Iriomote & Tsushima
THE END OF THE WILD CATS OF JAPAN
JapanÕs Unholy Worship of Big Business Wins Again
27 April
2007
keith
harmon snow
www.allthingspass.com
The wild cats of Iriomote Island
have never inhabited the
Iriomote National Park, a mountainous
reserve designated in their favor in 1972. Maybe this has begun to change.
The bulldozers have plowed up the coastal zone, pushed the forested hills into
ravines and swamps, cleared the debris. Big industry planted pineapples and
sugar cane. Big tourism planted resorts. As their natural habitat disappears,
the rare Iriomote Wild Cats are being forced to adapt or die. Some may have
fled to the mountainous interior, to Iriomote National Park.
It is an unfortunate experiment in behavioral adaptation,
and the most traveled road to extinction.
Iriomote is the ÒGalapagos of the Orient,Ó the
southernmost island in JapanÕs Nansei Shoto
archipelago, islands with 600 year-old blue coral colonies, ancient broad-leaf
and mangrove forests, endemic hares, woodcocks, robins and wildcats. Whi1e the
fighting on islands like Okinawa subsided long ago, the biodiversity of this sub-tropical
paradise has been under attack: This is the ÒHawaiiÓ of Japan.
The Western image of Japanese culture as philosophically and harmoniously attuned to nature is erroneous. Japanese culture—the Ministry of Trade and Industry, the local consumption and waste patterns, the rapacious timber industry, plantation and aquaculture industries which spread like cancer throughout Asia—is no different than American culture: use as much as there is, buy more, donÕt worry about the waste, chuck it in a hole: out of sight, out of mind. Honto ni?
As throughout Japan, unrestricted development is decimating the Nansei Shoto island groups with deforestation, erosion and siltation, pollution of rivers and suffocation of corals. Golf courses threaten the endangered species of Amami Island. Plans for mass tourism in the 1990Õs called for an airport runway to be extended over IshigakiÕs Shiraho reef, identified by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as Òthe most diverse reef ecosystem in Japan.Ó
While the Tsushima island leopard cat and Iriomote yamanecko were both designated as National Monuments by 1972,
these wild cats are severely threatened: the Governments concern amounts to
little more than lip service. Disease and hybridization from growing feral cat
populations, competition from introduced and native animals, and predation by
dogs are all contributing to their decline. More critical is habitat
destruction due to development.
In the late 1990Õs the scientific community determined
that the Iriomote Wild Cats are facing an even greater threat with the
discovery of a feline form of the AIDS virus in one of the islandÕs cats.
Researchers at the University of the Ryukyus and the University of Kagoshima,
who have conducted joint research on the cats since 1995, discovered a feline
infected with the FIV virus among cats living near a garbage dump on the
island. Researchers concluded that the number of Iriomote Wild Cats living near
and feeding from the garbage dump is on the increase, and are concerned those
cats will infect others unless steps are taken to prevent the spread of the
potentially fatal virus.
Why are the Wild Cats feeding on garbage dumps?
Disappearing local prey species, decimated habitat, disruptions in their
environment, and ecological unraveling of the ecosystem. In 2001 the Japanese
government began documenting the latest threat to the Iriomote cats: the
invasion of Iriomotejima Island by poisonous marine toads.
The more northerly Tsushima Island (710 sq. km) Wild Cat
is in the greatest danger. With a population of less than 70 individuals
(1994), the rapid expansion of the islandsÕ 49,000 plus inhabitants, the lack
of a protected area and the catÕs status as a sub-species of the leopard cats
of southeast Asia have left the Tsushima Cats on the short list of earthÕs
inhabitants.
The 40-70 Iriomote Wild Cats are an endemic species on
JapanÕs southernmost Iriomote Island, 293 square kilometers retaining much of
the ancient natural and cultural heritage. The sub-tropical environment draws
thousands of tourists each year for the adventure of JapanÕs Òlast frontier.Ó
They come for fantastic diving: The corals of the reef are like paint spilled
in a popsicle-blue sea. Myriad fish school and dart in and out. Sharks and rays
swim the channels of the marine park. They come for river journeys through
mangrove forests and hikes to waterfalls of the interior, a jungle-scape of
ancient twisted trees; vines coiled like snakes and snakes coiled like vines.
Preferring the coastal belt of forests, foothills and mangrove
swamps, the Iriomote Wild Cats forage with a seasonal dependency on reptiles,
birds and fish. Studies of ranging and feeding patterns funded by World
Wildlife Fund Japan have verified that the coastal zones excluded from the
National Park comprise their habitat. Studies of behavioral ecology, diet and
threats to survival have documented their susceptibility. Lacking however, are
any form of inter-disciplinary studies considering alternative strategies for
cultural and natural resource preservation and utilization. But these studies
would now be meaningless: big business moved forward with its plans.
ÒThe Iriomote Wild Cat is not endangered due to tourism
but rather from agricultural development.Ó Kiichi Mimura told me. Mimura was
the Assistant Director for Wildlife Protection at JapanÕs Environment Agency in
the 1990Õs. ÒPineapples and sugar cane are strong in the Japanese economy. Okinawa
and Hokkaido have a special agency to make fields, airports and roads, since
these areas are considered underdeveloped. But these areas have special
species.Ó
Studies of coastal zone caves have recently brought
several of these special species into the limelight. Others may disappear prior
to discovery. In 1993, one Japanese scientist stepped forward to speak on
behalf of the bats, a step which sent at least one concerned politician to
Iriomote on a fact-finding mission of her own. But the environmental
consciousness may be far too little, far too late.
Development of the Nansei Shoto region mirrors JapanÕs
Overseas Development Assistance (ODA) programs across South East Asia: plunder,
pillage, starve and profit. Social and environmental impact assessments, if
performed at all, are those of vested interests, and are universally closed to
the public. Kickbacks and coercion are standard procedure. When big business
moves in, management and infrastructure move in with it, closing out benefits
to local societies, radically altering natural environments.
ÒJapanese big business and trading companies have
long-time relations [overseas],Ó Yoichi Kuroda once told me. Kuroda is the
author of the WWF International and IUCN funded study, Timber From The South
Seas: An Analysis of JapanÕs Tropical Timber Trade (1989). ÒPersonally,
financially and technically. They
never have sensitivity to the environment—everything is from the point of
view or efficiency and cost-effectiveness. And illegal practices are rampant.Ó [1]
Protesting a massive agricultural pesticide AID package
destined to Cambodia for instance, a package denounced by the Food and
Agriculture Agency (FAO) of the United Nations, the over 10,000 member Japan
ConsumerÕs Union stated: ÒAs in most overseas development assistance (ODA)
projects, information has been withheld, feasibility studies are inadequate,
and projects ignore the realities ... they only exist to secure overseas
markets for Japanese enterprises.Ó
JapanÕs commitment to domestic conservation is best
exemplified by the ÒSpecial Resort LawÓ, pushed through the Japanese Diet one
day in 1988. Under this law a large percentage of the total land mass is exempt
from environmental regulations, opening even national parks for development.
ÒThis is just the tip of the iceberg,Ó said Jane
Davenport, former International Affairs Assistant to Japanese Diet member and
environmentalist Akiko Domoto. ÒWhen environmental conservation impinges
directly on human harm, they [government] are concerned. This is domestic
concern only, and itÕs concern only for Japanese humans, not wildlife or the
environment.Ó
Perhaps the greatest problem of all is the compromise of
the very environmental groups who are charged by the public trust with
protecting the earth. In the 1990Õs the World Wildlife Fund Japan compromised
endangered species protection by shutting down the Japanese arm of TRAFFIC, the
international agency charged with monitoring and controlling the trade in
endangered species. The reasons were clear: it was impinging on business
profits and embarrassing the officials and corporations involved. In the
process of investigating the closure of TRAFFIC it became clear that WWF-Japan
had become nothing more than the smokescreen of conservation concern and
propaganda for the big business community in Japan.
Indeed, officials from the most powerful and devastating
corporations—and the Japanese trading conglomerates themselves, the sogo
shosa—were on the board of WWF-Japan
in the mid-1990Õs. Companies like Sumitomo, Mitsubishi, C. Itoh, Toyoda and
Marubeni—the corporations that Swiss activist Bruno Manser challenged, in
partnership with grass-roots environmental organizations in Japan, for the
genocide against the indigenous Penan people of Sarawak, Malaysia. Of
thirty-three WWF-Japan trustees, 20 were from industry, officers of the
Keidanren, Nikkeiren, Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Tokyo Electric Power,
Sony, Toyota—and among the most powerful men in Japan. Men like
Hyosuke Kujiraoka, a member of JapanÕs House of Representatives, who secured
votes from TokyoÕs Katsushika fur-industry Ward by consulting for the Japan Fur
Association. Men like Teruzo Yoshina, CEO of Shimizu Construction,
formerly instrumental in WWF decision-making, who was arrested in September, 1993,
for his part in the Ibarakiken construction industry scandals. And men
like Kazuhiro Tashiro, former Director of the Ueno Zoological Gardens,
long-time friend of Takashi Aritake—the man behind the golden lion
tamarin scandal (that rocked the international endangered species community in
the 1990Õs).
The rise of corporate involvement and the demise of
environmental protection reached new heights by the mid-1990Õs: the directors
of WWF-Japan were the leaders of the very same companies responsible for
criminal activities in the logging, mining, agro-business, nuclear and chemical
industries. [2] The entire
enterprise—environmental conservation—was compromised. Most of
these companies also play a major role in deforestation of South East Asia, and
have moved on from the clear-cut landscapes in Asia to the forests of Congo and
South America; they have also been involved in clear-cutting the old growth
forests of Canada and the U.S. The most significant steps they have taken
toward environmental protection and sustainability are to produce massive PR
campaigns whitewashing their activities and misleading the public. The
International Tropical Timber Organization (ITTO), the International Union for
the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), and certain United Nations bodies (UNESCO)
have also been complicit in the ongoing environmental devastation. Japanese
power companies are involved in the bureaucratically and environmentally and
socially hostile enterprise of expanding nuclear power and spreading
radiation—and this proceeds with million dollar budgets behind some of
the most dishonest propaganda campaigns.
Has anything changed since the
mid-1990Õs? Hardly.
According to the Sarawak
Campaign Committee in Japan: ÒIt is the same Òdirty dozenÓ sogo shosha importing all the wood from Sarawak, from national
parks in Indonesia, and other places.Ó The board of directors of WWF-Japan
continues to be compromised by big business interests who gain credibility from
their WWF association and status. Directors include Koichi Ikeda, Chairman of
Asahi Beer; Yotaro Kobayashi, Chairman of Fuji-Xerox and member of the
Trilateral Commission; Hajime Sasaki, Chairman of NEC (benefits from coltan
from Congo); Shoichiro Toyota, Honorary Chairman, Toyota Motors; Junji Narita,
CEO, Hakuho-do (Ad Agency); Motokazu Hashimoto, Chairman, NHK (Public
Broadcasting); Hisashi Hie, Chairman, Fuji Television; Takeshi Fukuzawa,
Mitsubishi; Minoru Makihara, Advisor to the Board, Mitsubishi Corporation.
The scale of global
environmental devastation caused by Japanese industry and culture far outweighs
the meager efforts—and massive propaganda—to contain or mitigate
it. Tsunenari Tokugawa, director of the powerful Japanese NYK global shipping
company is today a director of WWF International and senior director of WWF-Japan.
Sumitomo Industries has over 700 subsidiaries or associated companies around
the world. WWF International and their national affiliates are all involved in
the euphemistic Congo Basin Forest Partnership, a program connected to the U.S.
Pentagon and major extractive industries, which is billed as an environmental
win-win for Africa and the rest of the world. Entities involved with the CBFP
include the Government of Japan and the American Forest and Paper Association.
Of course, the International Tropical Timber Organization—ostensibly
designed to restrict and control environmental devastation and corruption in
the logging sector—is also behind it. And while the genocide against the
indigenous Penan people continues in Sarawak Malaysia—Penan protests in
2006 and 2007 to blockade illegal logging have been met with paramilitary
retaliation—the international conservation and environment community
remains completely silent. [3]
Indeed, almost no one cares. Japanese agribusiness has spread over Southeast
Asia devastating natural habitats everywhere with monoculture, pesticidal
plantations. What does this say about the future of a few elusive little cats
living in the shadows of a tourist mecca?
In 2003 the Bulletin of the Faculty of Agriculture,
Kagoshima University, published a report indicating that the threats to the
wild cats—especially the Tshushima Wild Cat—are more serious than
ever. By, 2006 the biggest threats to the wild cats and other ecological
wonders of the island were centered on ecotourism: the specter of wild nature
and tropical seas drawing hundreds of thousands of people annually. Hotels have
overload sewage and electricity capacity, surging traffic threatens cats
crossing roads, scuba divers pressure once untouched reefs, and the wakes of tour
boats are eroding the roots of mangroves in ecologically fragile mangrove
swamps.
ÒWe think itÕs having an impact, and itÕs probably bad,Ó
said Maki Okamura, a scientist at the Iriomote Wildlife Conservation Center who
is working to save the 100 remaining Iriomote cats, one of the worldÕs most
endangered felines. Okamura was commenting to the Associated Press, and the use
of the word ÒprobablyÓ is rather an understatement. Tourism reportedly jumped
14-fold from 1975 to about 700,000 people a year by 2004. The first resort
hotel opened in 2004, and it divided IriomoteÕs 2,200 permanent islanders,
those in favor of unregulated corporate sprawl, and those in favor of
environmental and social happiness. Big business won. It always does.
The Environment Agency—which holds little ground
against the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MITI)—promoted the expansion
of Iriomote National Park (currently about 80% of the island) to include the
coastal habitat of the wildcat. Typical of historical land-use planning based
on an exclusionary model of protected area management however, the Agency
sought displacement of the Iriomote islanders, a solution even they admit to be
prohibitively expensive. In the end they just built the resorts.
Most of IriomoteÕs 1500 or so people have heard enough
about the endangered yamanekos,
nocturnal cats who rudder with tails through mangrove swamps, hunt along fields
and highways, steal chickens from farmyards-
ÒThe people donÕt give a damn about the cat,Ó Maggie
Suzuki told me. Suzuki was an American environmentalist living in Japan. ÒMost
of them are sick of conservationists. They have bills to pay. They donÕt want
to have to start from scratch somewhere else because of these cats.Ó
Calling for their share of the economic prosperity of
mainland Japan, islanders also developed a sweet tooth for pineapples and sugar
cane. While they also welcome the economic benefits of tourism, a study by the
IUCN (1990) on the effects of tourism on other Nansei Shoto islands, particularly nearby Ishigaki, determined that local facilities cannot compete
with major conglomerates targeting the area, corporations with unlimited
financial resources, impervious to the fragility of the natural. And so it came
to be. Eco-tourism and cottage industries are now as meaningless as the
wildcats dying in increasing numbers from increasing traffic.
With current population estimates of 40 to 80 Iriomote
wild cats the destruction of coastal habitat has devastated an already
devastated gene pool. Geographic isolation and the decline in numbers are
creating a shortage of genetically distinct mating partners. As with the
cheetah and the Florida panther, the Iriomote Wild Cats will ultimately suffer
from inbreeding, leading to reproductive and developmental impairment, and
increasing susceptibility to disease. In the Asiatic lions of Gir, India, a
sampling of the population revealed spermatozonal abnormalities of 79% in males
(abnormalities of 30% render a dog or a bull infertile). An epidemic of the
scale currently affecting the lions of the Serengeti would wipe out the
Iriomote cats. No matter how you look at it, extinction is just a matter or
time.
ÒThe [Iriomote] cats are so rare,Ó said David Wildt, cat
specialist of the IUCN Felid Taxon Advisory Group, Òthat very few people have actually
seen them. We recommended against a Species Survival [captive breeding]
Program, since the odds are that any two of these cats are already related.Ó
For
Susumu Murata, Iriomote Wild Cat watcher for 22 years, the wildcats are
fascinating members of a rich and varied biotic community. ÒTourism does not
have to be destructive,Ó he pointed out.
ÒThere are many things which could boost prosperity on Iriomote without
damaging the environment. But this cat is in deep trouble.Ó
During
the period between February 1994 and July 2003, the corpses of 29 Iriomote wild
cats and 36 Tsushima wildcats were preserved in the Wildlife Conservation
Center of the Environmental Agency of Japan. Causes of death in Iriomote
wildcats were 20 road kills, two trapped in torabasami (boar traps), one bite wound and six deaths from
unaccountable causes, while in Tsushima wildcats there were 22 road kills, four
deaths from weakness, two trapped in torabasami, three bite wounds and five deaths from unaccountable
causes. And these are only the corpses that were found—these shy little
cats arenÕt known for walking into town to announce their imminent demise.
The tragedy of another lost species notwithstanding, the
relevance of extinction relates to Òtrophic cascadingÓ, where a disturbance to
an intricately established ecosystem ripples through the biosphere. Also dying
off here is the population of lizards—the skinks—forming the bulk
of the wild cats diet in certain seasons. This in turn will affect the of the
population of certain insects responsible for the balance of agricultural
pests, prompting the increased use of pesticides, thus killing off other birds
and fish, etc., etc., etc. ItÕs already begun. The ÒGalapagos of the OrientÓ is
following the example of the ÒGalapagos of the United StatesÓ—you know,
that little group of islands in the Pacific Ocean that were stolen from the HawaiÕian people, without compensation of any kind, and
continue to be exploited without any benefit, and only exclusion and suffering,
for the native HawaiÕians.
Islands everywhere are under similar threats.
In reality, the ÒBeware of the CatÓ road signs posted
along IriomoteÕs roads will not stop the bulldozers, nor will the protests of a
few concerned citizens or environmentalists. We hear all this talk about
socioeconomic and environmental research, and sustainable land-use strategies
that consider the carrying capacity of the natural environment, one where
Iriomote islanders might have benefited from conservation, not consumption and
misuse, of the Iriomote wilderness. But there is not a single example of these
concepts being applied with any honesty or foresight. It always comes down to
profits by a select for, and losses for the public many. As far as government
and industry are concerned however, the catÕs in the bag. And few people seem
to care enough to let it out.
[1] See: keith harmon snow, ÒSamurais, Sawdust and Shame:
Japan and the Tropical Timber TradeÓ, Japan International Journal,
http://www.allthingspass.com/uploads/html-20Samurais.htm
[2] See:
http://www.allthingspass.com/journalism.php?catid=12
[3] See: Bruno Manser Fonds, <www.bmf.ch> and <http://www.allthingspass.com/journalism.php?catid=39>.