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After a multi-day hunting spree, a wild black bear is captured in Japan.

After a multi-day hunting spree, a wild black bear is captured in Japan.
After a multi-day hunting spree, a wild black bear is captured in Japan.

After a multi-day search that engulfed the nation and closed local schools, Utsunomiya in Japan captured a?wild black bear? on Tuesday.

After its first bear sighting Saturday night, the city closed all 94 municipal primary schools and middle schools for a second consecutive day on Tuesday. An official reported that authorities decided to close schools again on Wednesday because of a report about a second bear possibly roaming around the city.

In Japan, bear attacks, especially in urban areas have increased. The government has set up a taskforce to help reduce these incidents. According to the Environment Ministry, in fiscal 2025 the country recorded a record number of casualties including 13 fatalities.

Utsunomiya in Tochigi prefecture is about 100 km north of Tokyo.

Police cars and other vehicles that were involved in the search immediately?blocked the area when the bear reappeared in a residential 'area early Tuesday afternoon. Police officers walked around for a little more than an hour with long sticks, while others held metal shields. They were accompanied by national broadcasters who showed live footage from helicopters.

The adult bear, estimated to weigh 100 kg (220 pounds), was shot with tranquiliser guns, then loaded into a cage and driven off. Officials said that the city has yet to decide on what to do.

Iwaki in Fukushima Prefecture is 100 km northeast of the incident. On Tuesday, classes were suspended at three schools in an area where a black-bear had been spotted just a day earlier. At least four people were injured in a bear attack last week in Fukushima. Security footage showed the animal chasing and hurling a man to the ground in one incident. Asiatic black bears have been 'listed as vulnerable species worldwide, but the number of these bears in Japan has tripled since 2012. This is due to a decline in hunting.

Climate change has reduced the harvest of natural bear foods like acorns and birchnuts. The depopulation of rural regions and the proliferation abandoned farmland has encouraged them to seek food near human settlements.

(source: Reuters)