Federal subjects The district comprises the
West Siberian (part) and
East Siberian economic regions and ten
federal subjects: {{Historical populations
Religion and ethnicity According to a 2012 survey, 28.9% of the population of the current federal subjects of the Siberian Federal District (excluding Buryatia and Zabaykalsky Krai) adhere to the
Russian Orthodox Church, 5.2% are unaffiliated generic Christians, 1.9% are Orthodox believers without belonging to any church or adhere to other (non-Russian)
Orthodox churches, 1.4% are
Muslim, 1.2% are
Buddhist, and 1.6% adhere to some native faith such as
Rodnovery,
Tengrism, or Tuvan
Shamanism. In addition, 33.2% of the population declare to be "spiritual but not religious", 18.7% are
atheist, and 7.9% follow other religions or did not give an answer to the question. Ethnic composition, according to the 2010 census: • Total – 19,256,426 •
Russians – 16,542,506 (85.91%) •
Buryats – 442,794 (2.30%) •
Tuvans – 259,971 (1.35%) •
Ukrainians – 227,353 (1.18%) •
Tatars – 204,321 (1.06%) •
Germans – 198,109 (1.03%) •
Kazakhs – 117,507 (0.61%) •
Altaians – 72,841 (0.38%) •
Khakass — 70,859 (0.37%) •
Armenians – 63,091 (0.33%) •
Azerbaijanis – 54,762 (0.28%) •
Belarusians – 47 829 (0.25%) •
Uzbeks – 41,799 (0.22%) •
Chuvash – 40,527 (0.21%) •
Tajiks – 32,419 (0.17%) •
Kyrgyz — 30,871 (0.16%) •
Mordva – 19,238 (0.10%) •
Roma – 15,162 (0.08%) •
Bashkirs – 12 929 (0.07%) •
Shors – 12 397 (0.06%) •
Koreans – 11,193 (0.06%) •
Moldovans – 11 155 (0.06%) •
Evenks – 10,243 (0.05%) •
Jews – 9,642 (0.05%) •
Mari – 9,116 (0.05%) •
Chinese — 9,075 (0.05%) •
Udmurts – 8,822 (0.05%) •
Poles – 8,435 (0.04%) •
Georgians – 7,884 (0.04%) •
Estonians – 7,112 (0.04%) •
Dolgans – 5,854 (0.03%) • Persons who did not indicate nationality – 561,206 (2.91%) ==Presidential plenipotentiary envoys==