Jump to content

Recommended Posts

any hunters out there?

 

---------------------------------

 

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061024/od_uk_nm/oukoe_uk_life_japan_bears_1

 

As Japan's people grow older, bears grow bolder

 

Tue Oct 24, 7:05 AM ET

 

Scarce acorns, silent guns and rural depopulation are bringing Japan's bears out of the woods.

 

The number of Japanese black bears caught feasting in fields of sweet corn, apples and other crops has jumped this year, with the animals increasingly undisturbed by hunters, whose ranks are dwindling as the population ages.

 

"There are plenty of bears out there who've never even heard a gunshot, so if they do see people, they think it's OK not to run away," said Hidetake Hayashi of the Shinshu Black Bear Research Group, which monitors bears in Nagano prefecture.

 

Black bears can grow to about 1.5 metres (5 ft) in height and weigh 100 kg (220 lbs) or more.

 

Docile when left alone, they can be dangerous if caught unawares, and recent newscasts have reported attacks on humans.

 

The number of hunters in Japan has fallen from almost half a million in the late 1970s to about 150,000 in 2005, according to Dainihon Ryoyukai, the Japan hunters' association, so people might appear less intimidating to their ursine neighbours.

 

In Gifu prefecture, rangers have shot 121 bears since the start of April, six times as many as in the previous 12 months, the Yomiuri daily reported.

 

Gifu University's Professor Toshio Tsubota, who heads the Japan Bear Network, a nationwide body involved in bear research, said a skimpy acorn crop this year was the most likely cause of the rise in number of sightings.

 

The shortage of their favourite food has forced the bears to seek other sustenance before hibernating at the end of autumn.

 

A longer-term reason was rural depopulation, Tsubota added. As fewer villagers venture into the woods to chop down trees for firewood, the border zone between forest and village has eroded.

 

"The villages have thinned out," the Shinshu group's Hayashi said. "Bears may now think it's all right for them to be there."

 

But ultimately, he said, there was no clear single reason for the sharp rise in sightings.

 

"You'll have to go and ask the bears," he said.

Link to post
Share on other sites

I've only been in Japan for 5 months. My girlfriend and I went for a little weekend drive last week into Gunma. Driving back from the Prince Hotel at Minakami/Fujiwara we nearly ran one of the blighters over. We were both caught by suprise; he/she ran off into the bushes and I did a quick u-turn and pulled off to the side of the round. After a couple of minutes the bear wandered back out and had a sniff round the car. Didn't really seemed that fazed by the whole thing actually. Judging by its behaviour i can understand how they'd be coming into conflict with humans.

 

I for one was stoked though. Apparently you're pretty lucky if you see a wild bear in Japan - especially 2 hours drive from Tokyo!

Link to post
Share on other sites

my wife has now got me expecting to run into a bear whenever I go out for a trail run-not inconceivable I guess as bears were sighted in mountains close to here a few years ago-seems odd that they would come come so close to a huge metropolis like this.

Link to post
Share on other sites
×
×
  • Create New...