To the Top
The 3 steps are Choose table, Choose variable and Show result. You are currently at Choose variable

Number of hunting days

Choose variables

7/8/2025
9/16/2011
OSF: Natural Resources Institute Finland, Hunting
0400_mets
Luke/Tilastot
Now you have come to the page, Choose variable. This page give you the oportunity to select which variables and values you want to display in your result of the table. A variable is a property of a statistical unit. The page is divided into several boxes, one for each variable, where you can select values by click to highlight one or more values. It always starts with the statistics variable which is the main value counted in the table.
Mandatory

Selected 1 of total 2

Mandatory
Field for searching for a specific value in the list box. This is examples of values you can search for.2008 , 2009 , 2010 ,

Selected 1 of total 17

Field for searching for a specific value in the list box. This is examples of values you can search for.WHOLE COUNTRY , Ylä-Lappi , Keski-Lappi ,

Selected 0 of total 19

Optional variable
Mandatory

Selected 0 of total 4

Number of selected data cells are:
(maximum number allowed is 10,000,000)

Presentation on screen is limited to 10,000 rows and 100 columns

Number of selected cells exceeds the maximum allowed 10,000,000

Information

Relative standard error (%)

The relative standard error is the ratio of the standard error of a variable to its expected value. In tables, it is expressed as a percentage.
The standard error estimates the effect of sampling error on the accuracy of a variable. The 90% confidence interval for a point estimate published in the statistics is calculated using the relative standard error as follows: Point estimate ± 1.64 × relative standard error × point estimate.
Example: In 2024, the black grouse bag was 76,300 individuals, and the relative standard error was 5.7 percent. The calculation is: 76,300 ± 1.64 × 0.057 × 76,300.
In practice, this means that with 90 percent probability, the black grouse harvest in 2024 was between 69,167 and 83,433 individuals.