The streets of Takikawa, a quiet town on Japan's northern island of Hokkaido, were this week the scene of something extraordinary. For three days, a brown bear, driven by hunger and disorientation, roamed the urban fringe, attacking residents and evading capture. It finally ended with a marksman's bullet, but the questions it has raised about wildlife management are far from settled.
Local authorities describe a desperate scramble: schools closed, residents barricaded indoors, and a hunt that involved police, hunters, and even drones. One elderly woman was killed, and several others injured. In the end, the bear was shot dead. But for British wildlife experts watching from afar, the episode is a stark illustration of a flawed response.
To be clear, this was no simple case of a bear wandering into town. It was a systemic failure. The bear, a male estimated at over two metres tall, had been spotted days before the attacks. Yet the official protocol remained passive: scare it away, hope it leaves. It did not.
Dr. Sarah Lockwood, a zoologist at the University of Exeter, told me: "In the UK, we've seen similar debates around badger culling and deer management. The reflex is to reach for the gun. But what's often missing is a nuanced understanding of animal behaviour and a proactive strategy that prevents these situations from escalating."
Japan's bear cull policy is rooted in tradition and a certain stoicism. But it clashes with modern conservation science. The country's bear population is actually thriving in some areas, thanks to reforestation and reduced hunting. But this very success is bringing them into conflict with humans as their natural food sources dwindle. Climate change is reducing berry crops, their primary food, pushing them into towns.
What would a more measured approach look like? In parts of Canada, communities use electric fencing and bear-proof bins. In Slovenia, they have trained rapid response teams that use aversive conditioning: rubber bullets, paintball guns, and loud noises to teach bears to avoid humans. Euthanasia is a last resort, not a default.
The Takikawa incident reveals deeper cultural rifts. In Japan, there is a long history of reverence for nature, but also a bureaucratic rigidity that can delay decisive action. Local officials, fearing legal liability, often defer decisions until it is too late. Social media has added new pressure: outrage at the attack, but also sympathy for the bear, which became an unlikely martyr online.
It would be easy to dismiss this as a Japanese problem. But Londoners need only recall the M25 cat or the urban foxes of Brockley to remember that wildlife management is a universal challenge. Our own culls of badgers, intended to control bovine tuberculosis, have been fiercely contested by scientists who argue they are ineffective and cruel.
Behind each policy decision is a human cost. The woman who died was simply going to the shop. The hunters, local volunteers, have spoken of their trauma. And the bear itself? It was a victim of environmental change and our refusal to adapt.
The Japanese government has now promised a review. But for the people of Takikawa, and for the bears of Hokkaido, that review is long overdue. What we need is not just a better cull, but a better way of living alongside the wild.










