“…In summer, both temperature and precipitation are known to affect the quality and quantity of food plants (Nielsen et al, 2012), and, in turn, body growth of moose and reindeer (Bø & Hjeljord, 1991; Herfindal, Sæther, et al, 2006; Seddon, Macias‐Fauria, Long, Benz, & Willis, 2016; Solberg, Loison, Gaillard, & Heim, 2004; Tveraa et al, 2007, 2013). Temperature during the plant growing season seems to be particularly important, probably because plants rarely experience drought in Northern Europe (Quetin & Swann, 2017; Seddon et al, 2016). During warm summers, many ungulates may also experience considerable levels of insect harassment, leading to behavioural trade‐off between foraging and insect avoidance, particularly in reindeer (Colman et al, 2003; Hagemoen & Reimers, 2002).…”