Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Dead-Tree-with-Fungi-27MZIFLUWOQX.htmlConceptually similarDead Tree with FungiGP0KEXCompleted★★★★Dead Pine TreeGP01BJICompleted★★★★Dead Pine TreeGP0QUPCompleted★★★★Fallen Tree with FungiGP014HPCompleted★★★★Tree Stump with FungiGP014HRCompleted★★★★Old Growth ForestGP0FC8Completed★★★★Natural ForestGP0WQLCompleted★★★★WoodlandGP0URCCompleted★★★★Forests - Sami People and forest documentation (Finland : 2004)GP011L5Completed★★★★View AllGP01E1JDead Tree with FungiDead tree with fungi, typical for old-growth forest in natural state. Trees like this can stay up for several hundreds years after they are dead before they fall to the ground. Standing dead trees are an important habitat for several red-listed species in Finland. They are increasingly rare in Southern Finland due to modern forest management methods.Locations:Finland-Lapland (Finland)-Peurakaira-ScandinaviaDate:1 Jan, 2004Credit:© Matti Snellman / GreenpeaceMaximum size:2052px X 3076pxKeywords:Boreal forests-Day-Forests (campaign title)-Fungus-KWCI (GPI)-Low angle view-Outdoors-TreesShoot:Documentation on Sami People and Forests in FinlandFree grazing is the special feature of the Sami herding culture. The reindeers live and feed in their natural environment, if this environment were to disappear then so would the Sami culture and the reindeer's natural habitat. Meanwhile the Finnish state owned logging company Metsälitilus continues to deplete the traditional reindeer grazing areas. Some reindeer herders have filed a lawsuit against the Finnish state with the UN human rights committee.