Wrong, CNN, Climate Change Isn’t the Cause of Rising Bear Attacks in Japan

From ClimateREALISM

By Linnea Lueken

CNN recently posted an article claiming that climate change is causing an uptick in bear attacks in Japan. There is no evidence climate change is behind the bear attacks. In fact, there are several more relevant and direct factors likely contributing to the increase in dangerous bear encounters.

The CNN article, “Bear attacks in Japan are at a record high. Climate change and an aging population are making the problem worse,” opens describing a bear attack that was caught on camera, in which an Asiatic black bear attacked a man on his way to work. CNN interviewed supposed experts who say the bears are leaving the wild and entering urban areas more, in part because “climate change is interfering with the flowering and pollination of some of the animals’ traditional sources of food.”

The bears particularly enjoy acorns and other tree nuts. CNN quotes an associate professor from Nagaoka University of Technology, Maki Yamamoto, who explains that “you can have years of bad harvests and years of good harvest of acorns,” and during those bad years, bears “get closer to human settlements looking for fruits, chestnuts, persimmons, walnuts, and farm products in general[.]” CNN reports that indeed this year’s low acorn yield is a major contributing factor pushing bears into human populated regions.

But boom-and-bust cycles of acorn production both for oak trees and beech, among other nut-producing trees, are completely natural and not historically unusual. Scientists are not sure what the mechanism is or why large groups of trees will stop producing acorns at the same time, but it is well documented that nut producing trees evolved to have low-producing years seemingly to increase tree survival and expansion by limiting predation by fruit and nut consuming animals, like bears. This has nothing to do with climate change.

CNN goes on to quote Tsutomu Mano, senior research fellow at the Hokkaido Research Organization, who said climate change “is likely to have a significant impact on the flowering time of plants and the activity of insects responsible for pollination, which is necessary for fruiting.”

In terms of the threat to pollination, climate change is already expanding plant pollination and along with growing seasons, which is a good thing for pollinators and animals that consume the fruits, as discussed in several Climate Realism posts, herehere, and here, for example. There is no reason for believing this trend won’t continue.

Also note the future tense, not present tense, of the claim that climate change is likely to have an impact on plant flowering timing. If Japan was already seeing a sustained change in this timing over the course of the past decades’ warming, the expert would almost certainly have mentioned it. What speculatively might happen in the future, can have nothing to do with present incidences of bear attacks.

A much more comprehensive look at the complex bear-encounter dynamic can be found in an article posted to Nippon.com, “Seeking Balance with the Bear,” which details how habitat destruction in the forests, due to the Japanese government endeavoring to plant more non-acorn producing timber-friendly trees like pines, has driven bears out of their normal range. Also, the reduction in agrarian practices in Japan has led to many abandoned farms. Attracted by the fruit, bears migrate into the abandoned orchards closer to other human dwellings than they have been in the past when the bears had more options for food, and there were more people living in rural villages to keep the bears wary of encounters with humans.

The Asiatic black bear in Japan is listed as “vulnerable” on the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) Red List. Despite this, IUCN reports that the Asiatic bear’s population is either stable or increasing depending on location in Japan, with 12,000 to 19,000 bears inhabiting the small island nation. If it is true that their numbers are increasing, this may lead to more food competition between bears on dwindling habitat, pushing them to seek food outside their normal range. Additionally, the human population in Japan has risen over time, although it as leveled off in recent years, and before the COVID-19 pandemic there was a massive spike in tourists visiting. Both of these trends these have likely contributed to a rise in human/bear encounters. The same is true in urban areas in the United States. Also, expanding arctic villages face similar problems with growing polar bear populations, as discussed in Climate at a Glance: Polar Bears.

CNN’s attempt to tie the increase in bear attacks in Japan to climate change is misguided at best and intentionally misleading at worst. No evidence supports the assertion that climate change is responsible for increased bear/human conflicts in Japan. Even the claims that that warming is (or will begin) impacting acorn production due to a change in pollination timing is weak, unsupported by data, and actually contrary to rainfall and greening trends. Many factors, like, growing bear populations amid habitat changes and loss, are likely contributing increased reports of bear attacks on humans; climate change is not among them.

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Tom Halla
December 12, 2023 2:07 pm

All bad things are due to climate change!

Bill Powers
Reply to  Tom Halla
December 12, 2023 2:12 pm

Someone on this site made the excellent point that when EVERYTHING is due to climate change then nothing is due to climate change. These well paid baboons just keep throwing Sh*t against the wall to see if anything will stick and all they manage to do is draw flies.

Editor
Reply to  Bill Powers
December 12, 2023 2:19 pm

Bill said, “Someone on this site made the excellent point that when EVERYTHING is due to climate change then nothing is due to climate change.” 

I think something to that effect may have originated with Roger Pielke, Jr.

Regards,
Bob

Ron Long
Reply to  Tom Halla
December 12, 2023 3:13 pm

Right, Tom, and to the point that Climate Change! has replaced The Dog Ate My Homework!

Roger Bournival
December 12, 2023 2:29 pm

“Climate change <b>and an aging population</b> are making the problem worse”
I’m nearly 60, so I hear them on that point – I can’t outrun bears like I used to!

Rud Istvan
Reply to  Roger Bournival
December 12, 2023 2:43 pm

See comment just below. I am 73 and have never tried. But we do keep bear spray at our Georgia cabin, and take it with us when hiking with the dog.

wh
Reply to  Rud Istvan
December 12, 2023 4:04 pm

But they’re not dangerous. I’ve pet one before, and they’re very nice.

Reply to  Rud Istvan
December 12, 2023 4:12 pm

Bears have the wisdom not to tangle with me.

Reply to  Mike McMillan
December 12, 2023 4:44 pm

A young bear somehow managed to get itself down out of the front range foothills to our home in the suburbs of Denver. It climbed over our six-foot privacy fence and plopped down on the into our enclosed back yard where it probably would have been happy to hang out if it hadn’t landed face-to-face with my wife who was working in the vegetable garden. She shrieked and ran toward the house while the bear, probably just as alarmed, leaped back over the fence and out into the front yard where it was pursued down the block by curious neighbors. I get that a full grown bear might be a different situation. Still…

I didn’t hesitate to take my wife and daughter backpacking in Yellowstone National Park where grizzlies are allegedly not uncommon. We were nearly eaten alive, but not by bears – the horseflies plagued us all the way in to our river campsite, only leaving off after sundown. It was awful. What I did worry about was the lone bison standing in the middle of our return trip – a wide valley with thermal hot springs running under the brittle rock crust. We did a wide loop but we were out in the open and the bison kept turning toward us. After that the flied didn’t seem so bad.

Reply to  Roger Bournival
December 12, 2023 2:44 pm

I can’t outrun bears like I used to!”

How do you know that ? 😉

Reply to  bnice2000
December 12, 2023 4:11 pm

Hmm. Yes that’s something you’d learn only once and for a very brief time!

dk_
Reply to  bnice2000
December 12, 2023 6:47 pm

The trick is to always travel, in bear country, with someone who is at least a little bit slower.

Reply to  bnice2000
December 12, 2023 10:20 pm

UK Twix advert:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3p_cliI8rY0

(wish I could get embedded videos to work for me lol)

Ron Long
Reply to  Roger Bournival
December 12, 2023 4:27 pm

When I was telling friends about working in the mountains in Alaska, I told them that, because of the bears, I always had a special assistant with me. They usually asked: like someone really good with a gun? and I reply, no, some old guy that can’t run nearly as fast as I can.

Rud Istvan
December 12, 2023 2:37 pm

Asiatic black bears are very close cousins to North American black bears, but typically smaller. We are very familiar with American black bears, since they are a major nuisance at our north Georgia mountain cabin tucked away in an inholding of the Chatahoochee National Forest. We have had them rip open a screened porch to get at deer feed stored in a steel container with a tight lid. And our inholding had to pass a rule against hummingbird feeders. Too many getting ripped down off cabin walls so bears could sip the nectar—encouraging the bears not to fear the humans in the cabins.

The mast crop is only important to black bears in the fall, prehibernation. In a poor mast year, they forage a wider food shed. They will eat young grasses and insect grubs from rotten logs in the spring, and abundant wild blackberries and grass seedheads in summer. They will scavenge carrion and hunt rodents, since omnivorous. They quickly learn how to open and raid most supposedly bear proof steel bins.

To the extent northern Japan is replacing some hardwoods with pines for lumber, its bears will have to forage a larger fall food shed—just as ours do in poor mast years. That automatically places them into more contact with humans.

John Hultquist
Reply to  Rud Istvan
December 12, 2023 7:39 pm

Thanks for the “mast” explanation.
I didn’t see this in the article so was about to add the term to the post.
You saved me the trouble.

I found out the local bears like Black-oil Sunflower seeds.

December 12, 2023 2:43 pm

CNN presenting fraudulent far-leftist reports… based on junk science and ignorance

… nothing unusual about that.

Reply to  bnice2000
December 12, 2023 3:08 pm

Two-thirds of Republicans under the age of 30 support the so-called “climate change” agenda, 42 percent of Republicans support it overall, and 90 percent of Democrats support it.

The constant “climate change” brainwashing is affecting almost everyone.

https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2023/08/09/what-the-data-says-about-americans-views-of-climate-change/

Reply to  scvblwxq
December 12, 2023 4:23 pm

sheesh- you’re still having faith in such lame surveys- you aren’t aware how lame surveys are?

Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
December 12, 2023 5:49 pm

It is like a broken record…

.. and it is making scvblwxq look like he trying to emulate fungal toenail and her “hot, hot” fetish.

Not a good look at all !

Reply to  bnice2000
December 13, 2023 9:49 am

It’s making sc… look like a bot. Same comment(s) over and over ad nauseam. We get it.

Rud Istvan
Reply to  bnice2000
December 12, 2023 3:27 pm

There is a directional positive to this. Their CNN reports get progressively sillier and easier to refute—with ridicule. Works for me. Not a good look for them.

And, CNN failed to report that northern Japan (Hokkaido) inconveniently had near record high snowfall last winter. Of course, if you believe the present German media concerning current Munich snowfall, more snow is also a sign of global warming. Which is why Viner’s 2000 ‘UK children soon won’t know snow’ went down the internet memory hole. Except the warmunists apparently don’t know about an internet thingy called the Wayback machine, which means there never is an internet memory hole.
And, if you have been at this for long, all such gems are also backed up on one or more personal hard drives, to be internet restored as needed.

Bottom line—in the long run they cannot win and we cannot lose. Truth will out. I personally believe we are closer to the end of this warmunist nonsense than the beginning in 1988 or 1992 (Hansen 1988 strongly influenced UNFCCC 1992):

  1. None of their previous now verifiable predictions have come true.
  2. At any meaningful grid penetration, renewables are ruinables.
  3. All COPx have failed, for multiple reasons. 28th try is not a good look.
Reply to  bnice2000
December 12, 2023 4:15 pm

Climate change is causing more deranged CNN stories and an increase in stupidity.

Reply to  Richard Page
December 12, 2023 4:24 pm

apparently climate change is a major cause of brain damage!

Bob
December 12, 2023 3:07 pm

Very nice Linnea.

Reply to  Bob
December 12, 2023 5:50 pm

Yes, she is 🙂

J Boles
December 12, 2023 3:09 pm

They have painted themselves in to a corner, because ALL things are now reported as “the new normal” of climate change, so if this is the new normal then it need not be reported, because this is normal. If everything is climate change then NOTHING is. I agree!

dk_
December 12, 2023 3:39 pm

Perhaps deprecation or abandonment of Japanese traditional black bear hunting has increased the population of bears:

2005 WWF declares project to protect Asian Black Bear in Japan
https://wwf.panda.org/wwf_offices/japan/?uProjectID=JP0089

2017 National Geographic article on vanishing culture of Japanese black bear hunters
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/photography/article/matagi-hunting-tradition-japan

2021 Study on Black Bear populaton
https://bioone.org/journals/mammal-study/volume-48/issue-4/ms2022-0034/Demographic-Parameters-of-Asian-Black-Bears-in-Central-Japan/10.3106/ms2022-0034.full

2022 Black Bear sightings on the rise
https://www.nippon.com/en/japan-data/h00845/
Note: contains a nice chart showing the changing rates of sightings and licensed taking (hunting) of bears.

2023 Japanese subsidy and bounty on black bear hunting.
https://www.insider.com/japan-bounties-bear-akita-prefecture-attacks-norihisa-satake-2023-10

Turns out, bear sightings and attacks are caused by changes in population vs the varying availablility of food during the spring and fall — recovering from or preparing for hibernation. We receive (but not learn) the lesson again: faulty population surveys lead to imbalance in social mechanisms for management of natural processes.

If only World Wildlife fund activists and their ilk were required to occupy bear habitats during bear feeding seasons, the problem would resolve itself in just a couple years.

Reply to  dk_
December 12, 2023 6:07 pm

Good research work, dk_

dk_
Reply to  DMacKenzie
December 12, 2023 6:43 pm

Not really, but that’s really the problem. There’s no difference between what is laughably called journalism and a (in my grade school era) 7th grade position paper.

But some of those linked are really interesting papers and articles.

December 12, 2023 4:19 pm

Bears again! Well if it bleeds it leads- the project Veritas under cover videos ( as well as some people that worked there have outed CNN too)not only show how corrupt CNN reporters and management are- but it also shows what really not very bright people they employ- and that Zuc guy that ran the thing , what a nasty unprofessional piece of crap he is. There is going to be a backlash at some point, it’s just getting ridiculous.

December 12, 2023 4:19 pm

Speaking of good or bad nut years- this year in New England was the best I’ve ever seen for pine cones- and this is after 50 years as a field forester. I have a list of forestry folks who I send “policy rants” periodically- they mostly ignore me- but when I sent out several photos of pine trees bending over with so many pine cones- these folks all got excited and commented. I “blame” it on climate change. 🙂

Must be the slightly warmer weather and somewhat heavier rain. And that wonderful plant food- CO2.

Yes, this super abundant year of pine cones will be a bonanza for many wildlife species who thrive on pine seeds. I’ve attached a photo.

SAM_7718x.JPG
Reply to  Joseph Zorzin
December 12, 2023 6:09 pm

They are waiting for a fire to release their seeds.

Reply to  DMacKenzie
December 13, 2023 2:59 am

Pines here are not fire dependent like in the American west.

Intelligent Dasein
December 12, 2023 4:36 pm

Japan’s human population is falling, and the bears’ habitat is increasing. All throughout Japan there are small towns and villages that are basically deserted as the few young people move to the big cities looking for to meet people and find work, and the remaining old folks die off. Huge swaths of Japan are feral now. Populations of deer, bear, wild boar, and all kinds of wildlife that Westerners don’t typically associate with Japan, are growing rapidly. Of course, there are going to be more bear encounters. Nature is reclaiming much of the islands.

John Hultquist
December 12, 2023 7:40 pm

What? CNN is still functioning!

Drake
Reply to  John Hultquist
December 12, 2023 10:15 pm

“is still”

As if they ever did.

rovingbroker
December 13, 2023 5:05 am

The bears were there first.