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    <title>Outdoor Japan</title>
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	      <title>Bears in Japan</title>
		  <desciption><![CDATA[<p>When most people think of Japan, they think of reliable cars and  electronics, or perhaps karaoke or manga, recently maybe even whales &ndash;  but bears? Probably not. And yet there are lots of bears in this  country; two species to be exact, the Asiatic black bear and brown  bears.</p>
<p><img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue22/Bears_in_Japan_1.jpg" />Historically, Asiatic black bears (Ursus thibetanus) occupied all of  Kyushu, Shikoku and Honshu, while brown bears (U. arctos, grizzlies in  North America) ruled Hokkaido. Their ranges have been much reduced over  the centuries, and black bears became extinct on Kyushu in the 1950s and  are restricted to very small pockets of Shikoku.  <br />
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In Honshu, there are estimated to be more than 15,000 bears, although  even here some isolated populations are endangered. The 1,000&ndash;2,000  brown bears in Hokkaido are now confined to mountainous areas. Bears are  difficult to count in Japan&rsquo;s rough and densely vegetated topography,  and population statistics remain vague at best.<br />
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So many bears, so many people. There&rsquo;s regular contact and conflict  between the two in fields, bee yards and other places. It&rsquo;s inevitable  considering bears eat literally everything we do and a few things that  would turn us yellow.<br />
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Unfortunately, bear conservation and  researching preventive conflict methods have not been priorities in  Japan. Live wild bears have no economical value, but dead bears do. Bear  gall bladders have been in traditional Chinese medicine for thousands  of years. <br />
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Even though the pharmaceutical companies synthetically produce the  active ingredients contained in a bear gall bladder, some patients still  prefer the wild variety.  This may help explain why non-lethal damage  control methods have been spurned to the benefit of lethal methods.  <br />
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On average, more than 1,000 bears are killed each year just in damage control actions.&nbsp;<br />
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<to>  Most bear populations in Japan have somehow sustained themselves despite  the death rate over the last few decades. If they hadn&rsquo;t&mdash;all rather  than just a few&mdash;of the remaining populations would be endangered or  extinct. </to><br />
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<to>  The problem lies more in the fact that this lethal damage control  method, which has been applied more or less across the board regardless  of the health of specific bear populations, has failed to reduce damage  to acceptable levels. </to></p>
<p>Nationwide, each year, people are still mauled or even killed, and  damage to property still ranges in the hundreds of millions of yen,  which fuels local demands for more kills. Clearly, more effective  methods are required. <br />
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<to>  Unfortunately, the various levels of government have been very slow to  allocate research funds and get interested in bear management and  conservation issues.</to><br />
<to>  In a way, the existing system has worked. There are thousands of  conflicts each year, the majority of which require some sort of  management action. Hunters work thousands of hours on a voluntary basis  to control bear nuisances, partly because they can keep the bears they  kill and profit from the sale of their parts. </to><br />
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<to>  They would quickly lose interest if non-lethal methods were more widely  applied, and no amount of voluntary work could effectively replace them;  there is just too much. Paying government workers might do, but because  of the amount of work and expertise involved, it could actually cost  more than the value of the damage itself. </to><to></to></p>
<p><to><img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue22/Bears_in_Japan_2.jpg" />Making farmers and other property owners more responsible, and  encouraging them to use preventive methods such as electrical fences,  might help, but may also simply shift damage to unprotected areas  farther from the edge of the forests. There are many bears ready to risk  their lives to get a stomach full of delicious, easy-to-harvest  anthropogenic food.</to><to><br />
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In truth, the system is slowly evolving. The government is slowly  getting more interested and involved, sometimes asking hunters to limit  the number of bears they kill or encouraging property owners to use  preventive methods; occasionally, even helping fund scientific research  projects. </to><to><br />
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As a bear researcher, I am confident there will be at least some wild  bears in Japan for a long time, but I am very worried about some local  and isolated populations. A few of those are now partially protected and  may recover, but others may disappear unless killing moratoriums are  enforced at least until scientific research ascertains their health and  determines sustainable harvest rates. </to><to><br />
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Bears have already disappeared from Kyushu and most of Shikoku and  western Japan and current management approaches may not protect isolated  populations further north. I hope stakeholders will begin meaningful  discussions resulting in a consensus on the issues to ensure the  long-term survival of bears in Japan.</to></p>
<p><strong>JAPAN BEAR HIKES</strong><br />
Oscar started leading two-day summer bear-viewing hikes in the Japanese Alps in 2007 to help raise awareness and funding for the NPO he co-founded. So far all the participants have seen at least one bear and some as many as four. If you are interested in supporting the NPO&rsquo;s bear studies and having a great time this summer with a knowledgeable guide, visit <a target="_blank" href="http://www.withoscar.com/viewbears">www.withoscar.com/viewbears</a> (English) <a target="_blank" href="http://www.shinshukumaken.com">www.shinshukumaken.com</a> (Japanese).</p>]]></desciption>	
	      <author><![CDATA[Oscar C. Huygens]]></author>
	      <pubDate>Fri, 23 Jul 2010 07:09:16 +0000</pubDate>
	      <link>http://www.outdoorjapan.com/magazine/story_rss/99</link>
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