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Bear attacks surge in Japan, environmental change blamed

Key tiger habitats in Russia at risk of destruction: WWF
Moscow (AFP) Oct 20, 2010 - Nature conservation body WWF on Wednesday said key tiger habitats in Russia's Far East were slated for logging in what would be a new blow to the dwindling population of the highly endangered Amur tiger. Next week the local government in Primorsky region is planning to auction off some 28,000 cubic metres (990,000 cubic feet) of forest which includes cedar and oak forest inhabited by the Amur tiger, said Denis Smirnov, head of forest programme at WWF Russia's Amur Branch.

"Essentially these are the key habitat areas for the Amur tiger," Smirnov told AFP by phone from the regional capital Vladivostok. "That is being done under the guise of improvement felling," he said, referring to the cutting down of damaged or old trees. Once a tree felling permit is obtained, it will be next to impossible to control how much timber will be cut, he said. The timber parcels slated for logging October 26 include forestland in a future nature reserve that contains a cross-border habitat corridor between Russia and China.

Betweeen 400 and 500 tigers remain in the wild in Russia, and a further 20 to 25 live in China. Degradation of the animal's habitat and poaching of the tiger and its prey are blamed for its rapid disappearance. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in the past years has made a big show of his love for nature, publicly kissing animals and engaging in a string of stunts involving wildlife including tigers, leopards, bears and whales. Late next month Russia is scheduled to host a tiger summit in Saint Petersburg expected to be attended by Putin.
by Staff Writers
Tokyo (AFP) Oct 20, 2010
Bear attacks have shot up in Japan this year and sightings of the animals have spiked, a trend blamed on climatic changes and shifting land use patterns, officials and media reports said Wednesday.

At least four people were killed and 80 wounded in bear attacks between April and September in the island-nation, much of which is covered in mountain forests, topping last year's total of 64 attacks, said broadcaster NHK.

Some 400 bears were shot dead near human-populated areas by authorised hunters on Japan's far-northern island of Hokkaido alone, where two people were mauled to death by bears earlier this year, a local official said.

In the mountainous central prefecture of Fukushima, northeast of Tokyo, more than 150 bears were shot dead after they encroached on residential areas.

Some wildlife experts have blamed a record heat wave this summer which impacted the omnivores' natural food sources and sent the Asiatic black bears foraging for food in more densely populated farming and residential areas.

"The extremely hot summer and other climatic factors may have led to a shortage of acorns or nuts in woodlands this year," said Tatsuo Sato, an official of the Fukushima prefectural government.

In some areas habitat destruction is blamed for forcing the bears into closer contact with humans. In other parts, farms are being abandoned and reclaimed by nature, reducing buffer zone with the bears' natural habitats.

In the latest reported encounter, police and hunters went on the hunt Wednesday in Fukuchiyama, Kyoto prefecture, after a one-metre (three-foot) tall bear was sighted in a residential area. Noone was injured.

Another bear was hit by a train on Tuesday in Shiga prefecture, central Japan, a railway company official said.

"We should be fully aware that bears are expanding their range into our living areas," said an official in Hokkaido, which is home to 1,800-3,600 bears.

He also offered some safety advice to local residents: "In the unfortunate case of a bear encounter, all we should do is look steadily into its eyes and move away slowly without running".



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Change global economic model to save biodiversity: UN report
Manila (AFP) Oct 20, 2010
The global economy must be radically altered to put a value on forests, reefs and other elements of nature but the financial benefits of doing so will be enormous, a UN-backed report said Wednesday. The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB) report warned that allowing nature to remain unaccounted for within the economy would lead to the continuing rapid extinction of species, and e ... read more







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