Questionable claim: ‘Reindeer adapt to climate change by eating seaweed’

From the NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY and the “blaming climate change for anything odd is now fair game” department.

Stable isotope studies of reindeer poop reveals survival secret

Reindeer adapt to climate change by eating seaweed

The bodies of Svalbard reindeer are extremely well adapted to their arctic home at 79 degrees N latitude. As the northernmost reindeer population on the planet, they are thick and round, which makes it easier for them to tolerate the cold.

They’re shorter, smaller and much more sedentary than their cousins on mainland Europe and North America, too. All these characteristics make them much more physiologically efficient, enabling them to survive long cold nights on the sparse vegetation on the island archipelago.

Given Svalbard’s extreme winters, however, you might guess that global warming might make it easier for the roughly 20000 reindeer that live there to thrive. A new study from a team of researchers led by the Norwegian University of Science and Technology shows that this isn’t necessarily so.

Winter climate change now makes for tougher conditions for these reindeer — enough to force them to eat seaweed, which is not their normal fodder, the researchers report in an article in Ecosphere. But this adaptive behaviour may be one key to their long-term survival.

Desperate measures during icy winters

Biologist Brage Bremset Hansen, from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology’s Centre for Biodiversity Dynamics, and his colleagues have been studying reindeer on Svalbard for decades — long enough to begin to notice an increasing number of warm winters where rain would fall on the snowpack, creating an impenetrable layer of ice on the ground.

The layer of ice makes it difficult, if not impossible, for reindeer to get at the small plants and grasses they graze on during the winter. So what do the reindeer do? They start eating seaweed, Hansen and his colleagues from the Norwegian Polar Institute, the University of Alaska Anchorage, the University of Aarhus in Denmark and UNIS, the University Centre in Svalbard found.


Yes, that reindeer is eating seaweed. But more than visible proof, researchers have studied stable isotopes in reindeer poop, which confirms that reindeer do eat seaweed.
CREDIT Photo: Brage B. Hansen/NTNU

The researchers started their study because of one particularly bad winter when the tundra was covered with ice. Then, they observed that roughly one-third of all the reindeer they saw were feeding at the shore, rather than trying to paw through the ice to reach tundra grasses.

Hansen said he and his colleagues assumed the reindeer were feeding on seaweed, “but of course you need more hard-core evidence to show that this was linked to poor conditions, not just coincidence.”

Poop isotopes help distinguish between diets

So they devised a way to figure out if indeed reindeer were eating seaweed, and why.

This involved — and there is no polite way to say it — collecting and testing their poop. It turns out that researchers can distinguish between different kinds of food animals eat by testing their hair or their scat for isotopes.

In this case, the researchers collected reindeer poop from animals that were in habitats near the shore as well as from animals that lived in areas far from the shore. They then looked at stable isotope ratios of carbon, nitrogen and sulphur, all of which will have values that are detectably different in scat from reindeer that eat seaweed compared to scat from reindeer with a more traditional diet of terrestrial plants.

The researchers also had nine years of data for ground ice thickness, which they called basal ice. They combined this with GPS collar data, and location data from a total of 2199 reindeer observations during those years. They were then able to calculate where the reindeer were with respect to the coastline, and to see if more reindeer went to the coast to feed in years when the ground ice was thicker.

Bad winters make for a seaweed diet

It turns out that, yes, when thick ice covered their preferred food, reindeer will eat seaweed, the researchers found.

But they don’t exclusively feed on seaweed, the stable isotope and GPS collar data suggested, and instead eat as a supplementary source of nutrition.

“It seems they can’t sustain themselves on seaweed. They do move back and forth between the shore and the few ice-free vegetation patches every day, so it is obvious that they have to combine it with normal food, whatever they can find,” Hansen said, adding that the researchers had not done any physiological tests to see how much nutrition the reindeer actually get from seaweed.

Eating seaweed may provide a few extra calories to the reindeer, but it came at a cost: seaweed eaters had a lot of diarrhea, probably from the salt, Hansen said.

“When conditions are harsh, during bad winters, the reindeer do tend to be more often at the beach, and yes, they eat seaweed, confirming our hypothesis,” Hansen said. Although eating seaweed isn’t ideal, he said, it does show the animals are able to adapt, which is the good news.

“The bigger picture is that, although we sometimes observe that populations crash during extremely icy winters, the reindeer are surprisingly adaptive,” he said. “They have different solutions for new problems like rapid climate change, they have a variety of strategies, and most are able survive surprisingly hard conditions.”

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Commentary by Anthony:

The idea that this is a new phenomena that is a response to climate change, seems on the face of it, an absurd claim. Basically the researchers are saying that before “climate change” became the universal boogeyman on which anything out of the ordinary can be pinned on, that reindeer never had to face harsh winters before.

I asked zoologist Dr. Susan Crockford about it, and she had this to say:

I do know that reindeer, like most ungulates, are very attracted to salt. i.e., ‘salt licks’ (the ocean seaweed is salty). I can’t imagine it’s a new phenomenon, just a newly-discovered one.

It has been suggested that the salt in the urine deposited by Lapp herders has been one of the things that has kept semi-domesticated reindeer from just wandering off, since they are not truly ‘tamed’ or controlled by fencing, etc.

Also, sheep in northern Scotland are known to eat kelp when there is no other forage.

I found the reference to the Kelp claim about sheep in Wikipedia of all places: North Ronaldsay sheep

Studies have shown that, due to preference and availability, the sheep eat mainly brown kelps. This discovery led to suggestions that kelp may be of use as an alternative food source for other livestock.[38]

The grazing habits of the sheep have also adapted to their unusual diet: instead of grazing during the day and ruminating (digesting) at night as other sheep generally do, the North Ronaldsays graze as the tide uncovers the shore (twice in 24 hours), ruminating at high water.[39] Feeding begins around 3.5 hours after high tide as the areas of kelp and seaweed are exposed. Four hours later, which is just after the low tide, feeding ends, allowing rumination to begin. This cycle reduces the chance of the sheep becoming stranded at sea by the incoming tide.[40]

Unusually for sheep, the North Ronaldsay fattens in winter when storms throw larger amounts of kelp and seaweed onto the shore and food is abundant.[41]

Seems to [me] that the reindeer “discovery” is much ado about nothing, and certainly nothing to do with “climate change”.

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ozspeaksup
April 25, 2019 3:34 am

sheep goats cattle and horse all enjoy seaweed snackies and its good for them, bullkelp meal is over 200$au a bag sold as stock food additive here in aus. the fools in power banned people using seaweed collected from beaches years ago. yet commercial suppliers get the nod?
some seaweeds are now proven to kill or regress cancers.
almost all Sth Aus beaches were loaded with seaweed in huge rafts when i was young, 15yrs later it was hard to find any, the reason??? sewage effluent pumped into the gulf killed the seagrasses very efficiently.
but getting anyone to admit that has taken years and even now its easier to blame warming or farmers runoff than admit the truth

Philip Finck
April 25, 2019 6:02 am

The story is hog wash. Growing up on an offshore island in Nova Scotia I can assure you that deer eating seaweed, and in particular kelp, isn’t anything special. In fact it is the norm. During a fine sunny day in the summer a typical walk around Flat Island, about an hour jaunt, will reveal about 20 white tail deer. The vast majority will look up at you from the beach with a long streamer of kelp in their mouth. Again. this is summer with lots of available on land forage. It isn’t winter with a lack of food due to snow or ice cover on land. Not just deer but also cattle. In years when hay was scarce or rotted in the barns due to wet weather the islanders would feed the cattle seaweed. They didn’t taste great but they lived just fine. Climate change my butt.

HD Hoese
Reply to  Philip Finck
April 25, 2019 10:08 am

I recall meeting someone on a beach collecting seaweed (red, I think) to sell in Nova Scotia (1997) and buying some in a store, some different name used that I forget. I think I was the only one who ate it.

Isotopes are used a lot now to determine diet (habitat), not sure how much verification has been done, these somewhat skeptical with solutions (Phillips, D. L. and J. W. Gregg. 2001. Uncertainty in source partitioning using stable isotopes. Oecologia 127:171–179; 2003. Source partitioning using stable isotopes: coping with too many sources. Oecologia 136:261–269).

April 25, 2019 9:20 am

Bobbing the antlers off the reindeer didn’t help their ability to break ice.

tty
April 25, 2019 9:32 am

“They’re shorter, smaller and much more sedentary than their cousins on mainland Europe and North America, too. All these characteristics make them much more physiologically efficient”

They fail to mention the main reason that Svalbard reindeer have short legs (they are known as “dachshund reindeer”) and are much less mobile than other reindeer. There are no wolves or other predators there.

Incidentally there was once a similar reindeer population on Franz Josephs Land. They died out about 4,000 years ago when climate grew colder.

RoHa
April 25, 2019 7:34 pm

When do we start seeing aquatic reindeer diving for seaweed?