Journal of The Japanese Institute of Landscape Architecture
Online ISSN : 1348-4559
Print ISSN : 1340-8984
ISSN-L : 1340-8984
Research Paper
Effectiveness of Culling and Fencing in Reducing Crop Damage in Areas with Deer Overcrowding
Satoshi SAKURAIJunko MORIMOTOYoshio MISHIMAHiroyuki UNO
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2013 Volume 76 Issue 5 Pages 469-472

Details
Abstract
Recently, sika deer (Cervus nippon yesoensis) populations have caused significant crop losses (about five billion yen in 2009) in Hokkaido, Japan. The losses have been a severe social problem in eastern Hokkaido, which is overcrowded with the deer. We verified the effectiveness of culling and fencing in reducing crop damage over a 16-year period (1994–2009) in eastern Hokkaido. We constructed models that accounted for the crop damage costs associated with the amount of deer harvest and proportion of fence-protected fields on a municipality scale. The models revealed that fencing is an effective countermeasure for preventing crop damage, while culling is not adequately strong to reduce it. Furthermore, agricultural products were protected effectively if the fences covered at least 25% of the boundary between agricultural fields and forest edges. However, the effectiveness of fences declined over time. Our results suggest that increased culling pressure and regular fence maintenance are both required to ameliorate crop losses due to sika deer.
Content from these authors
© 2013 by Japanese Institute of Landscape Architecture
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top