Guest guest Posted February 29, 2004 Report Share Posted February 29, 2004 http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/newse/20040229wo71.htm Last known Japanese wolf said killed in 1910 Yomiuri Shimbun The last remaining Japanese wolf was discovered to have been a wolf killed in Fukui Prefecture in 1910, according to findings published in the latest issue of Tokyo University of Agriculture's scientific journal, Animate. Previously, it had been believed the last of the species was killed in Nara Prefecture in 1905. However, upon studying a photograph of a wolf captured five years later, specialists argued that it was a Japanese wolf. Visiting researcher at the National Science Museum Mizuko Yoshiyuki, a former professor at Tokyo University of Agriculture, announced the results of the study along with Yoshinori Imaizumi, former head of animal studies at the museum and the leading expert on the Japanese wolf. On the night of Aug. 3, 1910, an animal that looked like a wolf appeared at the Matsudaira Agricultural Experiment Station in Fukui and was killed by research assistants. The following day, a photographer from the city took a photograph of it. The photo was later examined at a meeting of a Japanese society for the study of mammals in 1962. But because the animal was thought to be larger than a Japanese wolf, and a Korean wolf on display in the prefecture had escaped from a nearby zoo at around the time the photo was taken, it was thought to most likely have been a Korean wolf. However, a recently discovered diary from the Matsudaira station showed that the wolf in the photo weighed about 18.75 kilograms, much less than a Korean wolf, which usually weighs between 25 and 45 kilograms. Also, the day after the wolf was captured and killed, employees from a nearby zoo confirmed that the animal was not the missing Korean wolf, according to the diary. With this new information, Yoshiyuki and others reexamined the original photograph. Based on distinguishing characteristics, such as a tail that is rounded, as if it had been bobbed, short legs relative to its body length and low body weight, the researchers concluded that the animal was a Japanese wolf. Get better spam protection with Mail. http://antispam./tools Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.