The Prague Post - Dogs, antennas and honey for Japan's big bear problem

EUR -
AED 4.309461
AFN 80.955902
ALL 97.033917
AMD 449.913431
ANG 2.099894
AOA 1075.886894
ARS 1706.304664
AUD 1.765215
AWG 2.111882
AZN 1.999213
BAM 1.95618
BBD 2.363728
BDT 142.827717
BGN 1.957891
BHD 0.442316
BIF 3458.206488
BMD 1.173268
BND 1.505573
BOB 8.10947
BRL 6.276166
BSD 1.173613
BTN 103.528061
BWP 15.633834
BYN 3.975188
BYR 22996.046539
BZD 2.360449
CAD 1.624547
CDF 3326.214299
CHF 0.934414
CLF 0.028557
CLP 1120.295109
CNY 8.359185
CNH 8.360131
COP 4571.3442
CRC 591.214729
CUC 1.173268
CUP 31.091594
CVE 110.727185
CZK 24.302422
DJF 208.513594
DKK 7.463678
DOP 74.179896
DZD 152.197504
EGP 56.51232
ERN 17.599015
ETB 167.953728
FJD 2.626599
FKP 0.864858
GBP 0.865197
GEL 3.156548
GGP 0.864858
GHS 14.31839
GIP 0.864858
GMD 83.893157
GNF 10160.49853
GTQ 8.997631
GYD 245.535555
HKD 9.129553
HNL 30.693138
HRK 7.534489
HTG 153.569147
HUF 390.369041
IDR 19251.562737
ILS 3.91398
IMP 0.864858
INR 103.576662
IQD 1536.980662
IRR 49365.238073
ISK 143.197773
JEP 0.864858
JMD 188.266534
JOD 0.831893
JPY 173.113891
KES 151.942625
KGS 102.60271
KHR 4697.764204
KMF 492.190243
KPW 1055.883528
KRW 1633.897018
KWD 0.358234
KYD 0.978077
KZT 634.605036
LAK 25430.577385
LBP 105066.121203
LKR 354.110227
LRD 208.842056
LSL 20.380107
LTL 3.464355
LVL 0.709698
LYD 6.347825
MAD 10.573782
MDL 19.493534
MGA 5244.506939
MKD 61.551945
MMK 2462.770377
MNT 4220.058209
MOP 9.407945
MRU 46.831025
MUR 53.388069
MVR 17.963172
MWK 2039.139633
MXN 21.647263
MYR 4.933636
MZN 74.98398
NAD 20.380102
NGN 1764.993945
NIO 43.063291
NOK 11.577565
NPR 165.636025
NZD 1.969741
OMR 0.451121
PAB 1.173673
PEN 4.08771
PGK 4.91017
PHP 67.069265
PKR 330.396521
PLN 4.253002
PYG 8386.627482
QAR 4.271403
RON 5.067388
RSD 117.126184
RUB 97.507745
RWF 1695.371798
SAR 4.401787
SBD 9.648687
SCR 17.720869
SDG 705.724823
SEK 10.949491
SGD 1.504593
SHP 0.922004
SLE 27.436909
SLL 24602.834246
SOS 670.526776
SRD 46.19746
STD 24284.27217
STN 24.873275
SVC 10.26803
SYP 15254.688545
SZL 20.36836
THB 37.229001
TJS 11.043749
TMT 4.106437
TND 3.406746
TOP 2.747915
TRY 48.528233
TTD 7.979446
TWD 35.554748
TZS 2886.238887
UAH 48.384295
UGX 4124.853191
USD 1.173268
UYU 47.009323
UZS 14624.78203
VES 184.8267
VND 30956.667752
VUV 140.114972
WST 3.117277
XAF 656.075928
XAG 0.027737
XAU 0.000322
XCD 3.170815
XCG 2.115183
XDR 0.815739
XOF 656.447483
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.119147
ZAR 20.375612
ZMK 10560.821252
ZMW 27.844047
ZWL 377.791714
  • RIO

    -0.1000

    62.44

    -0.16%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    24.36

    -0.08%

  • NGG

    0.5300

    71.6

    +0.74%

  • RELX

    0.1700

    46.5

    +0.37%

  • BTI

    -0.7200

    56.59

    -1.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.3000

    15.42

    +1.95%

  • SCS

    -0.1900

    16.81

    -1.13%

  • GSK

    -0.6500

    40.83

    -1.59%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    24.4

    +0.04%

  • BP

    -0.5800

    33.89

    -1.71%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    11.85

    -0.08%

  • BCE

    -0.1400

    24.16

    -0.58%

  • AZN

    -1.5400

    79.56

    -1.94%

  • BCC

    -3.3300

    85.68

    -3.89%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    14.23

    +0.77%

Dogs, antennas and honey for Japan's big bear problem
Dogs, antennas and honey for Japan's big bear problem / Photo: Richard A. Brooks - AFP

Dogs, antennas and honey for Japan's big bear problem

Thousands of bears are being shot in Japan each year as they become more and more of a problem. Junpei Tanaka and his dog Rela, straining at her leash in the woods, have a kinder, smarter way.

Text size:

People moving from rural areas and Japan's ageing society -- plus climate change affecting bears' food and hibernation time -- are prompting ever more of the hungry animals to approach towns.

Reliable data is hard to find but bear numbers also appear to have rocketed, with one newspaper estimating they had roughly tripled in 11 years in some places. Sightings have almost doubled this year.

The increasing frequency of these powerful animals -- which in the case of brown bears can weigh half a tonne (1,100 pounds) and outrun a human -- coming into contact with people has created alarming headlines.

This year is on track to be the deadliest for humans since the government started collating data in 2006, with six people killed by bears, including one elderly woman in her garden in October.

The severed head of a fisherman was found by a lake in May. A bear was reportedly spotted with his waders dangling from its mouth.

Another 212 people, also a record, have been injured in attacks.

One bear attacked six people in a single day in October, including an 83-year-old woman and a schoolgirl waiting for a bus in the northern town of Kitaakita.

- Animal-lovers -

It's been far worse for the bears.

On average over the past five years, 4,895 have been killed each year, according to figures from the Environment Ministry.

As of November 30, 6,287 have died in this fiscal year (to March), around 2,000 of them in November alone. Usually, they are shot.

"This year, it's expected to go as high as 8,000," said Tanaka, 50, a bear expert who works for the Picchio Wildlife Research Center.

This is prompting unease in a country -- three-quarters of it mountainous -- that thinks of itself as living in harmony with nature.

"For a long time, Japanese people co-existed with wild animals... They believed in the presence of gods in every kind of living thing and avoided unnecessary killing," Tanaka said.

"But now, it has become difficult to segregate the wild and human areas due to the change in environment, change in social structures and change in people's lifestyles," he said.

- Reliable -

Tanaka says his project in Karuizawa, a town surrounded by woods in the shadow of a volcano 90 minutes from Tokyo by bullet train, is a "forerunner" of what can be done without resorting to killing the bears.

In the dead of night -- when the bears are most active -- Tanaka demonstrates the methods used by his organisation, which he says keeps both humans and bears safe.

He and his team set barrel traps, with honey inside, to capture any bears that start to lose their fear of humans. They are fitted with a radio collar and released, far away.

The town has also installed bear-proof rubbish collection points -- the slot for the door handle is too small for a paw -- and appealed to locals to be more aware.

But the key component in the non-lethal efforts is Tanaka's amber-eyed, keen-nosed canine Rela and the rest of the team of specially trained Karelian Bear Dogs, a sturdy and fearless breed originally from Finland.

"They are very reliable staff of the team. They are our colleagues," Tanaka tells AFP.

Picchio acquired Rela's mother from the Wind River Bear Institute in the United States, whose bear biologist founder Carrie Hunt has pioneered the use of dogs in bear control.

Heading out in his small van in the pre-dawn mist, Tanaka first waggles around a metre-long (three-foot) antenna to triangulate the location of any nearby bears fitted with a radio collar.

"You got the bear scent? Okay, let's go!" Tanaka says in English -- like all his commands -- to the dog.

He and Rela then head fearlessly out over the hill and once they find a bear -- unseen by AFP staying safely at a distance -- the dog emits a fierce bark and scares it away.

- 'Bear shepherding' -

This "bear shepherding" method is unique in Japan, although other places are interested, said city official Masashi Tsuchiya.

"Bears are dangerous animals, so it is true that we did receive some voices from local residents that bears should be killed," Tsuchiya told AFP.

"But thanks to the Picchio programme, we have learned that we can control and monitor bears' behavioural patterns by identifying each individual animal, attaching a radio collar and pushing them away from the town," he said.

Japan has two types of bears. Around Karuizawa they are all Asian black bears -- also known as moon bears -- and the bigger brown bears live on the northern island of Hokkaido.

Moon bears always live in forests and don't like being seen but brown bears, which are bigger, come out in the open. And while brown bears "bluff" attacks, moon bears do not.

"Most of the time they run away from humans. But once they get in trouble with a human and get into a panic, they attack," Tanaka said.

"And they don't retreat."

C.Zeman--TPP