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Japanese serow

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Japanese serow

The Japanese serow (氈鹿, kamoshika; lit. "coarse pelt deer") (Capricornis crispus) (羚羊) is a Japanese goat-antelope, an even-toed ungulate. It is found in dense woodland in Japan, primarily in northern and central Honshu. The serow is seen as a national symbol of Japan, and is subject to protection in conservation areas. Adult Japanese serow stand about 81 centimetres (32 in) tall and weigh 30–45 kg (66–99 lb). They are black to whitish, and colouring lightens in summer. The fur is very bushy, especially the tail. Both sexes have short, backwards-curving horns, and are difficult to distinguish by sight. Japanese serow are found in dense mountain forests where they eat leaves, shoots, and acorns. They are diurnal and feed in early mornings and late afternoons. Serows are solitary, or gather in couples or small family groups. The animal marks its territory with sweet-and-sour-smelling preorbital gland secretions, and males and females have separate territories that may overlap. In the mid-20th century, the Japanese serow was hunted to near-extinction. In 1955, the Japanese government passed a law designating it a "Special National Monument" to protect it from poachers. Populations have since grown so greatly that the IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals ranks it "least concern". In 1979, complaints from foresters and farmers led to the repeal of the 1955 law. Since then, the serow has had protected status in 13 designated protected areas over 23 prefectures, and has been subject to culling as a pest outside conservation areas. Conservationists have labelled it a "living national treasure of the forest".

Tables

Japanese serow conservation areas · Relationship with humans › Conservation areas
English
English
Name
English
Name
Japanese
Shimokita Peninsula
Shimokita Peninsula
Name
Shimokita Peninsula
Name
Shimokita Hantō
Established
April 1981
Size ha (acres)
37,300 (92,000)
Prefecture(s)
Aomori
Kita-Ōu Mountains
Kita-Ōu Mountains
Name
Kita-Ōu Mountains
Name
Kita-Ōu Sankei
Established
February 1984
Size ha (acres)
105,000 (260,000)
Prefecture(s)
Aomori Akita Iwate
Kitakami Sankei
Kitakami Sankei
Name
Kitakami Sankei
Name
Kitakami Sankei
Established
July 1982
Size ha (acres)
41,000 (100,000)
Prefecture(s)
Iwate
Minami-Ōu Mountains
Minami-Ōu Mountains
Name
Minami-Ōu Mountains
Name
Minami-Ōu Sankei
Established
November 1984
Size ha (acres)
57,700 (143,000)
Prefecture(s)
Akita Iwate Yamagata Miyagi
Asahi—Iide Mountains
Asahi—Iide Mountains
Name
Asahi—Iide Mountains
Name
Asahi—Iide Sankei
Established
March 1985
Size ha (acres)
122,000 (300,000)
Prefecture(s)
Yamagata Fukushima Niigata
Echigo—Nikkō—Mikuni Mountains
Echigo—Nikkō—Mikuni Mountains
Name
Echigo—Nikkō—Mikuni Mountains
Name
Echigo—Nikkō—Mikuni Sankei
Established
May 1984
Size ha (acres)
215,200 (532,000)
Prefecture(s)
Fukushima Niigata Tochigi Gunma Nagano
Kantō Mountains
Kantō Mountains
Name
Kantō Mountains
Name
Kantō Sanchi
Established
November 1984
Size ha (acres)
79,000 (200,000)
Prefecture(s)
Gunma Saitama Tokyo Yamanashi Nagano
Minami Alps
Minami Alps
Name
Minami Alps
Name
Minami Arupusu
Established
February 1980
Size ha (acres)
122,000 (300,000)
Prefecture(s)
Yamanashi Nagano Shizuoka
Kita Alps
Kita Alps
Name
Kita Alps
Name
Kita Arupusu
Established
November 1979
Size ha (acres)
195,600 (483,000)
Prefecture(s)
Niigata Nagano Toyama Gifu
Shirayama
Shirayama
Name
Shirayama
Name
Shirayama
Established
February 1982
Size ha (acres)
53,700 (133,000)
Prefecture(s)
Toyama Ishikawa Gifu Fukui
Suzuka Mountains
Suzuka Mountains
Name
Suzuka Mountains
Name
Suzuka Sanchi
Established
September 1983
Size ha (acres)
14,100 (35,000)
Prefecture(s)
Shiga Mie
Ibuki—Hira Mountains
Ibuki—Hira Mountains
Name
Ibuki—Hira Mountains
Name
Ibuki—Hira Sankei
Established
March 1986
Size ha (acres)
67,500 (167,000)
Prefecture(s)
Gifu Shiga Fukui Kyoto
Kii Mountains
Kii Mountains
Name
Kii Mountains
Name
Kii Sankei
Established
July 1989
Size ha (acres)
79,500 (196,000)
Prefecture(s)
Mie Nara Wakayama
Shikoku Mountains
Shikoku Mountains
Name
Shikoku Mountains
Name
Shikoku Sanchi
Established
TBA
Size ha (acres)
TBA
Prefecture(s)
Tokushima Kōchi
Kyushu Mountains
Kyushu Mountains
Name
Kyushu Mountains
Name
Kyushu Sanchi
Established
TBA
Size ha (acres)
TBA
Prefecture(s)
Ōita Kumamoto Miyazaki
Name
Established
Size ha (acres)
Prefecture(s)
English
Japanese
Shimokita Peninsula
Shimokita Hantō
April 1981
37,300 (92,000)
Aomori
Kita-Ōu Mountains
Kita-Ōu Sankei
February 1984
105,000 (260,000)
Aomori Akita Iwate
Kitakami Sankei
Kitakami Sankei
July 1982
41,000 (100,000)
Iwate
Minami-Ōu Mountains
Minami-Ōu Sankei
November 1984
57,700 (143,000)
Akita Iwate Yamagata Miyagi
Asahi—Iide Mountains
Asahi—Iide Sankei
March 1985
122,000 (300,000)
Yamagata Fukushima Niigata
Echigo—Nikkō—Mikuni Mountains
Echigo—Nikkō—Mikuni Sankei
May 1984
215,200 (532,000)
Fukushima Niigata Tochigi Gunma Nagano
Kantō Mountains
Kantō Sanchi
November 1984
79,000 (200,000)
Gunma Saitama Tokyo Yamanashi Nagano
Minami Alps
Minami Arupusu
February 1980
122,000 (300,000)
Yamanashi Nagano Shizuoka
Kita Alps
Kita Arupusu
November 1979
195,600 (483,000)
Niigata Nagano Toyama Gifu
Shirayama
Shirayama
February 1982
53,700 (133,000)
Toyama Ishikawa Gifu Fukui
Suzuka Mountains
Suzuka Sanchi
September 1983
14,100 (35,000)
Shiga Mie
Ibuki—Hira Mountains
Ibuki—Hira Sankei
March 1986
67,500 (167,000)
Gifu Shiga Fukui Kyoto
Kii Mountains
Kii Sankei
July 1989
79,500 (196,000)
Mie Nara Wakayama
Shikoku Mountains
Shikoku Sanchi
TBA
TBA
Tokushima Kōchi
Kyushu Mountains
Kyushu Sanchi
TBA
TBA
Ōita Kumamoto Miyazaki

References

  1. Japanese serow (Japanese: ニホンカモシカ, Hepburn: Nihon kamoshika)
  2. As Capricornis crispa; Robert Swinhoe amended it for gender agreement in 1870.
  3. In Japanese, the word kamoshika refers both to serow and antelope species.
  4. "Deer" (Japanese: 鹿, Hepburn: shika)
  5. Japanese serow ("antelope-sheep") (Japanese: 羚羊, Hepburn: kamoshika)
  6. A mean of 14 centimetres (5 in) for 30 males and 13 centimetres (5 in) for 30 females was found in a 1985 study at Gifu
  7. Estimates place life expectancy at birth at 4 –6 years,
  8. Although the Japanese serow is generally monogamous, a 1996 study showed that 20% of males to be polygynous with two fem
  9. "Meat" (Japanese: 肉, Hepburn: niku)
  10. "Natural Monument" (Japanese: 天然記念物, Hepburn: ten'nen kinenbutsu)
  11. "Special Natural Monument" (Japanese: 特別天然記念物, Hepburn: tokubetsu ten'nen kinenbutsu)
  12. 15 such areas were originally proposed. Disputes with landowners have prevented their establishment in Kyushu and Shikok
  13. Law for Protection of Cultural Properties (Japanese: 文化財保護法, Hepburn: bunkazai hogo-hō)
  14. Wildlife Protection and Hunting Law (Japanese: 鳥獣の保護及び狩猟の適正化に関する法律, Hepburn: chōjū no hogo oyobi shuryō no tekiseika ni
  15. "living national treasure of the forest" (Japanese: 森の生きている国宝, Hepburn: mori no ikiteiru kokuhō)
  16. Tokida 2020.
  17. Jass & Mead 2004, p. 1.
  18. Tokida 2020; Grubb 2005.
  19. Jass & Mead 2004, p. 2.
  20. Togashi et al. 2009, p. 412.
  21. Wei et al. 2013, p. 6800.
  22. Jass & Mead 2004, p. 5.
  23. Lue 1987, p. 125.
  24. Min, et al. 2004, p. 369.
  25. Maruyama, Ikeda & Tokida 1997, p. 271.
  26. Knight 2003, p. 128.
  27. Knight 2003, p. 129.
  28. Knight 2003, pp. 128–129.
  29. Abe 2008, p. 113.
  30. "ニホンカモシカ"
    https://web /web/20200919183407/http://www2 /~hp0316/rdb/02honyuurui/0644
  31. "ニホンカモシカ"
    http://www /panel-kasidasi/09animal
  32. "カモシカ|青森県庁ウェブサイト Aomori Prefectural Government"
    https://web /web/20200616033556/https://www /bunka/education/kinen_tokuten_02
  33. Knight 2003, p. 125.
  34. Burton & Burton 2002, p. 2323.
  35. Iijima & Tsuchiya 2010, p. 115.
  36. Iijima & Tsuchiya 2010, p. 114.
  37. Jass & Mead 2004, p. 3.
  38. Atoji, Suzuki & Sugimura 1988, p. 159.
  39. Nawa 2009, p. 23.
  40. Jass & Mead 2004, p. 4.
  41. Ochiai & Susaki 2002, p. 970.
  42. Burton & Burton 2002, p. 2324.
  43. Ochiai & Susaki 2002, p. 964.
  44. Nawa 2009, p. 26.
  45. Nawa 2009, p. 25.
  46. Honda, Tatsukawa & Miura 1987, p. 365.
  47. Doko & Chen 2013, p. 53.
  48. Ono 2000, p. 25.
  49. Knight 2003, p. 126.
  50. Knight 2003, p. 130.
  51. Jiang et al. 2008, p. 1220.
  52. Natori & Porter 2007, p. 1443.
  53. Honda, Tatsukawa & Miura 1987, p. 368.
  54. Natori & Porter 2007, p. 1456.
  55. Tokida 2020; Jass & Mead 2004, p. 4.
  56. Inoshima 2010, p. 701.
  57. Sakae & Ishida 2012, p. 224; Jass & Mead 2004, p. 4.
  58. Kishimoto 2003, p. 147.
  59. Togashi et al. 2009, p. 415.
  60. Nawa 2009, p. 166.
  61. Nawa 2009, pp. 166–167.
  62. Nawa 2009, p. 167.
  63. Nawa 2009, p. 168.
  64. Knight 2003, p. 145.
  65. Knight 2003, p. 150.
  66. Maruyama, Ikeda & Tokida 1997, p. 273.
  67. Knight 2003, pp. 157–158.
  68. Knight 2003, p. 137.
  69. Knight 2003, p. 147.
  70. Knight 2003, pp. 148–150.
  71. Knight 2003, p. 151.
  72. Knight 2003, p. 157.
  73. Knight 2003, p. 152.
  74. Ono 2000, p. 145.
  75. Knight 2003, p. 148.
  76. Knight 2003, pp. 129–130.
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