This remote village in Japan sells bear meat from a vending machine - Action News
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This remote village in Japan sells bear meat from a vending machine

A remote Japanese town has taken to selling bear meat from a vending machine, sourcing its supply to Asian black bears, listed as a vulnerable species, caught in traps or in the mountains by hunters.

Black bears are a vulnerable species in Japan, but still legal to eat

A vending machine in Japan stocked with bear meat.
A vending machine menu offering Asian black bear meat, Akita beef and dried mountain stream fish is seen in front of a soba noodle restaurant in Semboku, Japan, on Friday. (Irene Wang/Reuters)

A remote Japanese town has taken to selling bear meat from a vending machine, sourcing its supply to Asian black bears, listed as a vulnerable species, caught in traps or in the mountains by hunters.

Bear attacks are an increasing problem in parts of rural Japan due to a shortage of food in the forests that brings the animals into inhabited areas to forage.

"The bears can be dangerous when they come into town, so hunters will set up traps or shoot them," said Daishi Sato, who placed the vending machine outside his sobanoodle shop near the railway station in Semboku, 400 kilometres north of Tokyo in Akita prefecture.

Asian black bears are listed as vulnerable, but not critically so, and it is legal to eat bear in Japan. Meat from trapped bears is tastier since the blood is drained immediately, according to Sato.

A close-up of bear meat in a plastic package.
Daishi Sato, owner of Soba Noodle restaurant and the vending machine, shows a pack of Asian black bear meat next to the vending machine. It sells for about $22 Cdn per package. (Irene Wang/Reuters)

Vending machines throughout Japan offer everything from drinks, snacks and surgical masks, to more exotic fare such as edible insects and whale meat.

"Bear meat isn't very common,so we want tourists who come to visit the town to buy it," Sato said.

He sells seven to 10 packs of 250 grams costing 2,200 yen ($22.39 Cdn) each in an average week.

Last year, 75 people were injured in Japan in encounters with bears and two were killed, according to government data. One of the deaths was in Akita.