, for milk and transportation. Reindeer are not considered fully domesticated, as they generally roam free on pasture grounds. In traditional nomadic herding, reindeer herders migrate with their herds between coastal and inland areas according to an annual migration route and herds are keenly tended. However, reindeer were not bred in captivity, though they were tamed for milking as well as for use as draught animals or beasts of burden. Millais (1915),[97] for example, shows a photograph (Plate LXXX) of an "Okhotsk Reindeer" saddled for riding (the rider standing behind it) beside an officer astride a steppe pony that is only slightly larger. Domestic reindeer are shorter-legged and heavier than their wild counterparts.[citation needed] In Scandinavia, management of reindeer herds is primarily conducted through siida, a traditional Sámi form of cooperative association.[231]

The use of reindeer for transportation is common among the nomadic peoples of the Russian North (but not anymore in Scandinavia). Although a sled drawn by 20 reindeer will cover no more than 20–25 km (12–16 mi) a day (compared to 7–10 km (4.3–6.2 mi) on foot, 70–80 km (43–50 mi) by a dog sled loaded with cargo and 150–180 km (93–112 mi) by a dog sled without cargo), it has the advantage that the reindeer will discover their own food, while a pack of 5–7 sled dogs requires 10–14 kg (22–31 lb) of fresh fish a day.[232]

The use of reindeer as semi-domesticated livestock in Alaska was introduced in the late 19th century by the United States Revenue Cutter Service, with assistance from Sheldon Jackson, as a means of providing a livelihood for Alaska Natives.[233] Reindeer were imported first from Siberia and later also from Norway. A regular mail run in Wales, Alaska, used a sleigh drawn by reindeer.[234] In Alaska, reindeer herders use satellite telemetry to track their herds, using online maps and databases to chart the herd's progress.[citation needed]

Domestic reindeer are mostly found in northern Fennoscandia and the Russian North, with a herd of approximately 150–170 reindeer living around the Cairngorms region in Scotland. The last remaining wild tundra reindeer in Europe are found in portions of southern Norway.[235] The International Centre for Reindeer Husbandry (ICR), a circumpolar organisation, was established in 2005 by the Norwegian government. ICR represents over 20 indigenous reindeer peoples and about 100,000 reindeer herders in nine different national states.[236] In Finland, there are about 6,000 reindeer herders, most of whom keep small herds of less than 50 reindeer to raise additional income. With 185,000 reindeer (as of 2001), the industry produces 2,000 metric tons (2,200 short tons) of reindeer meat and generates 35 million euros annually. 70% of the meat is sold to slaughterhouses. Reindeer herders are eligible for national and EU agricultural subsidies, which constituted 15% of their income. Reindeer herding is of central importance for the local economies of small communities in sparsely populated rural Sápmi.[237]

Currently, many reindeer herders are heavily dependent on diesel fuel to provide for electric generators and snowmobile transportation, although solar photovoltaic systems can be used to reduce diesel dependency.[238]

History edit

Reindeer hunting by humans has a very long history.

Wild reindeer "may well be the species of single greatest importance in the entire anthropological literature on hunting."[6]

Both Aristotle and Theophrastus have short accounts – probably based on the same source – of an ox-sized deer species, named tarandos, living in the land of the Bodines in Scythia, which was able to change the colour of its fur to obtain camouflage. The latter is probably a misunderstanding of the seasonal change in reindeer fur colour. The descriptions have been interpreted as being of reindeer living in the southern Ural Mountains in c. 350 BC.[38]

 
The tragelaphus or deer-goat

A deer-like animal described by Julius Caesar in his Commentarii de Bello Gallico (chapter 6.26) from the Hercynian Forest in the year 53 BC is most certainly to be interpreted as a reindeer:[38][239]

There is an ox shaped like a stag. In the middle of its forehead a single horn grows between its ears, taller and straighter than the animal horns with which we are familiar. At the top this horn spreads out like the palm of a hand or the branches of a tree. The females are of the same form as the males, and their horns are the same shape and size.

According to Olaus Magnus's Historia de Gentibus Septentrionalibus – printed in Rome in the year 1555 – Gustav I of Sweden sent 10 reindeer to Albert, Duke of Prussia, in the year 1533. It may be these animals that Conrad Gessner had seen or heard of.

During World War II, the Soviet Army used reindeer as pack animals to transport food, ammunition and post from Murmansk to the Karelian front and bring wounded soldiers, pilots and equipment back to the base. About 6,000 reindeer and more than 1,000 reindeer herders were part of the operation. Most herders were Nenets, who were mobilised from the Nenets Autonomous Okrug, but reindeer herders from the Murmansk, Arkhangelsk and Komi regions also participated.[240][241]

Santa Claus edit

 
Relaxing after pulling Santa's sleigh at the switching on of Christmas lights in Scotland

Around the world, public interest in reindeer peaks during the Christmas season.[242] According to folklore, Santa Claus's sleigh is pulled by flying reindeer. These reindeer were first named in the 1823 poem "A Visit from St. Nicholas".

Mythology and art edit

Among the Inuit, there is a story of the origin of the caribou:[243]

Once upon a time there were no caribou on the earth. But there was a man who wished for caribou, and he cut a hole deep in the ground, and up this hole came caribou, many caribou. The caribou came pouring out, until the earth was almost covered with them. And when the man thought there were caribou enough for mankind, he closed up the hole again. Thus the caribou came up on earth.

— [243]

Inuit artists from the Barrenlands incorporate depictions of caribou — and items made from caribou antlers and skin — in carvings, drawings, prints and sculpture.

Contemporary Canadian artist Brian Jungen, of Dane-zaa First Nations ancestry, commissioned an installation entitled "The ghosts on top of my head" (2010–11) in Banff, Alberta, which depicts the antlers of caribou, elk and moose.[244]

I remember a story my Uncle Jack told me – a Dunne-Za creation story about how animals once ruled the earth and were ten times their size and that got me thinking about scale and using the idea of the antler, which is a thing that everyone is scared of, and making it into something more approachable and abstract.

— Brian Jungen, 2011[244]

Tomson Highway, CM[245] is a Canadian and Cree playwright, novelist, and children's author, who was born in a remote area north of Brochet, Manitoba.[245] His father, Joe Highway, was a caribou hunter. His 2001 children's book entitled Caribou Song/atíhko níkamon was selected as one of the "Top 10 Children's Books" by the Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail. The young protagonists of Caribou Song, like Tomson himself, followed the caribou herd with their families.

Heraldry and symbols edit

 
Coat of arms of Kuusamo
 
Coat of arms of Inari

Several Norwegian municipalities have one or more reindeer depicted in their coats-of-arms: Eidfjord, Porsanger, Rendalen, Tromsø, Vadsø and Vågå. The historic province of Västerbotten in Sweden has a reindeer in its coat of arms. The present Västerbotten County has very different borders and uses the reindeer combined with other symbols in its coat-of-arms. The city of Piteå also has a reindeer. The logo for Umeå University features three reindeer.[246]

The Canadian 25-cent coin or "quarter" features a depiction of a caribou on one face. The caribou is the official provincial animal of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, and appears on the coat of arms of Nunavut. A caribou statue was erected at the centre of the Beaumont-Hamel Newfoundland Memorial, marking the spot in France where hundreds of soldiers from Newfoundland were killed and wounded in World War I. There is a replica in Bowring Park in St. John's, Newfoundland's capital city.[247]

Two municipalities in Finland have reindeer motifs in their coats-of-arms: Kuusamo has a running reindeer;[248] and Inari has a fish with reindeer antlers.[249]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In North American English, known as caribou if wild and reindeer if domesticated[4]
  2. ^ The 6-species taxonomy is based on a revision by Harding (2022).[9][70][89]
  3. ^ a b c ** <text missing>
  4. ^ a b c Banfield rejected this classification in 1961. However, Geist and others considered it valid. Bangs (1896) is invalid as a taxonomic authority, as his two-page pamphlet was not published.[9]
  5. ^ Although most taxonomic authorities over the years recognized "Greenland Caribou" as a distinct subspecies, several gave the name as a subspecies of Cervus [Rangifer] tarandus for North American barren-ground caribou, groenlandicus having priority over other names. The name dates from George Edwards (1743),[93] who claimed to have seen a male specimen (“head of perfect horns...”) from Greenland and said that a Captain Craycott had brought a live pair from Greenland to England in 1738.
  6. ^ According to Inuit elder Marie Kilunik of the Aivilingmiut, Canadian Inuit preferred the caribou skins from caribou taken in the late summer or autumn, when their coats had thickened. They used it for winter clothing "because each hair is hollow and fills with air trapping heat."[139]

References edit

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reindeer, other, uses, disambiguation, caribou, redirects, here, other, uses, caribou, disambiguation, this, article, long, read, navigate, comfortably, please, consider, splitting, content, into, articles, condensing, adding, subheadings, please, discuss, thi. For other uses see Reindeer disambiguation Caribou redirects here For other uses see Caribou disambiguation This article may be too long to read and navigate comfortably Please consider splitting content into sub articles condensing it or adding subheadings Please discuss this issue on the article s talk page July 2023 The reindeer or caribou a Rangifer tarandus 5 is a species of deer with circumpolar distribution native to Arctic subarctic tundra boreal and mountainous regions of Northern Europe Siberia and North America 2 It is the only representative of the genus Rangifer More recent studies suggest the splitting of reindeer and caribou into six distinct species over their range Reindeer Caribou Temporal range Chibanian to present 1 PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N A reindeer in NorwayConservation statusVulnerable IUCN 3 1 2 Secure NatureServe 3 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder ArtiodactylaFamily CervidaeSubfamily CapreolinaeTribe OdocoileiniGenus RangiferC H Smith 1827Species R tarandusBinomial nameRangifer tarandus Linnaeus 1758 SpeciesSee text traditionally 1 but possibly up to 6Reindeer range North American green Eurasian red and Alaskan introduced orange Reindeer occur in both migratory and sedentary populations and their herd sizes vary greatly in different regions The tundra subspecies are adapted for extreme cold and some are adapted for long distance migration Reindeer vary greatly in size and color from the smallest the Svalbard reindeer R t platyrhynchus to the largest Osborn s caribou R t osborni Although reindeer are quite numerous some species and subspecies are in decline and considered vulnerable They are unique among deer Cervidae in that females may have antlers although the prevalence of antlered females varies by species and subspecies Reindeer are the only successfully semi domesticated deer on a large scale in the world Both wild and domestic reindeer have been an important source of food clothing and shelter for Arctic people from prehistorical times They are still herded and hunted today 6 In some traditional Christmas legends Santa Claus s reindeer pull a sleigh through the night sky to help Santa Claus deliver gifts to good children on Christmas Eve Contents 1 Description 2 Status 3 Naming 4 Evolution 5 Taxonomy 6 Species and subspecies 7 Physical characteristics 7 1 Antlers 7 2 Pelt 7 3 Heat exchange 7 4 Hooves 7 5 Size 7 6 Clicking sound 7 7 Eyes 8 Biology and behaviors 8 1 Seasonal body composition 8 2 Reproduction and life cycle 8 3 Social structure migration and range 9 Ecology 9 1 Distribution and habitat 9 2 Diet 9 3 Predators 9 4 Other threats 10 Conservation 10 1 Current status 10 2 Boreal woodland caribou 10 3 Peary caribou 11 Relationship with humans 11 1 Indigenous North Americans 11 2 Indigenous Eurasians 11 3 Husbandry 11 4 History 11 5 Santa Claus 11 6 Mythology and art 11 7 Heraldry and symbols 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 Bibliography 16 External links 16 1 Caribou specific links North America Description editNames follow international convention 7 8 before the recent revision 9 see Taxonomy below Reindeer caribou Rangifer vary in size from the smallest the Svalbard reindeer R t platyrhynchus to the largest Osborn s caribou R t osborni They also vary in coat color and antler architecture The North American range of caribou extends from Alaska through the Yukon the Northwest Territories and Nunavut throughout the tundra taiga and boreal forest and south through the Canadian Rocky Mountains 10 Of the eight subspecies classified by Harding 2022 into the Arctic caribou R arcticus the migratory mainland barren ground caribou of Arctic Alaska and Canada R t arcticus summer in tundra and winter in taiga a transitional forest zone between boreal forest and tundra the nomadic Peary caribou R t pearyi lives in the polar desert of the High Arctic Archipelago and Grant s caribou R t granti lives in the western end of the Alaska Peninsula and the adjacent islands the other four subspecies Osborn s caribou R t osborni Stone s caribou R t stonei the Rocky Mountain caribou R t fortidens and the Selkirk Mountains caribou R t montanus are all montane The extinct insular Queen Charlotte Islands caribou R t dawsoni lived on Graham Island in Haida Gwaii formerly known as the Queen Charlotte Islands The boreal woodland caribou R t caribou lives in the boreal forest of northeastern Canada the Labrador or Ungava caribou of northern Quebec and northern Labrador R t caboti and the Newfoundland caribou of Newfoundland R t terranovae have been found to be genetically in the woodland caribou lineage 11 12 In Eurasia both wild and domestic reindeer are distributed across the tundra and into the taiga Eurasian mountain reindeer R t tarandus are close to North American caribou genetically and visually but with sufficient differences to warrant division into two species The unique insular Svalbard reindeer inhabits the Svalbard Archipelago The Finnish forest reindeer R t fennicus is spottily distributed in the coniferous forest zones from Finland to east of Lake Baikal the Siberian forest reindeer R t valentinae formerly called the Busk Mountains reindeer R t buskensis by American taxonomists occupies the Altai and Ural Mountains Male bull and female cow reindeer can grow antlers annually although the proportion of females that grow antlers varies greatly between populations 7 Antlers are typically larger on males Antler architecture varies by species and subspecies and together with pelage differences can often be used to distinguish between species and subspecies see illustrations in Geist 1991 13 and Geist 1998 14 Status editAbout 25 000 mountain reindeer R t tarandus still live in the mountains of Norway notably in Hardangervidda 15 In Sweden there are approximately 250 000 reindeer in herds managed by Sami villages 16 Russia manages 19 herds of Siberian tundra reindeer R t sibiricus that total about 940 000 17 The Taimyr herd of Siberian tundra reindeer is the largest wild reindeer herd in the world 18 19 varying between 400 000 and 1 000 000 it is a metapopulation consisting of several subpopulations some of which are phenotypically different 20 with different migration routes and calving areas 21 22 The Kamchatkan reindeer R t phylarchus a forest subspecies formerly included reindeer west of the Sea of Okhotsk which however are indistinguishable genetically from the Jano Indigirka East Siberian taiga and Chukotka populations of R t sibiricus 23 Siberian tundra reindeer herds have been in decline but are stable or increasing since 2000 17 Insular island reindeer classified as the Novaya Zemlya reindeer R t pearsoni occupy several island groups the Novaya Zemlya Archipelago about 5 000 animals at last count but most of these are either domestic reindeer or domestic wild hybrids the New Siberia Archipelago about 10 000 to 15 000 and Wrangel Island 200 to 300 feral domestic reindeer 24 What was once the second largest herd is the migratory Labrador caribou R t caboti 9 George River herd in Canada with former variations between 28 000 and 385 000 As of January 2018 there are fewer than 9 000 animals estimated to be left in the George River herd as reported by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 25 The New York Times reported in April 2018 of the disappearance of the only herd of southern mountain woodland caribou in the contiguous United States with an expert calling it functionally extinct after the herd s size dwindled to a mere three animals 26 After the last individual a female was translocated to a wildlife rehabilitation center in Canada caribou were considered extirpated from the contiguous United States 27 The Committee on Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada COSEWIC classified both the Southern Mountain population DU9 R t montanus and the Central Mountain population DU8 R t fortidens as Endangered and the Northern Mountain population DU7 R t osborni as Threatened 28 Some species and subspecies are rare and three subspecies have already become extinct the Queen Charlotte Islands caribou R t dawsoni from western Canada the Sakhalin reindeer R t setoni from Sakhalin and the East Greenland caribou from eastern Greenland 29 30 31 although some authorities believe that the latter R t eogroenlandicus Degerbol 1957 is a junior synonym of the Peary caribou 32 33 9 Historically the range of the sedentary boreal woodland caribou covered more than half of Canada 34 and into the northern states of the contiguous United States from Maine to Washington Boreal woodland caribou have disappeared from most of their original southern range and were designated as Threatened in 2002 by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada COSEWIC 35 Environment Canada reported in 2011 that there were approximately 34 000 boreal woodland caribou in 51 ranges remaining in Canada Environment Canada 2011b 36 although those numbers included montane populations classified by Harding 2022 into subspecies of the Arctic caribou 9 Siberian tundra reindeer herds are also in decline and Rangifer as a whole is considered to be Vulnerable by the IUCN Naming editCharles Hamilton Smith is credited with the name Rangifer for the reindeer genus 37 which Albertus Magnus used in his De animalibus fol Liber 22 Cap 268 Dicitur Rangyfer quasi ramifer This word may go back to the Sami word raingo 38 Carl Linnaeus chose the word tarandus as the specific epithet making reference to Ulisse Aldrovandi s Quadrupedum omnium bisulcorum historia fol 859 863 Cap 30 De Tarando 1621 However Aldrovandi and Conrad Gessner 39 thought that rangifer and tarandus were two separate animals 40 In any case the tarandos name goes back to Aristotle and Theophrastus The use of the terms reindeer and caribou for essentially the same animal can cause confusion but the International Union for Conservation of Nature clearly delineates the issue Reindeer is the European name for the species of Rangifer while in North America Rangifer species are known as Caribou 2 41 The word reindeer is an anglicized version of the Old Norse words hreinn reindeer and dyr animal and has nothing to do with reins 42 The word caribou comes through French from the Mi kmaq qalipu meaning snow shoveler and refers to its habit of pawing through the snow for food 43 Because of its importance to many cultures Rangifer and some of its species and subspecies have names in many languages Inuvaluit of the western Canadian Arctic and Inuit of the eastern Canadian Arctic who speak different dialects of Inuktitut both call the barren ground caribou tuktu 44 45 46 The Wekʼeezhii people a Dene Athapascan group call the Arctic caribou Ɂekwǫ and the boreal woodland caribou tǫdzi 47 The Gwichʼin also a Dene group have over 24 distinct caribou related words 48 Reindeer are also called tuttu by the Greenlandic Inuit 49 and hreindyr sometimes rein by the Icelanders Evolution editThe glacial interglacial cycles of the upper Pleistocene had a major influence on the evolution of Rangifer species and other Arctic and sub Arctic species Isolation of tundra adapted species Rangifer in Last Glacial Maximum refugia during the last glacial the Wisconsin glaciation in North America and the Weichselian glaciation in Eurasia shaped intraspecific genetic variability particularly between the North American and Eurasian parts of the Arctic 5 Reindeer caribou Rangifer are in the subfamily Odocoileinae along with roe deer Capreolus Eurasian elk moose Alces and water deer Hydropotes These antlered cervids split from the horned ruminants Bos cattle and yaks Ovis sheep and Capra goats about 36 million years ago 50 The Eurasian clade of Odocoileinae Capreolini Hydropotini and Alcini split from the New World tribes of Capreolinae Odocoileini and Rangiferini in the Late Miocene 8 7 9 6 million years ago 51 Rangifer evolved as a mountain deer exploiting the subalpine and alpine meadows 14 Rangifer originated in the Late Pliocene and diversified in the Early Pleistocene a 2 million year period of multiple glacier advances and retreats Several named Rangifer fossils in Eurasia and North America predate the evolution of modern tundra reindeer Archaeologists distinguish modern tundra reindeer and barren ground caribou from primitive forms living and extinct that did not have adaptations to extreme cold and to long distance migration They include a broad high muzzle to increase the volume of the nasal cavity to warm and moisten the air before it enters the throat and lungs bez tines set close to the brow tines distinctive coat patterns short legs and other adaptations for running long distances and multiple behaviors suited to tundra but not to forest such as synchronized calving and aggregation during rutting and post calving 52 As well many genes including those for vitamin D metabolism fat metabolism retinal development circadian rhythm and tolerance to cold temperatures are found in tundra caribou that are lacking or rudimentary in forest types 53 54 For this reason forest adapted reindeer and caribou could not survive in tundra or polar deserts The oldest undoubted Rangifer fossil is from Omsk Russia dated to 2 1 1 8 Ma 55 The oldest North American Rangifer fossil is from the Yukon 1 6 million years before present BP 56 A fossil skull fragment from Sussenborn Germany R arcticus stadelmanni 57 which is probably misnamed with rather thin and cylinder shaped antlers dates to the Middle Pleistocene Gunz Period 680 000 620 000 BP 58 Rangifer fossils become increasingly frequent in circumpolar deposits beginning with the Riss glaciations the second youngest of the Pleistocene Epoch roughly 300 000 130 000 BP By the 4 Wurm period 110 000 70 000 to 12 000 10 000 BP its European range was extensive supplying a major food source for prehistoric Europeans 59 North American fossils outside of Beringia that predate the Last Glacial Maximum LGM are of Rancholabrean age 240 000 11 000 years BP and occur along the fringes of the Rocky Mountain and Laurentide ice sheets as far south as northern Alabama and in Sangamonian deposits 100 000 years BP from western Canada 60 A R t pearyi sized caribou occupied Greenland before and after the LGM and persisted in a relict enclave in northeastern Greenland until it went extinct about 1900 see discussion of R t eogroenlandicus below Archaeological excavations showed that larger barren ground sized caribou appeared in western Greenland about 4 000 years ago 61 The late Valerius Geist 1998 14 dates the Eurasian reindeer radiation dates to the large Riss glaciation 347 000 to 128 000 years ago based on the Norwegian Svalbard split 225 000 years ago 62 Finnish forest reindeer R t fennicus likely evolved from Cervus Rangifer geuttardi Desmarest 1822 a reindeer that adapted to forest habitats in Eastern Europe as forests expanded during an interglacial period before the LGM the Wurmian or Weichsel glaciation 58 The fossil species geuttardi was later replaced by R constantini which was adapted for grasslands 63 in a second immigration 19 000 20 000 years ago when the LGM turned its forest habitats into tundra while fennicus survived in isolation in southwestern Europe 58 R constantini was then replaced by modern tundra barren ground caribou adapted to extreme cold probably in Beringia before dispersing west R t tarandus in the Scandinavian mountains and R t sibiricus across Siberia and east R t arcticus in the North American Barrenlands when rising seas isolated them Likewise in North America DNA analysis shows that woodland caribou R caribou diverged from primitive ancestors of tundra barren ground caribou not during the LGM 26 000 19 000 years ago as previously assumed but in the Middle Pleistocene around 357 000 years ago 64 65 At that time modern tundra caribou had not even evolved Woodland caribou are likely more related to extinct North American forest caribou than to barren ground caribou For example the extinct caribou Torontoceros Rangifer hypogaeus had features robust and short pedicles smooth antler surface and high position of second tine that relate it to forest caribou 66 Humans started hunting reindeer in both the Mesolithic and Neolithic Periods and humans are today the main predator in many areas Norway and Greenland have unbroken traditions of hunting wild reindeer from the Last Glacial Period until the present day In the non forested mountains of central Norway such as Jotunheimen it is still possible to find remains of stone built trapping pits guiding fences and bow rests built especially for hunting reindeer These can with some certainty be dated to the Migration Period although it is not unlikely that they have been in use since the Stone Age Cave paintings by ancient Europeans include both tundra and forest types of reindeer 14 A 2022 study of ancient environmental DNA from the Early Pleistocene 2 million years ago Kap Kobenhavn Formation of northern Greenland identified preserved DNA fragments of Rangifer identified as basal but potentially ancestral to modern reindeer This suggests that reindeer have inhabited Greenland since at least the Early Pleistocene Around this time northern Greenland was 11 19 C warmer than the Holocene with a boreal forest hosting a species assemblage with no modern analogue These are among the oldest DNA fragments ever sequenced 67 68 Taxonomy editCarl Linnaeus in 1758 named the Eurasian tundra species Cervus tarandus the genus Rangifer being credited to Smith 1827 37 Rangifer has had a convoluted history because of the similarity in antler architecture brow tines asymmetrical and often palmate bez tines a back tine sometimes branched and branched at the distal end often palmate Because of individual variability early taxonomists were unable to discern consistent patterns among populations nor could they examining collections in Europe appreciate the difference in habitats and the differing function they imposed on antler architecture For example woodland caribou males rutting in boreal forest where only a few females can be found collect harems and defend them against other males for which they have short straight strong much branched antlers beams flattened in cross section designed for combat and not too large so as not to impede them in forested winter ranges By contrast modern tundra caribou see Evolution above have synchronized calving as a predator avoidance strategy which requires large rutting aggregations Males cannot defend a harem because while he was busy fighting they would disappear into the mass of the herd Males therefore tend individual females their fights are infrequent and brief 60 Their antlers are thin beams round in cross section sweep back and then forward with a cluster of branches at the top these are designed more for visual stimulation of the females Their bez tines are set low just above the brow tine which is vertically flattened to protect the eyes while the buck threshes low brush a courtship display 69 The low bez tines help the wide flat brow tines dig craters in the hard packed tundra snow for forage for which reason brow tines are often called shovels in North America and ice tines in Europe The differences in antler architecture reflect fundamental differences in ecology and behavior and in turn deep divisions in ancestry that were not apparent to the early taxonomists Similarly working on museum collections where skins were often faded and in poor states of preservation early taxonomists could not readily perceive differences in coat patterns that are consistent within a subspecies but variable among them Geist calls these nuptial characteristics sexually selected characters that are highly conserved and diagnostic among subspecies 14 60 Towards the end of the 19th century national museums began sending out biological exploration expeditions and collections accumulated Taxonomists usually working for the museums began naming subspecies more rigorously based on statistical differences in detailed cranial dental and skeletal measurements than antlers and pelage supplemented by better knowledge of differences in ecology and behavior From 1898 to 1937 mammalogists named 12 new species other than barren ground and woodland which had been named earlier of caribou in Canada and Alaska and three new species and nine new subspecies in Eurasia each properly described according to the evolving rules of zoological nomenclature with type localities designated and type specimens deposited in museums see table in Species and subspecies below 9 70 In the mid 20th century as definitions of species evolved mammalogists in Europe 71 and North America 72 made all Rangifer species conspecific with R tarandus and synonymized most of the subspecies Banfield s often cited A Revision of the Reindeer and Caribou Genus Rangifer 1961 73 eliminated R t caboti the Labrador caribou R t osborni Osborn s caribou from British Columbia and R t terranovae the Newfoundland caribou as invalid and included only barren ground caribou renamed as R t groenlandicus formerly R arcticus and woodland caribou as R t caribou However Banfield made multiple errors eliciting a scathing review by Ian McTaggart Cowan in 1962 74 Most authorities continued to consider all or most subspecies valid some were quite distinct In his chapter in the authoritative 2005 reference work Mammal Species of the World 7 referenced by the American Society of Mammalogists English zoologist Peter Grubb agreed with Valerius Geist a specialist on large mammals 14 60 that these subspecies were valid i e before the recent revision In North America R t caboti R t caribou R t dawsoni R t groenlandicus R t osborni R t pearyi and R t terranovae and in Eurasia R t tarandus R t buskensis called R t valentinae in Europe see below R t phylarchus R t pearsoni R t sibiricus and R t platyrhynchus These subspecies were retained in the 2011 replacement work Handbook of Mammals of the World Vol 2 Hoofed Mammals 8 Most Russian authors also recognized R t angustirostris a forest reindeer from east of Lake Baikal 75 17 23 However since 1991 many genetic studies have revealed deep divergence between modern tundra reindeer and woodland caribou 76 5 77 78 11 Geist 2007 and others continued arguing that the woodland caribou was incorrectly classified noting that true woodland caribou the uniformly dark small maned type with the frontally emphasized flat beamed antlers is scattered thinly along the southern rim of North American caribou distribution He affirms that the true woodland caribou is very rare in very great difficulties and requires the most urgent of attention 79 In 2011 noting that the former classifications of Rangifer tarandus either with prevailing taxonomy on subspecies designations based on ecotypes or natural population groupings failed to capture the variability of caribou across their range in Canada needed for effective subspecies conservation and management COSEWIC developed Designatable Unit DU attribution 35 an adaptation of evolutionary significant units 80 The 12 designatable units for caribou in Canada that is excluding Alaska and Greenland based on ecology behavior and importantly genetics but excluding morphology and archaeology essentially followed the previously named subspecies distributions without naming them as such plus some ecotypes Ecotypes are not phylogenetically based and cannot substitute for taxonomy 81 Meanwhile genetic data continued to accumulate revealing sufficiently deep divisions to easily separate Rangifer back into six previously named species and to resurrect several previously named subspecies Molecular data showed that the Greenland caribou R t groenlandicus and the Svalbard reindeer R t platyrhynchus although not closely related to each other were the most genetically divergent among Rangifer clades 12 that modern see Evolution above Eurasian tundra reindeer R t tarandus and R t sibiricus and North American barren ground caribou R t arcticus although sharing ancestry were separable at the subspecies level that Finnish forest reindeer R t fennicus clustered well apart from both wild and domestic tundra reindeer 23 and that boreal woodland caribou R t caribou were separable from all others 82 83 Meanwhile archaeological evidence was accumulating that Eurasian forest reindeer descended from an extinct forest adapted reindeer and not from tundra reindeer see Evolution above since they do not share a direct common ancestor they cannot be conspecific Similarly woodland caribou diverged from the ancestors of Arctic caribou before modern barren ground caribou had evolved and were more likely related to extinct North American forest reindeer see Evolution above Lacking a direct shared ancestor barren ground and woodland caribou cannot be conspecific Molecular data also revealed that the four western Canadian montane ecotypes are not woodland caribou they share a common ancestor with modern barren ground caribou tundra reindeer but distantly having diverged gt 60 000 years ago 84 64 12 before the modern ecotypes had evolved their cold and darkness adapted physiologies and mass migration and aggregation behaviors see Evolution above Before Banfield 1961 taxonomists using cranial dental and skeletal measurements had unequivocally allied these western montane ecotypes with barren ground caribou naming them as in Osgood 1909 85 Murie 1935 86 and Anderson 1946 87 among others R t stonei R t montanus R t fortidens and R t osborni respectively 86 87 and this phylogeny was confirmed by genetic analysis DNA also revealed three unnamed clades that based on genetic distance genetic divergence and shared vs private haplotypes and alleles together with ecological and behavioral differences may justify separation at the subspecies level the Atlantic Gaspesie caribou COSEWIC DU11 77 65 an eastern montane ecotype of the boreal woodland caribou and the Baffin Island caribou 88 Neither one of these clades has yet been formally described or named Jenkins et al 2012 said that Baffin Island caribou are unique compared to other Barrenground herds as they do not overwinter in forested habitat nor do all caribou undertake long seasonal migrations to calving areas It also shares a mtDNA haplotype with Labrador caribou in the North American lineage i e woodland caribou 82 Roed et al 1991 76 had noted Among Baffin Island caribou the TFL2 allele was the most common allele p 0 521 while this allele was absent or present in very low frequencies in other caribou populations Table 1 including the Canadian barren ground caribou from the Beverly herd A large genetic difference between Baffin Island caribou and the Beverly herd was also indicated by eight alleles found in the Beverly herd which were absent from the Baffin Island samples Jenkins et al 2018 88 also reported genetic distinctiveness of Baffin Island caribou from all other barren ground caribou its genetic signature was not found on the mainland or on other islands nor were Beverly herd the nearest mainly barren ground caribou alleles present in Baffin Island caribou evidence of reproductive isolation These advances in Rangifer genetics were brought together with previous morphological based descriptions ecology behavior and archaeology to propose a new revision of the genus 9 Species and subspecies editExtant species and subspecies of Rangifer Species 1 species taxonomy Species 6 species taxonomy b Subspecies Common name Sedentary migratory Range Weight of male Type locality specimenR tarandus Linnaeus 1758 reindeer or caribou R arcticusRichardson 1829Arctic caribou nbsp R t arcticus orR a articus Richardson 1829 barren ground caribou migratory the High Arctic islands of Nunavut and the Northwest Territories Canada and western Greenland except for the southwestern region 150 kg 330 lb Fort Enterprise Winter Lake Mackenzie District N W T Canada given by Allen 1908 Neotype no 22066 for the species nbsp R t arcticus orR a arcticus Richardson 1829 Porcupine caribou an ecotype of the barren ground caribou migratory summers in the northern Yukon mountains and the coastal plains winters in the boreal forests of Alaska and the Yukon the same as for the subspeciesR t fortidens orR a fortidens Hollister 1912 Rocky Mountain caribou short migrations summers in alpine forest and winters in lowland forest the Canadian Rocky Mountains Largest of the caribou exceeding in measurements the largest specimens of Rangifer osborni and Rangifer montanus head of Moose Pass branch of the Smoky River Alberta north east of Mount Robson USNM No 174505R t granti orR a granti Allen 1902 Grant s caribou sedentary makes short movements to seasonal habitats 90 127 the western end of the Alaska Peninsula and the adjacent islands 90 127 Western end of Alaska Peninsula opposite Popoff Island Alaska AMNH no 17593 90 122 nbsp R t montanus orR a montanus Seton Thompson 1899 Selkirk Mountains caribou twice yearly altitudinal movements the Columbia Mountains specifically the Selkirk Purcell and Monashee Mountains in British Columbia Canada and Washington Idaho and Montana the United States no data Illecillewaet watershed near Revelstoke Selkirk Range B C NMC no 232 nbsp R t osborni orR a osborni c Allen 1902 7 d 79 Osborn s caribou short migrations summers in alpine forest and winters in lowland muskeg British Columbia Canada males up to 340 kg 750 lb Cassiar Mountains British Columbia AMNH no 15714 nbsp R t pearyi orR a pearyi Allen 1902 73 Peary caribou an island population that makes local movements both within and among islands the High Arctic islands except for Baffin Island of Nunavut and the Northwest Territories Canada 8 smallest North American subspecies males average 70 kg 150 lb Ellesmere Land Ellesmere Island N Lat 79 AMNH no 19231R t stonei orR a stonei Allen 1901 Stone s caribou altitudinal movements the mountains of southern Alaska and the southeastern Yukon no data Kenai Peninsula Alaska AMNH no 16701R caribou Gmelin 1788 woodland caribou nbsp R t caribou orR c caribou Gmelin 1788 boreal woodland caribou sedentary makes short movements to seasonal habitats the boreal forests of northeastern Canada 8 males average 180 kg 400 lb up to 272 kg 600 lb Type locality amended to eastern Canada Miller Jr 1912 NMC Neotype no 4800 nbsp R t caboti orR c caboti c G M Allen 1914 7 d 79 Labrador caribou or Ungava caribou migratory except for the Torngat Mountain population DU10 northern Quebec and northern Labrador Canada no data Thirty miles north of Nachvak Torngat Mountains northeast coast of Labrador MCZ No 15 372 nbsp R t terranovae orR c terranovae Allen 1896 7 d 79 Newfoundland caribou Newfoundland Canada 139 6 kg 3 adult males 91 Grand Lake Newfoundland AMNH 11775R fennicusLonnberg 1909forest reindeer nbsp R t fennicus orR f fennicus Lonnberg 1909 Finnish forest reindeer migratory northwestern Russia and Finland 8 92 150 250 kg 330 550 lb Torne District in Enontekio Finnish Lappland NR No 4661 StockholmR t valentinae orR f valentinae c Flerov 1933 7 Siberian forest reindeer altitudinal migration the Ural Mountains Russia and the Altai Mountains Mongolia 8 no data Head of Chulyshman River North Eastern Altai Siberia skin ZMASL no 22599 skull no 10214R groenlandicus Borowsky 1780 nbsp R groenlandicus orR t groenlandicus Borowsky 1780 e Greenland caribou or Greenland reindeer sedentary four small areas in southwestern Greenland 94 no data Greenland clarification needed R platyrhynchus Vrolik 1829 Svalbard reindeer nbsp R platyrhynchus orR t platyrhynchus Vrolik 1829 Svalbard reindeer an island population that makes local movements both within and among islands the Svalbard Archipelago of Norway 8 smallest of the reindeer has extremely short legs Spitzbergen Neotype no M2625 OsloR tarandus Linnaeus 1758 tundra reindeer or mountain reindeer R t pearsoni Lydekker 1903 7 Novaya Zemlya reindeer an island population that makes local movements both within and among islands the Novaya Zemlya and New Siberia Archipelagoes of Russia and Wrangel Island Russia 8 no data Island of Novaya Zemlya type specimen In the possession of H J Pearson Esq Bramcote Nottinghamshire England Flerov 1933 R t phylarchus Hollister 1912 7 Kamchatkan reindeer restricted to the Kamchatka Peninsula Russia after those reindeer west of the Sea of Okhotsk were found to actually be R t sibiricus 8 23 no data Southeastern Kamtchatka Kamchatka USNM No 21343R t sibiricus Murray 1866 7 Siberian tundra reindeer long distance migrations Siberia Russia 8 Franz Josef Land during the Holocene from gt 6400 1300 cal BP from where it has been extirpated 95 no data Siberia eastward of the River Lena Type specimen of sibiricus unknown however Jacobi 1931 deposited a type specimen of asiaticus in the Museum of Leningrad ZMASL Buturlin coll no 240 1908 nbsp R t tarandus Linnaeus 1758 mountain reindeer or Norwegian reindeer migratory the Arctic tundra of the Fennoscandian Peninsula in Norway 8 92 and the Austfirdir in Iceland where it has been introduced 96 no data ScandinaviaAbbreviations AMNH the American Museum of Natural History BCPM the British Columbia Provincial Museum RBCM the Royal British Columbia Museum NHMUK the British Museum Natural History originally the BMNH DMNH the Denver Museum of Natural History MCZ the Museum of Comparative Zoology MSI the Museum of the Smithsonian Institution NMC the National Museum of Canada originally the CGS Canadian Geological Survey Museum now the CMN Canadian Museum of Nature NR the Naturhistoriska Riksmuseet RSMNH the Royal Swedish Museum of Natural History USNM the U S National Museum ZMASL the Zoological Museum of the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences formerly the Zoological Museum of the Academy of Sciences Leningrad Extinct subspecies of Rangifer Subspecies Common name Division Range Weight of male Extinct sinceR t eogroenlandicus Degerbol 1957 31 East Greenland caribouor Arctic reindeer tundra eastern Greenland no data 1900R t dawsoni orR a dawsoni Thompson Seton 1900 73 Queen Charlotte Islands caribouor Dawson s caribou woodland Graham Island of Haida Gwaii off the coast of British Columbia Canada formerly known as the Queen Charlotte Islands no data 1908R t setoni orR f setoniFlerov 1933 Sakhalin reindeer tundra Sakhalin in the Sea of Okhotsk Russia no data 2007 The table above includes as per the recent revision R t caboti the Labrador caribou the Eastern Migratory population DU4 and R t terranovae the Newfoundland caribou the Newfoundland population DU5 which molecular analyses have shown to be of North American i e woodland caribou lineage 82 and four mountain ecotypes now known to be of distant Beringia Eurasia lineage see Taxonomy above 82 5 64 The scientific name Tarandus rangifer buskensis Millais 1915 the Busk Mountains reindeer was selected as the senior synonym to R t valentinae Flerov 1933 in Mammal Species of the World 7 but Russian authors 17 do not recognize Millais and Millais articles in a hunting travelogue The Gun at Home and Abroad 97 seem short of a taxonomic authority 9 The scientific name groenlandicus is fraught with problems Edwards 1743 98 illustrated and claimed to have seen a male specimen head of perfect horns from Greenland and said that a Captain Craycott had brought a live pair from Greenland to England in 1738 He named it Capra groenlandicus Greenland reindeer Linnaeus 99 in the 12th edition of Systema naturae gave grœnlandicus as a synonym for Cervus tarandus Borowski 100 disagreed and again changed the spelling saying Cervus gronlandicus was morphologically distinct from Eurasian tundra reindeer Baird 101 placed it under the genus Rangifer as R grœnlandicus It went back and forth as a full species or subspecies of the barren ground caribou R arcticus or a subspecies of the tundra reindeer R tarandus but always as the Greenland reindeer caribou Taxonomists consistently documented morphological differences between Greenland and other caribou reindeer in cranial measurements dentition antler architecture etc 102 103 Then Banfield 1961 72 in his famously flawed revision gave the name groenlandicus to all the barren ground caribou in North America Greenland included because groenlandicus pre dates Richardson s 104 R arctus However because genetic data shows the Greenland caribou to be the most distantly related of any caribou to all the others genetic distance FST 44 12 whereas most cervid deer family species have a genetic distance of 2 to 5 89 as well as behavioral and morphological differences a recent revision returned it to species status as R groenlandicus 9 Although it has been assumed that the larger caribou that appeared in Greenland 4 000 years ago originated from Baffin Island itself unique see Taxonomy above a reconstruction of LGM glacial retreat and caribou advance Yannic et al 2013 12 shows colonization by NAL lineage caribou more likely Their PCA and tree diagrams show Greenland caribou clustering outside of the Beringian Eurasian lineage The scientific name R t granti has a very interesting history Allen 1902 90 named it as a distinct species R granti from the western end of Alaska Peninsula opposite Popoff Island and noting that Rangifer granti is a representative of the Barren Ground group of Caribou which includes R arcticus of the Arctic Coast and R granlandicus of Greenland It is not closely related to R stonei of the Kenai Peninsula from which it differs not only in its very much smaller size but in important cranial characters and in coloration The external and cranial differences between R granti and the various forms of the Woodland Caribou are so great in almost every respect that no detailed comparison is necessary According to Mr Stone Rangifer granti inhabits the barren land of Alaska Peninsula ranging well up into the mountains in summer but descending to the lower levels in winter generally feeding on the low flat lands near the coast and in the foothills As regards cranial characters no comparison is necessary with R montanus or with any of the woodland forms Osgood 85 and Murie 1935 86 agreeing with granti s close relationship with the barren ground caribou brought it under R arcticus as a subspecies R t granti Anderson 1946 87 and Banfield 1961 72 based on statistical analysis of cranial dental and other characters agreed But Banfield 1961 also synonymized Alaska s large R stonei with other mountain caribou of British Columbia and the Yukon as invalid subspecies of woodland caribou then R t caribou This left the small migratory barren ground caribou of Alaska and the Yukon including the Porcupine caribou herd without a name which Banfield rectified in his 1974 Mammals of Canada 105 by extending to them the name granti The late Valerius Geist 1998 in the only error in his whole illustrious career re analyzed Banfield s data with additional specimens found in an unpublished report he cites as Skal 1982 but was not able to find diagnostic features that could segregate this form from the western barren ground type But Skal 1982 had included specimens from the eastern end of the Alaska Peninsula and the Kenai Peninsula the range of the larger Stone s caribou Later geneticists comparing barren ground caribou of Alaska with those of mainland Canada found little difference and they all became the former R t groenlandicus now R t arcticus R t granti was lost in the oblivion of invalid taxonomy until Alaskan researchers sampled some small pale caribou from the western end of the Alaska Peninsula their range enclosing the type locality designated by Allen 1902 and found them to be genetically distinct from all other caribou in Alaska 106 107 Thus granti was rediscovered its range restricted to that originally described Stone s caribou R t stonei 108 a large montane type was described from the Kenai Peninsula where apparently it was never common except in years of great abundance 86 the eastern end of the Alaska Peninsula and mountains throughout southern and eastern Alaska 108 It was placed under R arcticus as a subspecies 86 R t stonei and later synonymised as noted above The same genetic analyses mentioned above for R t granti 107 resulted in resurrecting R t stonei as well 9 The Sakhalin reindeer R t setoni endemic to Sakhalin was described as Rangifer tarandus setoni Flerov 1933 but Banfield 1961 brought it under R t fennicus as a junior synonym The wild reindeer on the island are apparently extinct having been replaced by domestic reindeer Some of the Rangifer species and subspecies may be further divided by ecotype depending on several behavioral factors predominant habitat use northern tundra mountain forest boreal forest forest dwelling woodland woodland boreal woodland migratory or woodland mountain spacing dispersed or aggregated and migration patterns sedentary or migratory 109 110 111 North American examples of this are the Torngat Mountain population DU10 an ecotype of R t caboti a recently discovered and unnamed clade between the Mackenzie River and Great Bear Lake of Beringian Eurasian lineage an ecotype of R t osborni 112 the Atlantic Gaspesie population DU11 an eastern montane ecotype of the boreal woodland caribou R t caribou 113 65 114 the Baffin Island caribou an ecotype of the barren ground caribou R t arcticus 88 and the Dolphin Union herd another ecotype of R t arcticus 115 The last three of these likely qualify as subspecies 9 but they have not yet been formally described or named Physical characteristics editNaming in this and following sections follows the taxonomy in the authoritative 2011 reference work Handbook of Mammals of the World Vol 2 Hoofed Mammals 8 Antlers edit nbsp Losing the velvet layer under which a new antler is growing an annual processIn most cervid species only males grow antlers the reindeer is the only cervid species in which females also grow them normally 116 Androgens play an essential role in the antler formation of cervids The antlerogenic genes in reindeer have more sensitivity to androgens in comparison with other cervids 117 118 There is considerable variation among species and subspecies in the size of the antlers e g they are rather small and spindly in the northernmost species and subspecies 119 but on average the bull s antlers are the second largest of any extant deer after those of the male moose In the largest subspecies the antlers of large bulls can range up to 100 cm 39 in in width and 135 cm 53 in in beam length They have the largest antlers relative to body size among living deer species 116 Antler size measured in number of points reflects the nutritional status of the reindeer and climate variation of its environment 120 121 The number of points on male reindeer increases from birth to 5 years of age and remains relatively constant from then on 121 24 In male caribou antler mass but not the number of tines varies in concert with body mass 122 123 While antlers of male woodland caribou are typically smaller than those of male barren ground caribou they can be over 1 m 3 ft 3 in across They are flattened in cross section compact and relatively dense 36 Geist describes them as frontally emphasized flat beamed antlers 79 Woodland caribou antlers are thicker and broader than those of the barren ground caribou and their legs and heads are longer 36 Quebec Labrador male caribou antlers can be significantly larger and wider than other woodland caribou Central barren ground male caribou antlers are perhaps the most diverse in configuration and can grow to be very high and wide Osborn s caribou antlers are typically the most massive with the largest circumference measurements 124 The antlers main beams begin at the brow extending posterior over the shoulders and bowing so that the tips point forward The prominent palmate brow tines extend forward over the face 125 The antlers typically have two separate groups of points lower and upper Antlers begin to grow on male reindeer in March or April and on female reindeer in May or June This process is called antlerogenesis Antlers grow very quickly every year on the bulls As the antlers grow they are covered in thick velvet filled with blood vessels and spongy in texture The antler velvet of the barren ground caribou and the boreal woodland caribou is dark chocolate brown 126 The velvet that covers growing antlers is a highly vascularised skin This velvet is dark brown on woodland or barren ground caribou and slate grey on Peary caribou and the Dolphin Union caribou herd 125 127 128 Velvet lumps in March can develop into a rack measuring more than a meter in length 3 ft by August 129 88 nbsp A R tarandus skullWhen the antler growth is fully grown and hardened the velvet is shed or rubbed off To the Inuit for whom the caribou is a culturally important keystone species the months are named after landmarks in the caribou life cycle For example amiraijaut in the Igloolik region is when velvet falls off caribou antlers 130 Male reindeer use their antlers to compete with other males during the mating season Butler 1986 showed that the social requirements of caribou females during the rut determines the mating strategies of males and consequently the form of male antlers 131 In describing woodland caribou which have a harem defense mating system SARA wrote During the rut males engage in frequent and furious sparring battles with their antlers Large males with large antlers do most of the mating 132 Reindeer continue to migrate until the bulls have spent their back fat 130 133 134 By contrast barren ground caribou males tend individual females and their fights are brief and much less intense consequently their antlers are long and thin round in cross section and less branched and are designed more for show or sexual attraction than fighting In late autumn or early winter after the rut male reindeer lose their antlers growing a new pair the next summer with a larger rack than the previous year Female reindeer keep their antlers until they calve In the Scandinavian and Arctic Circle populations old bulls antlers fall off in late December young bulls antlers fall off in the early spring and cows antlers fall off in the summer citation needed When male reindeer shed their antlers in early to mid winter the antlered cows acquire the highest ranks in the feeding hierarchy gaining access to the best forage areas These cows are healthier than those without antlers 135 Calves whose mothers do not have antlers are more prone to disease and have a significantly higher mortality 135 Cows in good nutritional condition for example during a mild winter with good winter range quality may grow new antlers earlier as antler growth requires high intake 135 nbsp A R t platyrhynchus skullAccording to a respected Igloolik elder Noah Piugaattuk who was one of the last outpost camp leaders 136 caribou tuktu antlers 130 get detached every year Young males lose the velvet from the antlers much more quickly than female caribou even though they are not fully mature They start to work with their antlers just as soon as the velvet starts to fall off The young males engage in fights with their antlers towards autumn soon after the velvet had fallen off they will be red as they start to get bleached their colour changes When the velvet starts to fall off the antler is red because the antler is made from blood The antler is the blood that has hardened in fact the core of the antler is still bloody when the velvet starts to fall off at least close to the base Elder Noah Piugaattuk of Igloolik cited in Tuktu Caribou 2002 Canada s Polar Life According to the Igloolik Oral History Project IOHP Caribou antlers provided the Inuit with a myriad of implements from snow knives and shovels to drying racks and seal hunting tools A complex set of terms describes each part of the antler and relates it to its various uses 130 Currently the larger racks of antlers are used by Inuit as materials for carving Iqaluit based Jackoposie Oopakak s 1989 carving entitled Nunali which means place where people live and which is part of the permanent collection of the National Gallery of Canada includes a massive set of caribou antlers on which he has intricately carved the miniaturized world of the Inuit where Arctic birds caribou polar bears seals and whales are interspersed with human activities of fishing hunting cleaning skins stretching boots and travelling by dog sled and kayak from the base of the antlers to the tip of each branch 137 Pelt edit The color of the fur varies considerably both between individuals and depending on season and species Northern populations which usually are relatively small are whiter while southern populations which typically are relatively large are darker This can be seen well in North America where the northernmost subspecies the Peary caribou is the whitest and smallest subspecies of the continent while the Selkirk Mountains caribou Southern Mountain population DU9 124 is the darkest and nearly the largest 119 only exceeded in size by Osborn s caribou Northern Mountain population DU7 124 The coat has two layers of fur a dense woolly undercoat and a longer haired overcoat consisting of hollow air filled hairs 138 f Fur is the primary insulation factor that allows reindeer to regulate their core body temperature in relation to their environment the thermogradient even if the temperature rises to 38 C 100 F 140 In 1913 Dugmore noted how the woodland caribou swim so high out of the water unlike any other mammal because their hollow air filled quill like hair acts as a supporting life jacket 141 A darker belly color may be caused by two mutations of MC1R They appear to be more common in domestic reindeer herds 142 Heat exchange edit Blood moving into the legs is cooled by blood returning to the body in a countercurrent heat exchange CCHE a highly efficient means of minimizing heat loss through the skin s surface In the CCHE mechanism in cold weather blood vessels are closely knotted and intertwined with arteries to the skin and appendages that carry warm blood with veins returning to the body that carry cold blood causing the warm arterial blood to exchange heat with the cold venous blood In this way their legs for example are kept cool maintaining the core body temperature nearly 30 C 54 F higher with less heat lost to the environment Heat is thus recycled instead of being dissipated The heart does not have to pump blood as rapidly in order to maintain a constant body core temperature and thus metabolic rate CCHE is present in animals like reindeer fox and moose living in extreme conditions of cold or hot weather as a mechanism for retaining the heat in or out of the body These are countercurrent exchange systems with the same fluid usually blood in a circuit used for both directions of flow 143 Reindeer have specialized counter current vascular heat exchange in their nasal passages Temperature gradient along the nasal mucosa is under physiological control Incoming cold air is warmed by body heat before entering the lungs and water is condensed from the expired air and captured before the reindeer s breath is exhaled then used to moisten dry incoming air and possibly be absorbed into the blood through the mucous membranes 144 Like moose caribou have specialized noses featuring nasal turbinate bones that dramatically increase the surface area within the nostrils Hooves edit The reindeer has large feet with crescent shaped cloven hooves for walking in snow or swamps According to the Species at Risk Public Registry SARA woodland 132 Caribou have large feet with four toes In addition to two small ones called dew claws they have two large crescent shaped toes that support most of their weight and serve as shovels when digging for food under snow These large concave hooves offer stable support on wet soggy ground and on crusty snow The pads of the hoof change from a thick fleshy shape in the summer to become hard and thin in the winter months reducing the animal s exposure to the cold ground Additional winter protection comes from the long hair between the toes it covers the pads so the caribou walks only on the horny rim of the hooves SARA 2014 Reindeer hooves adapt to the season in the summer when the tundra is soft and wet the footpads become sponge like and provide extra traction In the winter the pads shrink and tighten exposing the rim of the hoof which cuts into the ice and crusted snow to keep it from slipping This also enables them to dig down an activity known as cratering through the snow to their favourite food a lichen known as reindeer lichen Cladonia rangiferina 145 146 Size edit The females or cows as they are often called usually measure 162 205 cm 64 81 in in length and weigh 80 120 kg 180 260 lb 147 The males or bulls as they are often called are typically larger to an extent which varies between the different species and subspecies measuring 180 214 cm 71 84 in in length and usually weighing 159 182 kg 351 401 lb 147 Exceptionally large bulls have weighed as much as 318 kg 701 lb 147 Weight varies drastically between the seasons with bulls losing as much as 40 of their pre rut weight 148 The shoulder height is usually 85 to 150 cm 33 to 59 in and the tail is 14 to 20 cm 5 5 to 7 9 in long The reindeer from Svalbard are the smallest of all They are also relatively short legged and may have a shoulder height of as little as 80 cm 31 in 149 thereby following Allen s rule Clicking sound edit The knees of many species and subspecies of reindeer are adapted to produce a clicking sound as they walk 150 The sounds originate in the tendons of the knees and may be audible from several hundred meters away The frequency of the knee clicks is one of a range of signals that establish relative positions on a dominance scale among reindeer Specifically loud knee clicking is discovered to be an honest signal of body size providing an exceptional example of the potential for non vocal acoustic communication in mammals 150 The clicking sound made by reindeer as they walk is caused by small tendons slipping over bone protuberances sesamoid bones in their feet 151 152 The sound is made when a reindeer is walking or running occurring when the full weight of the foot is on the ground or just after it is relieved of the weight 141 Eyes edit A study by researchers from University College London in 2011 revealed that reindeer can see light with wavelengths as short as 320 nm i e in the ultraviolet range considerably below the human threshold of 400 nm It is thought that this ability helps them to survive in the Arctic because many objects that blend into the landscape in light visible to humans such as urine and fur produce sharp contrasts in ultraviolet 153 It has been proposed that UV flashes on power lines are responsible for reindeer avoiding power lines because in darkness these animals see power lines not as dim passive structures but rather as lines of flickering light stretching across the terrain 154 In 2023 researchers studying reindeer living in Cairngorms National Park Scotland suggested that UV visual sensitivity in reindeer helps them detect UV absorbing lichens against a background of UV reflecting snows 155 The tapetum lucidum of Arctic reindeer eyes changes in color from gold in summer to blue in winter to improve their vision during times of continuous darkness and perhaps enable them to better spot predators 156 Biology and behaviors editSeasonal body composition edit nbsp SwedenReindeer have developed adaptations for optimal metabolic efficiency during warm months as well as for during cold months 157 The body composition of reindeer varies highly with the seasons Of particular interest is the body composition and diet of breeding and non breeding females between the seasons Breeding females have more body mass than non breeding females between the months of March and September with a difference of around 10 kg 22 lb more than non breeding females From November to December non breeding females have more body mass than breeding females as non breeding females are able to focus their energies towards storage during colder months rather than lactation and reproduction Body masses of both breeding and non breeding females peaks in September During the months of March through April breeding females have more fat mass than the non breeding females with a difference of almost 3 kg 6 6 lb After this however non breeding females on average have a higher body fat mass than do breeding females 158 The environmental variations play a large part in reindeer nutrition as winter nutrition is crucial to adult and neonatal survival rates 159 Lichens are a staple during the winter months as they are a readily available food source which reduces the reliance on stored body reserves 158 Lichens are a crucial part of the reindeer diet however they are less prevalent in the diet of pregnant reindeer compared to non pregnant individuals The amount of lichen in a diet is found more in non pregnant adult diets than pregnant individuals due to the lack of nutritional value Although lichens are high in carbohydrates they are lacking in essential proteins that vascular plants provide The amount of lichen in a diet decreases in latitude which results in nutritional stress being higher in areas with low lichen abundance 160 6 In a study of seasonal light dark cycles on sleep patterns of female reindeer researchers performed non invasive electroencephalography EEG on reindeer kept in a stable at the UiT The Arctic University of Norway The EEG recordings showed that 1 the more time reindeer spend ruminating the less time they spend in non rapid eye movement sleep NREM sleep and 2 reindeer s brainwaves during rumination resemble the brainwaves present during NREM sleep These results suggest that by reducing the time requirement for NREM sleep reindeer are able to spend more time feeding during the summer months when food is abundant 161 162 Reproduction and life cycle edit Further information Rut mammalian reproduction Cervidae Reindeer mate in late September to early November and the gestation period is about 228 234 days 163 During the mating season bulls battle for access to cows Two bulls will lock each other s antlers together and try to push each other away The most dominant bulls can collect as many as 15 20 cows to mate with A bull will stop eating during this time and lose much of his body fat reserves 164 To calve females travel to isolated relatively predator free areas such as islands in lakes peatlands lake shores or tundra 132 As females select the habitat for the birth of their calves they are warier than males 163 Dugmore noted that in their seasonal migrations the herd follows a female for that reason 141 Newborns weigh on average 6 kg 13 lb 148 In May or June the calves are born 163 After 45 days the calves are able to graze and forage but continue suckling until the following autumn when they become independent from their mothers 164 Bulls live four years less than the cows whose maximum longevity is about 17 years Cows with a normal body size and who have had sufficient summer nutrition can begin breeding anytime between the ages of 1 and 3 years 163 When a cow has undergone nutritional stress it is possible for her to not reproduce for the year 165 Dominant bulls those with larger body size and antler racks inseminate more than one cow a season Social structure migration and range edit nbsp The size of the antlers plays a significant role in establishing the hierarchy in the herd 166 Some populations of North American caribou for example many herds in the barren ground caribou subspecies and some woodland caribou in Ungava and northern Labrador migrate the farthest of any terrestrial mammal traveling up to 5 000 km 3 000 mi a year and covering 1 000 000 km2 400 000 sq mi 2 167 Other North American populations the boreal woodland caribou for example are largely sedentary 168 The European populations are known to have shorter migrations Island populations such as the Novaya Zemlya and Svalbard reindeer and the Peary caribou make local movements both within and among islands Migrating reindeer can be negatively affected by parasite loads Severely infected individuals are weak and probably have shortened lifespans but parasite levels vary between populations Infections create an effect known as culling infected migrating animals are less likely to complete the migration 169 Normally travelling about 19 55 km 12 34 mi a day while migrating the caribou can run at speeds of 60 80 km h 37 50 mph 2 Young calves can already outrun an Olympic sprinter when only 1 day old 170 During the spring migration smaller herds will group together to form larger herds of 50 000 to 500 000 animals but during autumn migrations the groups become smaller and the reindeer begin to mate During winter reindeer travel to forested areas to forage under the snow By spring groups leave their winter grounds to go to the calving grounds A reindeer can swim easily and quickly normally at about 6 5 km h 4 0 mph but if necessary at 10 km h 6 2 mph and migrating herds will not hesitate to swim across a large lake or broad river 2 The barren ground caribou form large herds and undertake lengthy seasonal migrations from winter feeding grounds in taiga to spring calving grounds and summer range in the tundra The migrations of the Porcupine herd of barren ground caribou are among the longest of any mammal 10 Greenland caribou found in southwestern Greenland are mixed migrators and many individuals do not migrate those that do migrate less than 60 km 171 Unlike the individual tending mating system aggregated rutting synchronized calving and aggregated post calving of barren ground caribou Greenland caribou have a harem defense mating system and dispersed calving and they do not aggregate 94 Although most wild tundra reindeer migrate between their winter range in taiga and summer range in tundra some ecotypes or herds are more or less sedentary Novaya Zemlya reindeer R t pearsoni formerly wintered on the mainland and migrated across the ice to the islands for summer but only a few now migrate 24 Finnish forest reindeer R t fennicus were formerly distributed in most of the coniferous forest zones south of the tree line including some mountains but are now spottily distributed within this zone As an adaptation to their Arctic environment they have lost their circadian rhythm 172 Ecology editDistribution and habitat edit nbsp Sweden nbsp Suomussalmi FinlandMain article Reindeer distribution Originally the reindeer was found in Scandinavia Eastern Europe Greenland Russia Mongolia and northern China north of the 50th latitude In North America it was found in Canada Alaska and the northern contiguous United States from Maine to Washington In the 19th century it was still present in southern Idaho 2 Even in historical times it probably occurred naturally in Ireland and it is believed to have lived in Scotland until the 12th century when the last reindeer were hunted in Orkney 173 During the Late Pleistocene Epoch reindeer occurred further south in North America such as in Nevada Tennessee and Alabama 174 and as far south as Spain in Europe 166 175 Today wild reindeer have disappeared from these areas especially from the southern parts where it vanished almost everywhere Large populations of wild reindeer are still found in Norway Finland Siberia Greenland Alaska and Canada According to Grubb 2005 Rangifer is circumboreal in the tundra and taiga from Svalbard Norway Finland Russia Alaska USA and Canada including most Arctic islands and Greenland south to northern Mongolia China Inner Mongolia 176 Sakhalin Island and USA northern Idaho and Great Lakes region Reindeer were introduced to and are feral in Iceland Kerguelen Islands South Georgia Island Pribilof Islands St Matthew Island 7 a free ranging semi domesticated herd is also present in Scotland 177 There is strong regional variation in Rangifer herd size There are large population differences among individual herds and the size of individual herds has varied greatly since 1970 The largest of all herds in Taimyr Russia has varied between 400 000 and 1 000 000 the second largest herd at the George River in Canada has varied between 28 000 and 385 000 While Rangifer is a widespread and numerous genus in the northern Holarctic being present in both tundra and taiga boreal forest 166 by 2013 many herds had unusually low numbers and their winter ranges in particular were smaller than they used to be 18 Caribou and reindeer numbers have fluctuated historically but many herds are in decline across their range 178 This global decline is linked to climate change for northern migratory herds and industrial disturbance of habitat for non migratory herds 179 Barren ground caribou are susceptible to the effects of climate change due to a mismatch in the phenological process between the availability of food during the calving period 160 180 181 In November 2016 it was reported that more than 81 000 reindeer in Russia had died as a result of climate change Longer autumns leading to increased amounts of freezing rain created a few inches of ice over lichen causing many reindeer to starve to death 182 Diet edit nbsp Two caribou licking salt from a roadway in British ColumbiaReindeer are ruminants having a four chambered stomach They mainly eat lichens in winter especially reindeer lichen Cladonia rangiferina they are the only large mammal able to metabolize lichen owing to specialised bacteria and protozoa in their gut 183 They are also the only animals except for some gastropods in which the enzyme lichenase which breaks down lichenin to glucose has been found 184 However they also eat the leaves of willows and birches as well as sedges and grasses Reindeer are osteophagous they are known to gnaw and partly consume shed antlers as a dietary supplement and in some extreme cases will cannibalise each other s antlers before shedding 185 There is also some evidence to suggest that on occasion especially in the spring when they are nutritionally stressed 186 they will feed on small rodents such as lemmings 187 fish such as the Arctic char Salvelinus alpinus and bird eggs 188 Reindeer herded by the Chukchis have been known to devour mushrooms enthusiastically in late summer 189 During the Arctic summer when there is continuous daylight reindeer change their sleeping pattern from one synchronised with the sun to an ultradian pattern in which they sleep when they need to digest food 190 Predators edit nbsp Standing on snow to avoid bloodsucking insectsA variety of predators prey heavily on reindeer including overhunting by people in some areas which contributes to the decline of populations 132 Golden eagles prey on calves and are the most prolific hunter on the calving grounds 191 Wolverines will take newborn calves or birthing cows as well as less commonly infirm adults Brown bears and polar bears prey on reindeer of all ages but like wolverines are most likely to attack weaker animals such as calves and sick reindeer since healthy adult reindeer can usually outpace a bear The gray wolf is the most effective natural predator of adult reindeer and sometimes takes large numbers especially during the winter Some gray wolf packs as well as individual grizzly bears in Canada may follow and live off of a particular reindeer herd year round 109 192 In 2020 scientists on Svalbard witnessed and were able to film for the first time a polar bear attack reindeer driving one into the ocean where the polar bear caught up with and killed it 193 The same bear successfully repeated this hunting technique the next day On Svalbard reindeer remains account for 27 3 in polar bear scats suggesting that they may be a significant part of the polar bear s diet in that area 194 Additionally as carrion reindeer may be scavenged opportunistically by red and Arctic foxes various species of eagles hawks and falcons and common ravens Bloodsucking insects such as mosquitoes black flies and especially the reindeer warble fly or reindeer botfly Hypoderma tarandi and the reindeer nose botfly Cephenemyia trompe 179 195 are a plague to reindeer during the summer and can cause enough stress to inhibit feeding and calving behaviors 196 An adult reindeer will lose perhaps about 1 L 0 22 imp gal 0 26 US gal of blood to biting insects for every week it spends in the tundra 170 The population numbers of some of these predators is influenced by the migration of reindeer citation needed Tormenting insects keep caribou on the move searching for windy areas like hilltops and mountain ridges rock reefs lakeshore and forest openings or snow patches that offer respite from the buzzing horde Gathering in large herds is another strategy that caribou use to block insects 197 Reindeer are good swimmers and in one case the entire body of a reindeer was found in the stomach of a Greenland shark Somniosus microcephalus a species found in the far North Atlantic 198 Other threats edit White tailed deer Odocoileus virginianus commonly carry meningeal worm or brainworm Parelaphostrongylus tenuis a nematode parasite that causes reindeer moose Alces alces elk Cervus canadensis and mule deer Odocoileus hemionus to develop fatal neurological symptoms 199 200 201 which include a loss of fear of humans White tailed deer that carry this worm are partially immune to it 148 Changes in climate and habitat beginning in the 20th century have expanded range overlap between white tailed deer and caribou increasing the frequency of infection within the reindeer population This increase in infection is a concern for wildlife managers Human activities such as clear cutting forestry practices forest fires and the clearing for agriculture roadways railways and power lines favor the conversion of habitats into the preferred habitat of the white tailed deer open forest interspersed with meadows clearings grasslands and riparian flatlands 148 Towards the end of the Soviet Union there was increasingly open admission from the Soviet government that reindeer numbers were being negatively affected by human activity and that this must be remediated especially by supporting reindeer breeding by native herders 202 Conservation editCurrent status edit While overall widespread and numerous some reindeer species and subspecies are rare and three subspecies have already become extinct 29 30 As of 2015 the IUCN has classified the reindeer as Vulnerable due to an observed population decline of 40 over the last 25 years 2 According to IUCN Rangifer tarandus as a species is not endangered because of its overall large population and its widespread range 2 In North America the Queen Charlotte Islands caribou 203 30 29 and the East Greenland caribou both became extinct in the early 20th century the Peary caribou is designated as Endangered the boreal woodland caribou is designated as Threatened and some individual populations are endangered as well While the barren ground caribou is not designated as Threatened many individual herds including some of the largest are declining and there is much concern at the local level 204 Grant s caribou a small pale subspecies endemic to the western end of the Alaska Peninsula and the adjacent islands 90 has not been assessed as to its conservation status The status of the Dolphin Union herd was upgraded to Endangered in 2017 205 In NWT Dolphin Union caribou were listed as Special Concern under the NWT Species at Risk NWT Act 2013 Both the Selkirk Mountains caribou Southern Mountain population DU9 and the Rocky Mountain caribou Central Mountain population DU8 are classified as Endangered in Canada in regions such as southeastern British Columbia at the Canada United States border along the Columbia and Kootenay Rivers and around Kootenay Lake Rocky Mountain caribou are extirpated from Banff National Park 206 but a small population remains in Jasper National Park and in mountain ranges to the northwest into British Columbia Montane caribou are now considered extirpated in the contiguous United States including Washington and Idaho Osborn s caribou Northern Mountain population DU7 is classified as Threatened in Canada In Eurasia the Sakhalin reindeer is extinct and has been replaced by domestic reindeer and reindeer on most of the Novaya Zemlya islands have also been replaced by domestic reindeer although some wild reindeer still persist on the northern islands 24 Many Siberian tundra reindeer herds have declined some dangerously but the Taymir herd remains strong and in total about 940 000 wild Siberian tundra reindeer were estimated in 2010 17 There is strong regional variation in Rangifer herd size By 2013 many caribou herds in North America had unusually low numbers and their winter ranges in particular were smaller than they used to be 204 Caribou numbers have fluctuated historically but many herds are in decline across their range 178 There are many factors contributing to the decline in numbers 179 Boreal woodland caribou edit Ongoing human development of their habitat has caused populations of boreal woodland caribou to disappear from their original southern range In particular boreal woodland caribou were extirpated in many areas of eastern North America in the beginning of the 20th century Professor Marco Musiani of the University of Calgary said in a statement that The woodland caribou is already an endangered subspecies in southern Canada and the United States The warming of the planet means the disappearance of their critical habitat in these regions Caribou need undisturbed lichen rich environments and these types of habitats are disappearing 207 Boreal woodland caribou were designated as Threatened in 2002 by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada COSEWIC 35 Environment Canada reported in 2011 that there were approximately 34 000 boreal woodland caribou in 51 ranges remaining in Canada Environment Canada 2011b 36 According to Geist the woodland caribou is highly endangered throughout its distribution right into Ontario 7 In 2002 the Atlantic Gaspesie population DU11 of the boreal woodland caribou was designated as Endangered by COSEWIC The small isolated population of 200 animals was at risk from predation and habitat loss Peary caribou edit In 1991 COSEWIC assigned endangered status to the Banks Island and High Arctic populations of the Peary caribou The Low Arctic population of the Peary caribou was designated as Threatened In 2004 all three were designated as endangered 203 In 2015 COSEWIC returned the status to Threatened Relationship with humans editSee also Reindeer in Siberian shamanism and Reindeer hunting in Greenland nbsp Pulling a sled in RussiaArctic peoples have depended on caribou for food clothing and shelter European prehistoric cave paintings represent both tundra and forest forms the latter either the Finnish forest reindeer or the narrow nosed reindeer an eastern Siberia forest form 14 Canadian examples include the Caribou Inuit the inland dwelling Inuit of the Kivalliq Region in northern Canada the Caribou Clan in the Yukon the Inupiat the Inuvialuit the Han the Northern Tutchone and the Gwichʼin who followed the Porcupine caribou herd for millennia Hunting wild reindeer and herding of semi domesticated reindeer are important to several Arctic and sub Arctic peoples such as the Duhalar for meat hides de antlers milk ru and transportation 6 Reindeer have been domesticated at least two and probably three times in each case from wild Eurasian tundra reindeer after the Last Glacial Maximum LGM 208 50 Recognizably different domestic reindeer breeds include those of the Evenk Even and Chukotka Khargin people of Yakutia and the Nenets breed from the Nenets Autonomous district and Murmansk region 209 the Tuvans Todzhans Tofa Tofalars in the Irkutsk Region the Soyots the Republic of Buryatia and the Dukha also known as Tsaatan the Khubsugul in the Province of Mongolia 210 The Sami Sapmi have also depended on reindeer herding and fishing for centuries 211 IV 212 16 In Sapmi reindeer are used to pull a pulk a Nordic sled 92 In traditional British and United States Christmas legend Santa Claus s reindeer pull a sleigh through the night sky to help Santa Claus deliver gifts to good children on Christmas Eve The reindeer has an important economic role for all circumpolar peoples including the Sami the Swedes the Norwegians the Finns and the Northwestern Russians in Europe the Nenets the Khanty the Evenks the Yukaghirs the Chukchi and the Koryaks in Asia and the Inuit in North America It is believed that domestication started between the Bronze and Iron Ages Siberian reindeer owners also use the reindeer to ride on Siberian reindeer are larger than their Scandinavian relatives For breeders a single owner may own hundreds or even thousands of animals The numbers of Russian and Scandinavian reindeer herders have been drastically reduced since 1990 The sale of fur and meat is an important source of income Reindeer were introduced into Alaska near the end of the 19th century they interbred with the native caribou subspecies there Reindeer herders on the Seward Peninsula have experienced significant losses to their herds from animals such as wolves following the wild caribou during their migrations citation needed Reindeer meat is popular in the Scandinavian countries Reindeer meatballs are sold canned Sauteed reindeer is the best known dish in Sapmi In Alaska and Finland reindeer sausage is sold in supermarkets and grocery stores Reindeer meat is very tender and lean It can be prepared fresh but also dried salted and hot and cold smoked In addition to meat almost all of the internal organs of reindeer can be eaten some being traditional dishes 213 Furthermore Lapin Poron liha fresh reindeer meat completely produced and packed in Finnish Sapmi is protected in Europe with PDO classification 214 215 Reindeer antlers are powdered and sold as an aphrodisiac or as a nutritional or medicinal supplement to Asian markets The blood of the caribou was supposedly mixed with alcohol as drink by hunters and loggers in colonial Quebec to counter the cold This drink is now enjoyed without the blood as a wine and whiskey drink known as Caribou 216 217 Indigenous North Americans edit This section is missing information about US government intervention to introduce herding in the form of Alaska Reindeer Service Canadian purchase from Alaska Please expand the section to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page March 2023 Caribou are still hunted in Greenland and in North America In the traditional lifestyles of some of Canada s Inuit peoples and northern First Nations peoples Alaska Natives and the Kalaallit of Greenland caribou is an important source of food clothing shelter and tools nbsp An early 20th century Inuit parka made of caribou skinThe Caribou Inuit are inland dwelling Inuit in present day Nunavut s Kivalliq Region formerly the Keewatin Region Northwest Territories Canada They subsisted on caribou year round eating dried caribou meat in the winter The Ahiarmiut are Caribou Inuit that followed the Qamanirjuaq barren ground caribou herd 218 There is an Inuit saying in the Kivalliq Region 183 The caribou feeds the wolf but it is the wolf who keeps the caribou strong Kivalliq region Elder Chief of Koyukuk and chair for the Western Arctic Caribou Herd Working Group Benedict Jones or Kʼughtoʼoodenoolʼoʼ represents the Middle Yukon River Alaska His grandmother was a member of the Caribou Clan who travelled with the caribou as a means to survive In 1939 they were living their traditional lifestyle at one of their hunting camps in Koyukuk near the location of what is now the Koyukuk National Wildlife Refuge His grandmother made a pair of new mukluks in one day Kʼughtoʼoodenoolʼoʼ recounted a story told by an elder who worked on the steamboats during the gold rush days out on the Yukon In late August the caribou migrated from the Alaska Range up north to Huslia Koyukuk and the Tanana area One year when the steamboat was unable to continue they ran into a caribou herd estimated to number 1 million animals migrating across the Yukon They tied up for seven days waiting for the caribou to cross They ran out of wood for the steamboats and had to go back down 40 miles to the wood pile to pick up some more wood On the tenth day they came back and they said there was still caribou going across the river night and day 219 The Gwichʼin an indigenous people of northwestern Canada and northeastern Alaska have been dependent on the international migratory Porcupine caribou herd for millennia 220 142 To them caribou vadzaih is the cultural symbol and a keystone subsistence species of the Gwich in just as the American buffalo is to the Plains Native Americans 221 Innovative language revitalisation projects are underway to document the language and to enhance the writing and translation skills of younger Gwich in speakers In one project lead research associate and fluent speaker Gwich in elder Kenneth Frank works with linguists who include young Gwich in speakers affiliated with the Alaska Native Language Center at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks to document traditional knowledge of caribou anatomy The main goal of the research was to elicit not only what the Gwich in know about caribou anatomy but how they see caribou and what they say and believe about caribou that defines themselves their dietary and nutritional needs and their subsistence way of life 221 Elders have identified at least 150 descriptive Gwich in names for all of the bones organs and tissues Associated with the caribou s anatomy are not just descriptive Gwich in names for all of the body parts including bones organs and tissues but also an encyclopedia of stories songs games toys ceremonies traditional tools skin clothing personal names and surnames and a highly developed ethnic cuisine 221 In the 1980s Gwich in Traditional Management Practices were established to protect the Porcupine caribou upon which the Gwich in depend They codified traditional principles of caribou management into tribal law which include limits on the harvest of caribou and procedures to be followed in processing and transporting caribou meat and limits on the number of caribou to be taken per hunting trip 222 Indigenous Eurasians edit Reindeer herding has been vital for the subsistence of several Eurasian nomadic indigenous peoples living in the circumpolar Arctic zone such as the Sami Nenets and Komi 223 Reindeer are used to provide renewable sources and reliable transportation In Mongolia the Dukha are known as the reindeer people They are credited as one of the world s earliest domesticators The Dukha diet consists mainly of reindeer dairy products 224 Reindeer husbandry is common in northern Fennoscandia northern Norway Sweden and Finland and the Russian North In some human groups such as the Eveny wild reindeer and domestic reindeer are treated as different kinds of beings 225 Husbandry edit Main article Reindeer herding nbsp A team pulling a sled near Arkhangelsk Russia late 19th century photochrom nbsp Milking in Western Finnmark Norway 19th centuryThe reindeer is the only successfully semi domesticated deer on a large scale in the world Reindeer in northern Fennoscandia northern Norway Sweden and Finland as well in the Kola Peninsula and Yakutia in Russia are mostly semi domesticated reindeer ear marked by their owners Some reindeer in the area are truly domesticated mostly used as draught animals nowadays commonly for tourist entertainment and races traditionally important for the nomadic Sami Domestic reindeer have also been used for milk e g in Norway There are only two genetically pure populations of wild reindeer in Northern Europe wild mountain reindeer R t tarandus that live in central Norway with a population in 2007 of between 6 000 and 8 400 animals 226 and wild Finnish forest reindeer R t fennicus that live in central and eastern Finland and in Russian Karelia with a population of about 4 350 plus 1 500 in Arkhangelsk Oblast and 2 500 in Komi 227 East of Arkhangelsk both wild Siberian tundra reindeer R t sibiricus some herds are very large and domestic reindeer R t domesticus occur with almost no interbreeding by wild reindeer into domestic clades and none the other way Kharzinova et al 2018 228 Rozhkov et al 2020 229 DNA analysis indicates that reindeer were independently domesticated at least twice in Fennoscandia and Western Russia and possibly also Eastern Russia 230 Reindeer have been herded for centuries by several Arctic and sub Arctic peoples including the Sami the Nenets and the Yakuts They are raised for their meat hides and antlers and to a lesser extent for milk and transportation Reindeer are not considered fully domesticated as they generally roam free on pasture grounds In traditional nomadic herding reindeer herders migrate with their herds between coastal and inland areas according to an annual migration route and herds are keenly tended However reindeer were not bred in captivity though they were tamed for milking as well as for use as draught animals or beasts of burden Millais 1915 97 for example shows a photograph Plate LXXX of an Okhotsk Reindeer saddled for riding the rider standing behind it beside an officer astride a steppe pony that is only slightly larger Domestic reindeer are shorter legged and heavier than their wild counterparts citation needed In Scandinavia management of reindeer herds is primarily conducted through siida a traditional Sami form of cooperative association 231 The use of reindeer for transportation is common among the nomadic peoples of the Russian North but not anymore in Scandinavia Although a sled drawn by 20 reindeer will cover no more than 20 25 km 12 16 mi a day compared to 7 10 km 4 3 6 2 mi on foot 70 80 km 43 50 mi by a dog sled loaded with cargo and 150 180 km 93 112 mi by a dog sled without cargo it has the advantage that the reindeer will discover their own food while a pack of 5 7 sled dogs requires 10 14 kg 22 31 lb of fresh fish a day 232 The use of reindeer as semi domesticated livestock in Alaska was introduced in the late 19th century by the United States Revenue Cutter Service with assistance from Sheldon Jackson as a means of providing a livelihood for Alaska Natives 233 Reindeer were imported first from Siberia and later also from Norway A regular mail run in Wales Alaska used a sleigh drawn by reindeer 234 In Alaska reindeer herders use satellite telemetry to track their herds using online maps and databases to chart the herd s progress citation needed Domestic reindeer are mostly found in northern Fennoscandia and the Russian North with a herd of approximately 150 170 reindeer living around the Cairngorms region in Scotland The last remaining wild tundra reindeer in Europe are found in portions of southern Norway 235 The International Centre for Reindeer Husbandry ICR a circumpolar organisation was established in 2005 by the Norwegian government ICR represents over 20 indigenous reindeer peoples and about 100 000 reindeer herders in nine different national states 236 In Finland there are about 6 000 reindeer herders most of whom keep small herds of less than 50 reindeer to raise additional income With 185 000 reindeer as of 2001 update the industry produces 2 000 metric tons 2 200 short tons of reindeer meat and generates 35 million euros annually 70 of the meat is sold to slaughterhouses Reindeer herders are eligible for national and EU agricultural subsidies which constituted 15 of their income Reindeer herding is of central importance for the local economies of small communities in sparsely populated rural Sapmi 237 Currently many reindeer herders are heavily dependent on diesel fuel to provide for electric generators and snowmobile transportation although solar photovoltaic systems can be used to reduce diesel dependency 238 Miniatures of reindeer from Olaus Magnus s 1539 Carta marina nbsp Milking nbsp Crossing frozen water nbsp Drawing a wagon nbsp Drawing a one man sled nbsp Reindeer mounted cavalryHistory edit Reindeer hunting by humans has a very long history Wild reindeer may well be the species of single greatest importance in the entire anthropological literature on hunting 6 Both Aristotle and Theophrastus have short accounts probably based on the same source of an ox sized deer species named tarandos living in the land of the Bodines in Scythia which was able to change the colour of its fur to obtain camouflage The latter is probably a misunderstanding of the seasonal change in reindeer fur colour The descriptions have been interpreted as being of reindeer living in the southern Ural Mountains in c 350 BC 38 nbsp The tragelaphus or deer goatA deer like animal described by Julius Caesar in his Commentarii de Bello Gallico chapter 6 26 from the Hercynian Forest in the year 53 BC is most certainly to be interpreted as a reindeer 38 239 There is an ox shaped like a stag In the middle of its forehead a single horn grows between its ears taller and straighter than the animal horns with which we are familiar At the top this horn spreads out like the palm of a hand or the branches of a tree The females are of the same form as the males and their horns are the same shape and size According to Olaus Magnus s Historia de Gentibus Septentrionalibus printed in Rome in the year 1555 Gustav I of Sweden sent 10 reindeer to Albert Duke of Prussia in the year 1533 It may be these animals that Conrad Gessner had seen or heard of During World War II the Soviet Army used reindeer as pack animals to transport food ammunition and post from Murmansk to the Karelian front and bring wounded soldiers pilots and equipment back to the base About 6 000 reindeer and more than 1 000 reindeer herders were part of the operation Most herders were Nenets who were mobilised from the Nenets Autonomous Okrug but reindeer herders from the Murmansk Arkhangelsk and Komi regions also participated 240 241 Santa Claus edit nbsp Relaxing after pulling Santa s sleigh at the switching on of Christmas lights in ScotlandMain article Santa Claus s reindeer Around the world public interest in reindeer peaks during the Christmas season 242 According to folklore Santa Claus s sleigh is pulled by flying reindeer These reindeer were first named in the 1823 poem A Visit from St Nicholas Mythology and art edit Among the Inuit there is a story of the origin of the caribou 243 Once upon a time there were no caribou on the earth But there was a man who wished for caribou and he cut a hole deep in the ground and up this hole came caribou many caribou The caribou came pouring out until the earth was almost covered with them And when the man thought there were caribou enough for mankind he closed up the hole again Thus the caribou came up on earth 243 Inuit artists from the Barrenlands incorporate depictions of caribou and items made from caribou antlers and skin in carvings drawings prints and sculpture Contemporary Canadian artist Brian Jungen of Dane zaa First Nations ancestry commissioned an installation entitled The ghosts on top of my head 2010 11 in Banff Alberta which depicts the antlers of caribou elk and moose 244 I remember a story my Uncle Jack told me a Dunne Za creation story about how animals once ruled the earth and were ten times their size and that got me thinking about scale and using the idea of the antler which is a thing that everyone is scared of and making it into something more approachable and abstract Brian Jungen 2011 244 Tomson Highway CM 245 is a Canadian and Cree playwright novelist and children s author who was born in a remote area north of Brochet Manitoba 245 His father Joe Highway was a caribou hunter His 2001 children s book entitled Caribou Song atihko nikamon was selected as one of the Top 10 Children s Books by the Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail The young protagonists of Caribou Song like Tomson himself followed the caribou herd with their families Heraldry and symbols edit nbsp Coat of arms of Kuusamo nbsp Coat of arms of InariSeveral Norwegian municipalities have one or more reindeer depicted in their coats of arms Eidfjord Porsanger Rendalen Tromso Vadso and Vaga The historic province of Vasterbotten in Sweden has a reindeer in its coat of arms The present Vasterbotten County has very different borders and uses the reindeer combined with other symbols in its coat of arms The city of Pitea also has a reindeer The logo for Umea University features three reindeer 246 The Canadian 25 cent coin or quarter features a depiction of a caribou on one face The caribou is the official provincial animal of Newfoundland and Labrador Canada and appears on the coat of arms of Nunavut A caribou statue was erected at the centre of the Beaumont Hamel Newfoundland Memorial marking the spot in France where hundreds of soldiers from Newfoundland were killed and wounded in World War I There is a replica in Bowring Park in St John s Newfoundland s capital city 247 Two municipalities in Finland have reindeer motifs in their coats of arms Kuusamo has a running reindeer 248 and Inari has a fish with reindeer antlers 249 See also editAlaska Reindeer Service Caribou herds and populations in Canada Rangifer constellation Rangifer journal Reindeer PoliceNotes edit In North American English known as caribou if wild and reindeer if domesticated 4 The 6 species taxonomy is based on a revision by Harding 2022 9 70 89 a b c lt text missing gt a b c Banfield rejected this classification in 1961 However Geist and others considered it valid Bangs 1896 is invalid as a taxonomic authority as his two page pamphlet was not published 9 Although most taxonomic authorities over the years recognized Greenland Caribou as a distinct subspecies several gave the name as a subspecies of Cervus Rangifer tarandus for North American barren ground caribou groenlandicus having priority over other names The name dates from George Edwards 1743 93 who claimed to have seen a male specimen head of perfect horns from Greenland and said that a Captain Craycott had brought a live pair from Greenland to England in 1738 According to Inuit elder Marie Kilunik of the Aivilingmiut Canadian Inuit preferred the caribou skins from caribou taken in the late summer or autumn when their coats had thickened They used it for winter clothing because each hair is hollow and fills with air trapping heat 139 References edit Kurten Bjorn 1968 Pleistocene Mammals of Europe Transaction Publishers pp 170 177 ISBN 978 1 4128 4514 4 Retrieved 6 August 2013 a b c d e f g h i Gunn A 2016 Rangifer tarandus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T29742A22167140 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 1 RLTS T29742A22167140 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 NatureServe Explorer 2 0 explorer natureserve org Retrieved 30 March 2022 United States Food and Drug Administration FDA 13 December 2022 Fun Facts about Reindeer and Caribou Food and Drug Administration a b c d Flagstad Oystein Roed Knut H 2003 Refugial origins of reindeer Rangifer tarandus L inferred from mitochondrial DNA sequences PDF Evolution 57 3 658 670 doi 10 1554 0014 3820 2003 057 0658 roorrt 2 0 co 2 PMID 12703955 Archived from the original PDF on 4 September 2006 Retrieved 4 January 2013 a b c In North America and Eurasia the species has long been an important resource in many areas the most important resource for peoples inhabiting the northern boreal forest and tundra regions Banfield 1961 170 Kurten 1968 170 Ernest S Burch Jr 1972 The Caribou Wild Reindeer as a Human Resource American Antiquity 37 3 339 368 doi 10 2307 278435 JSTOR 278435 S2CID 161921691 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Grubb P 2005 Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 8221 4 OCLC 62265494 a b c d e f g h i j k l Mattioli S 2011 Caribou Rangifer tarandus pp 431 432 in Handbook of the Mammals of the World Vol 2 Hoofed Mammals Lynx Edicions Barcelona ISBN 978 84 96553 77 4 a b c d e f g h i j k l Harding Lee E 26 August 2022 Available names for Rangifer Mammalia Artiodactyla Cervidae species and subspecies ZooKeys 1119 117 151 Bibcode 2022ZooK 1119 117H doi 10 3897 zookeys 1119 80233 ISSN 1313 2970 PMC 9848878 PMID 36762356 a b Eder Tamara Kennedy Gregory 2011 Mammals of Canada Edmonton Alberta Lone Pine p 81 ISBN 978 1 55105 857 3 a b Cronin Matthew A 2003 Genetic variation in caribou and reindeer Rangifer tarandus Animal Genetics 34 1 33 41 doi 10 1046 j 1365 2052 2003 00927 x PMID 12580784 a b c d e Yannic G Pellissier L Ortego J Lecomte N Couturier S Cuyler C Dussault C Hundertmark K J Irvine R J Jenkins D A Kolpashikov L Mager K Musiani M Parker K L Roed K H Sipko T THorisson S G V Weckworth B Guisan A Bernatchez L Cote S D 2013 Genetic diversity in caribou linked to past and future climate change Nature Climate Change 4 132 137 doi 10 1038 NCLIMATE2074 Geist Valerius 1991 On an objective definition of subspecies taxa as legal entities and its application to Rangifer tarandus Lin 1758 In C E Butler S P Mahoney eds Proceedings 4th North American Caribou Workshop 1989 St John s Newfoundland pp 1 76 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d e f g Geist Valerius 1998 Deer of the world their evolution behavior and ecology Mechanicsburg PA Stackpole Books ISBN 9780811704960 The wild reindeer areas in Norway Villrein no alt om villrein in Norwegian Retrieved 14 November 2022 Sami reindeer herding in Sweden in Swedish Retrieved 8 November 2023 a b c d e Mizin I A 2018 The current state of the wild reindeer in Russia general overview of the situation Barents office of WWF Russia Russian Arctic National Park for World Wildlife Fund Arkhangelsk Russia 8 pp a b Russell D E Gunn A 20 November 2013 Migratory Tundra Rangifer In Jeffries M O Richter Menge J A Overland J E eds Arctic Report Card 2013 PDF NOAA Arctic Research Program pp 96 101 Archived from the original PDF on 26 October 2022 Retrieved 16 November 2022 Kolpasshikov L Makhailov V Russell D E 2015 The role of harvest predators and socio political environment in the dynamics of the Taimyr wild reindeer herd with some lessons for North America PDF Ecology and Society 20 doi 10 5751 ES 07129 200109 Shapkin A 2017 About phenotypic variability of taimyr tundra wild reindeer Rangifer tarandus Genetika i razvedenie zivotnyh Genetics and Breeding of Animals in Russian and English 1 22 30 Kholodova M V Kolpashchikov L A Kuznetsova M V Baranova A I 2011 Genetic diversity of wild 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