Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Almost every day': Japan battles spike in bear attacks

EUR -
AED 4.272782
AFN 73.880447
ALL 96.109812
AMD 438.463446
ANG 2.08227
AOA 1066.887849
ARS 1628.233031
AUD 1.622187
AWG 2.094217
AZN 1.98029
BAM 1.956959
BBD 2.34555
BDT 142.64448
BGN 1.91696
BHD 0.439262
BIF 3456.551108
BMD 1.163454
BND 1.481022
BOB 8.046869
BRL 6.008544
BSD 1.164625
BTN 106.923244
BWP 15.562618
BYN 3.420385
BYR 22803.699379
BZD 2.342148
CAD 1.577545
CDF 2530.51239
CHF 0.904201
CLF 0.0262
CLP 1034.531775
CNY 8.001
CNH 7.984128
COP 4317.449999
CRC 549.93988
CUC 1.163454
CUP 30.831532
CVE 110.331291
CZK 24.395265
DJF 207.378166
DKK 7.471661
DOP 69.913208
DZD 152.841149
EGP 60.462267
ERN 17.451811
ETB 180.643343
FJD 2.553195
FKP 0.864522
GBP 0.865185
GEL 3.164157
GGP 0.864522
GHS 12.565604
GIP 0.864522
GMD 84.932141
GNF 10209.353566
GTQ 8.929365
GYD 243.64744
HKD 9.106518
HNL 30.82405
HRK 7.535655
HTG 152.705033
HUF 383.843313
IDR 19622.816007
ILS 3.597755
IMP 0.864522
INR 106.923167
IQD 1525.616652
IRR 1537737.217723
ISK 145.698957
JEP 0.864522
JMD 182.732935
JOD 0.824877
JPY 183.931036
KES 150.25982
KGS 101.743875
KHR 4673.908704
KMF 492.141117
KPW 1047.148546
KRW 1704.564469
KWD 0.356738
KYD 0.970483
KZT 567.490971
LAK 24947.09643
LBP 104287.701151
LKR 361.999059
LRD 213.109877
LSL 18.955271
LTL 3.435378
LVL 0.703762
LYD 7.434627
MAD 10.859772
MDL 20.042473
MGA 4830.985696
MKD 61.655283
MMK 2442.597639
MNT 4166.223618
MOP 9.384298
MRU 46.226569
MUR 53.414002
MVR 17.986898
MWK 2019.348018
MXN 20.426646
MYR 4.565412
MZN 74.370691
NAD 18.955189
NGN 1627.753781
NIO 42.856671
NOK 11.192474
NPR 171.079732
NZD 1.957337
OMR 0.447347
PAB 1.164605
PEN 4.062706
PGK 5.020103
PHP 68.489047
PKR 325.382194
PLN 4.263402
PYG 7582.686331
QAR 4.246752
RON 5.089413
RSD 117.435566
RUB 91.96633
RWF 1702.552229
SAR 4.36661
SBD 9.367737
SCR 17.325815
SDG 699.235839
SEK 10.644243
SGD 1.478448
SHP 0.872892
SLE 28.665839
SLL 24397.048945
SOS 664.410626
SRD 43.674879
STD 24081.14983
STN 24.515257
SVC 10.190123
SYP 129.435751
SZL 18.960718
THB 36.671903
TJS 11.144792
TMT 4.083724
TND 3.405846
TOP 2.801318
TRY 51.265759
TTD 7.901782
TWD 36.9059
TZS 3020.32643
UAH 51.098681
UGX 4314.610934
USD 1.163454
UYU 46.968624
UZS 14155.444326
VES 506.912968
VND 30534.851541
VUV 138.94084
WST 3.177098
XAF 656.362652
XAG 0.013233
XAU 0.000224
XCD 3.144292
XCG 2.098761
XDR 0.816305
XOF 656.365475
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.602577
ZAR 18.906861
ZMK 10472.474231
ZMW 22.592963
ZWL 374.631729
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.25

    +0.13%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    14.46

    -0.14%

  • RYCEF

    0.7800

    17.68

    +4.41%

  • NGG

    -0.5600

    89.85

    -0.62%

  • GSK

    -0.1900

    55.32

    -0.34%

  • RIO

    1.3300

    91.68

    +1.45%

  • RELX

    -0.4900

    35.19

    -1.39%

  • BTI

    1.0800

    59.41

    +1.82%

  • BCE

    0.5100

    26.39

    +1.93%

  • AZN

    0.0400

    194.99

    +0.02%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    23.08

    -0.35%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    12.64

    +0.47%

  • BCC

    -1.9500

    72.54

    -2.69%

  • BP

    -0.7100

    39.94

    -1.78%

'Almost every day': Japan battles spike in bear attacks
'Almost every day': Japan battles spike in bear attacks / Photo: Caroline GARDIN - AFP

'Almost every day': Japan battles spike in bear attacks

The sense of fear is palpable in parts of northern Japan, where some locals have fastened bells to their bags hoping the noise will keep bears away, while signs warn people to be on guard.

Text size:

The animals have killed a record 13 across the country since April, with a steady flow of reports of bears entering homes, roaming near schools and rampaging in supermarkets.

"We hear news almost every day about people being attacked or injured," said 28-year-old Kakeru Matsuhashi, a traditional "Matagi" hunter, as he walked through a forest clutching a knife.

"It's becoming something that feels personal, and it's simply frightening," he added in the northern prefecture of Akita, an area hit by a series of attacks.

This year, the number of fatalities is double the previous record of 2023-24, with five months of the fiscal year still to go.

Data is patchy from certain regions, but in recent years, Japan has seen among the highest number of fatal attacks globally.

Keiji Minatoya, also from Akita, knows this too well -- a bear leapt from his garage, pinned him to the ground and sank its teeth into his face in 2023.

"I was thinking: 'This is how I die'", said 68-year-old Minatoya, who managed to escape and take refuge inside his home.

The government is now scrambling to deal with the surge in attacks, which scientists say is being driven by a fast-growing bear population combined with this year's bad acorn harvest, leaving some mountains "overcrowded" with hungry bears.

Troops have been deployed to provide logistical help for trapping and hunting bears, while riot police will be allowed to use rifles to shoot the animals, which can weigh half a tonne and outrun a human.

The victims include a 67-year-old man in Iwate, a region next to Akita, whose body was found outside his home, with animal bite marks and scars.

Hunters were called to the scene and shot a bear near the house.

Also in Iwate, a 60-year-old man is thought to have been attacked while cleaning an outdoor bath at a remote hot spring resort. His body was discovered in nearby woods.

Official data show the number of wounded is also on course to be a record, tallying over 100 people in the six months to September.

- 'Overcrowded' with bears -

A major issue is the expanding bear population, which is growing fast due to an abundance of food -- including acorns, deer and boars -- under the influence of a warming climate, experts say.

Japan's brown bear population has doubled in three decades, and now stands at around 12,000, while the number of Asian black bears has climbed on the country's main Honshu island, reaching 42,000, according to a recent government report.

Some mountains have become "overcrowded", according to Naoki Ohnishi, researcher at the Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute.

"Put simply, the size of the bear population has gone beyond the capacity of the mountains to hold them," he said.

Although rising temperatures have led to more frequent bumper crops of acorns, the nuts still produce good and bad harvests every two to five years as part of their normal crop cycle.

This year, as well as in 2023 -- the year Minatoya was attacked -- there is a poor supply.

While most bears still stay in the mountains, recent bad harvests have led some -- together with their cubs -- to wander into towns to look for food, said Shinsuke Koike, professor at the Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology.

With exposure to humans, cubs in particular become less fearful and develop a taste for farmed produce and common fruits such as persimmon, Koike added.

Steady rural depopulation due to a chronically low birthrate and young people moving to cities has also reduced the human presence at the edges of forests and mountains, blurring the traditional boundaries between people and bears.

"Bear habitats inched closer to human habitats in 2023," Ohnishi said. "This year, they are coming a step further because they are starting from where they left off."

- 'Witnessing a disaster' -

Hajime Nakae, professor of emergency and critical medicine at the Akita University Hospital, said the frequent bear sightings made him feel like he was "living inside... a safari park for bears".

The doctor, who has treated bear injuries for three decades, explained the nature of wounds was changing as bears become less afraid of humans.

In encounters years ago, a startled bear may have struck a human in the face before fleeing but now "they charge at you from about 10 metres and then leap at you".

He said that without meaningful intervention he expected bear injuries to increase and spread to other parts of the nation, adding: "We are witnessing a disaster."

"Thorough culling" to reduce the number of bears is the only effective way to reduce the risk for local people, researcher Ohnishi said.

Last year, the government added bears to the list of animals subject to population control, reversing protection that had helped bears thrive.

But rural resources are stretched thin and the number of hunters is less than half of what it was in 1980.

As of 2020, the latest statistics available, there were around 220,000, mostly in their 60s or older.

Japan culled more than 9,000 bears in 2023-2024, and over 4,200 between April to September this year.

Akita has alone culled over 1,000 so far.

In the immediate future, Japan's worries should ease, if only temporarily.

Experts Koike and Ohnishi said hibernation patterns had not shifted and the bears would soon go to sleep for the winter.

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)