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More than 200 dead reindeer found on Norway's Arctic Svalbard: Report

Xinhua | Updated: 2019-07-30 10:29
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Terrestrial ecologist Ashild Onvik Pedersen examines a reindeer cadaver in the Arctic archipelago Svalbard. [Photo/VCG]

OSLO - Norwegian researchers have found more than 200 reindeer that died of hunger on Norway's Arctic archipelago of Svalbard, public broadcaster NRK reported Saturday.

The catastrophe happened due to climate change and lack of food, and has never been these big, said three researchers from the Norwegian Polar Institute.

They had been monitored and counted reindeer in 10 weeks as that is a key species for understanding the tundra ecosystem.

The Norwegian Polar Institute has mapped the wild reindeer stock on Svalbard for 40 years.

"It is scary to find so many dead animals. This is a terrifying example of how climate change affects nature. It is just sad," said researcher Ashild Onvik Pedersen.

According to her, heavy rainfall on Svalbard in December made it difficult for the animals to find food.

"The reindeer graze all over Svalbard, and in the winter they dig up food from the tundra. They can dig through snow, but not ice," Onvik Pedersen told NRK.

She believed that the dead reindeer were all examples of how a milder climate has a major impact on wildlife in areas far from civilization, although it is almost untouched by humans.

Torkild Tveraa, researcher at the Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, told NRK that deer play an important role in Arctic ecosystems in Europe, Asia and North America.

"Reindeer is the largest herbivore in Arctic regions. If it disappears and thus does not eat, tramples and fertilizers around, the landscape will look very different," Tveraa said.

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