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This article is from thestar.com.my

URL:

http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2003/2/25/features/foreignfish & s\

ec=features

 

________________________

 

Tuesday, February 25, 2003

Foreign fish havoc in Japan

By MARK WAGNER

 

AS THE waves lap gently and a stork sweeps its long, white wings over the shore,

Akihiko Kubo reaches over the side of the boat and pulls up a net filled with

black bass and blue gill from the cold, dark waters.

 

“It looks so peaceful and beautiful above the waterline,” says Kubo, a director

of Shiga prefecture & #8217;s Fisheries Cooperative Association. “But it & #8217;s a

raging battle down below.”

 

Pastoral Lake Biwa is in the front line in the battle to stem the spread of

alien species. Originally introduced by sports fishermen, the voracious American

fish are rapidly outeating and outbreeding their Japanese counterparts.

 

Kubo heads a programme that hires unemployed salarymen to go fishing five days

a week in a bid to wipe out the invaders. The 57km-long freshwater lake,

Japan & #8217;s largest, is revered in the nation & #8217;s history, literature,

kabuki theatre and film and is said to be among the oldest lakes in the world.

 

 

 

The fish fight going on here, and a similar one taking place in the moats of

Tokyo & #8217;s Imperial Palace, is grabbing national attention. But they & #8217;re

only the most prominent of several environmental battles under way as imported

goats, mongooses, dandelions, beetles, raccoons and a host of other flora and

fauna threaten to wreak havoc on Japan & #8217;s environment.

 

While countries all over the world struggle against aggressive invasive

species, Japan is among the more vulnerable, environmentalists say, given its

fragile island ecosystem. As a result, many indigenous plants and animals find

themselves ill-prepared for the fierce competition from invaders entering aboard

cargo ships and airliners as pets or stowaways.

 

The struggle parallels the threat some Japanese are feeling in other areas,

including the economy, society, crime and sports.

 

In some cases, foreign animals and plants were brought in to fix another

perceived environmental problem. The Javanese mongoose was introduced into

Okinawa about 1910 to control rats and the venomous habu snake. The only

“environmental impact study” involved releasing a mongoose and a habu in an

enclosed room.

 

The mongoose dutifully attacked and killed the snake, so mongooses were brought

in. Once released into the wilds, however, they all but ignored snakes in favour

of other far easier native prey. Today tens of thousands of the creatures thrive

& #8211; along with untold numbers of snakes and rats & #8211; as two perceived

problems have turned into three.

 

Sometimes, sport has provided the catalyst. Black bass were brought in from

California in 1925 by a Japanese angler who enjoyed the fight they provided at

the end of a fishing line. Blue gills followed, reportedly a 1960 gift to

Japan & #8217;s crown prince from the mayor of Chicago. Both species are crowding

out original settlers such as crucian carp, baby shrimp and eels.

 

Nor do most Japanese like the taste of bass, which they find too strong despite

government-promoted recipes and other attempts to sing its praises.

 

In other cases, fashion has provided the impetus. The nutria, a rodent with

webbed feet, spread rapidly throughout western Japan after it was brought in

during the 1930s for the use of its pelts in making military uniforms.

 

Abandoned pets are another big problem. A television cartoon in the late 1970s

starring a raccoon prompted thousands of Japanese to acquire their very own

masked scavengers, before people tired of the critters and unleashed them into

the wild. Now the Hokkaido prefecture government finds itself battling to limit

crop damage.

 

“We & #8217;re catching about 900 raccoons a year,” said Masashi Asano, a manager

at Hokkaido & #8217;s Environment and Lifestyle Department. “They love fried bread

coated with sugar nestled in dog food and caramel corn.”

 

Other troublesome wayward pets turning up in forests, parks and sewers include

snapping turtles, piranhas, alligators and ferrets. Foreign beetles are also a

worry, smuggled inside suitcases for the US$2,000 (RM7,600) or more collectors

pay for rare varieties, according to Japan & #8217;s Bug Monthly magazine.

 

In some cases, foreign species threaten to love their domestic counterparts out

of existence, such as Taiwanese monkeys that breed with Japanese monkeys, which

are on the protected species list.

 

Often it & #8217;s not clear how or why aggressive foreign animals and plants got

here. The goats ravaging the Bonin Islands are variously attributed to early

settlers from Hawaii, whalers and even Commodore Matthew Perry, the American who

forced open Japan & #8217;s trading ports in the 1850s, said Toshimitsu Doi, an

environmental official with the national government in Tokyo.

 

For decades, Japan showed little concern for its environmental invaders.

However, the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, put the issue on the

radar, leading to policies that went into effect last year. They call for the

extermination of species deemed a threat to the ecosystem or humans, farmers in

particular.

 

Today there are officially 200 animal invaders, 246 insects and 1,553 plants.

And while surveys find 73% of Japanese favouring extermination programmes and

around 90% supporting import restrictions, there & #8217;s no clear list of

extermination candidates. Turf wars within the government hamper efforts to

address the problem, said Hidenori Kusakari, an assistant director with the

environmental group World Wildlife Fund Japan.

 

In the moat surrounding the Imperial Palace, long a symbol of Japan,

researchers are attempting to cleanse the waters of black bass and blue gill

with a US$450,000 (RM1.7mil), five-year project. Like so many other efforts,

however, they & #8217;ve been frustrated by the wily foreigners. Some experts say

the only solution may be to drain the moat & #8211; hardly a model approach for

Biwa or other inland bodies of water.

 

Extermination programmes have seen their share of critics from animal-rights

groups and anglers. Fishermen have launched a counter-offensive against efforts

at Biwa and other prime fishing spots, questioning government data, methods and

rationale.

 

“Sure I want the indigenous fish to come back, but I also want other fish

including black bass to coexist,” said Kyoji Terada, chairman of the Shiga

Fishing Boat Association and owner of 48 rental boats. “They blame everything on

the black bass. ... They & #8217;re going to destroy our livelihood.”

 

Anglers first spotted blue gills in Lake Biwa in the mid-1960s and black bass

in 1974, with the extermination programme launched in 1984. The prefectural

programme Kubo oversees has 43 people netting fish eight hours a day, rain or

shine, in addition to dozens of commercial fishermen paid by the weight of their

catch.

 

Out on the boat, Kubo sighs as he recalls boyhood fishing trips taken almost as

soon as he could walk. He shirked his homework for the sport, majored in tuna at

fishery college and built his career around fish.

 

“If I could meet the person who introduced black bass into this lake, I & #8217;d

give them a piece of my mind and tell them what an idiot they were,” he said.

“It used to be the indigenous fish practically jumped into your net. Now you

really have to try to catch one. I just hope my grandchildren can see the water

thick with them again someday.” & #8211; LAT-WP<p>

 

________________________

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