Japan's famous Nara deer dying from eating plastic bags

Authorities in Japan’s ancient capital Nara are
warning visitors not to feed the city’s wild deer – a major tourist attraction
– after several of the animals died after swallowing plastic bags.
Large amounts of plastic waste were found in the
stomachs of nine of 14 deer to have died since March, according to a local
wildlife conservation group.
The bags and wrappers are thought to have been
discarded by visitors who fed the animals, ignoring signs in English and
Chinese warning them to give the animals only approved senbei crackers that are
sold in local shops and do not come in plastic packaging.
Officials from the Nara Deer Preservation
Foundation discovered masses of bags and other plastic items inside the dead
animals’ stomachs, according to Kyodo news agency. One of the deer had
swallowed 4.3kg of plastic, it added.
The deer are attracted by the smell of food coming
from plastic bags discarded by tourists, who flock to Nara to view its shrines
and temples and interact with the estimated 1,300 free-roaming deer in the
city’s main park.
Rie Maruko, a vet and member of the conservation
group, said the deer died from starvation after plastic and other foreign
objects damaged their complex digestive system.
“The deer that died were very skinny and I was
able to feel their bones,” Maruko told Kyodo. “Please don’t feed them anything
other than the designated senbei snacks.”
Nara’s deer, which have been known to attack
visitors who tease them with food or try to take selfies with them, are believed
to be divine messengers and were designated natural treasures in 1957.
Local authorities said they would step up requests
not to feed the deer unauthorised snacks amid a steep rise in tourism, with the
number of international visitors to Nara prefecture rising almost tenfold since
2012 to 2.09 million in 2017.