|
The peninsula of Shiretoko is one of the richest north
temperate ecosystems in the world and an outstanding example
of the interaction between terrestrial and marine ecosystems.
The sea is enriched by melting sea ice in spring and by a
warm current in summer, which produces and maintains an explosive
growth of phytoplankton, the basis of abundant life. Many
rivers connect the sea with a wealth of pristine vegetation
from the coast to volcanic mountain tops. Both on land and
in the sea, northern and southern species intermingle, resulting
in great diversity, including ten salmonid species and dense
populations of bears, sea lions and birds.
COUNTRY Japan
NAME Shiretoko
IUCN MANAGEMENT CATEGORY
Onnebetsudake Wilderness Area: Ia (Strict Nature Reserve)
Shiretoko Forest Ecosystem Reserve: IV (Habitat/Species Management
Area)
Shiretoko National Park: V (Protected Landscape / Seascape)
Shiretoko National Wildlife Protection Area: V (Protected
Landscape / Seascape)
NATURAL WORLD HERITAGE SITE 2005: Inscribed
on the World Heritage List under Natural Criteria ii and iv.
BIOGEOGRAPHICAL PROVINCE Manchu-Japanese Mixed Forest
(2.14.5)
GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION Located in furthest northeast
Hokkaido, the northernmost island of the Japanese archipelago,
between 43° 56’38” to 44° 21’10”
N and 144° 57’57” to 145° 23’ 022”
E.
DATE AND HISTORY OF ESTABLISHMENT
1964: Shiretoko National Park established under the National
Parks Law of 1957;
1980: Onnebetsudake Wilderness Area established under the
Nature Conservation Law of 1972;
1982: Shiretoko National Wildlife Protection Area established
under the Wildlife Protection & Hunting Law of 1918 as
revised in 2002;
1990: Shiretoko Forest Ecosystem Reserve established under
the Law on the Administration and Management of National Forests;
extended in 2004 south of the main bisecting road;
2005: Marine Management zone of World Heritage Site to be
enlarged from 1 to 3 km offshore, adding 15,000 ha.
AREA
Total area: 56,000 ha. Core zone: 34,000 ha; Buffer zone:
22,100 ha, including the original marine area (7,400 ha).
The core zone includes the Onnebutsudake Wilderness Area (1,895
ha) and is coterminous with the Preservation Zone of the Shiretoko
Forest Ecosystem Reserve. The core zone of the World Heritage
Site also contains both Special Areas of the National Wildlife
Protection Area and is contained by Shiretoko National Park
(46,073 ha) and the National Forest. The buffer zone surrounds
the whole site, including but extending south of Shiretoko
National Park.
LAND TENURE
State: 95% is owned and managed by the national Forestry Agency
with a few areas owned by the State directly, by Hokkaido
Prefecture, Shari and Rausu towns and private owners. Onnebetsudake
Wilderness Area and Shiretoko National Park are managed by
the Ministry of the Environment (MoE), by Hokkaido Prefecture
and local governments. These are to be replaced by a regional
liaison committee.
ALTITUDE ±200m below sea level to 1,661m (Mt
Rausu).
PHYSICAL FEATURES
The nominated property is one third sea and two-thirds land.
The peninsula of Shiretoko is about 24 km wide at the base
and protrudes north-east some 70 km from the mainland between
the Sea of Okhotsk and Nemuro Strait between Hokkaido and
the Kurile Islands. In the area of the nominated site it is
21 km wide, narrowing to an average of 10 km and extends some
50 km. It is formed of a range of volcanic peaks over 1,550m
high of which Mt Rausu (1,661m) is the highest; Mt Iou has
periodically erupted pure molten sulphur, last in 1936, and
there are still fumaroles and hot springs in the range. The
western coast has steep volcanic cliffs up to 120m high; the
east coast is smooth with curious rock formations. 44 small
rivers, nine of which have been dammed, run down to the sea
where on the west coast surface ice forms in winter. The formation
of this which is the most southerly sea ice in the northern
hemisphere (the latitude is south of Bordeaux) is due to three
factors: the enclosed nature of the Sea of Okhotsk which limits
water exchange with the ocean, the huge flow of freshwater
from the Amur river which is trapped in the top 50m by a layer
of cold salt brine which prevents deeper circulation of the
water; and icy winter winds from Siberia, which freeze the
surface rapidly. Its melting releases nutrients along the
continental shelf, feeding long-lasting phyto-planktonic blooms
that underpin an immense biological productiveness. In summer,
the warm Soya current flows along the surface of the sea.
The sea cliffs and rock formations, the changing colours of
the vegetation and of the offshore sea ice are handsome scenery.
CLIMATE
There is a marked difference in the weather on the east and
west coasts, that are separated by the central mountains.
The east coast has 1,600mm of rainfall with, in 1998, an average
maximum temperature in August of 18.9°C and an average
minimum February temperature of -10.9°C, with heavy snowfall.
The same year on the west coast the annual rainfall was 813mm,
the average maximum temperature in August was 21.8°C,
and the average minimum February temperature was -16.1°C.
VEGETATION
About 90% of the land is covered with nearly pristine natural
vegetation extending from the coast to above the tree line
in belts graded by altitude. The complex undulating topography
and contrasting weather on either coast create a variety of
habitats where many southern as well as northern species grow
here. 817 species are recorded of which 233 are alpine species
from the northern Pacific or Siberia. Alpine and subarctic
communities grow on the exposed and thin soils of the coasts.
From these (on Mt Rausu) the vegetation ranges through cool
temperate broadleaved forest of Japanese oak Quercus mongolica
grosseserrata, Japanese linden Tilia japonica
and painted maple Acer mono to 750m; mixed forest
of species found below and above this level; then sub-alpine
coniferous forest of Sakhalin fir Abies sachalensis,
Yeso spruce Picea yesoensis and Sakhalin spruce P.glehnii
with birch Betula ermanii forests up to 1,100m. Above
these is an alpine zone of stone pine Pinus pumila
scrub and deciduous thicket.
Much of the broadleaf forest is of deciduous southern species
like the katsura tree Cercidiphyllum japonicum, and
several isolated southern plants occur. The mixed forest is
floored with dwarf bamboo and contains many woody vines and
epiphytes. There are numerous endemic and threatened species.
One flower, Viola kitamiana, is endemic to the peninsula.
There is wetland vegetation in marshes and beside lakes; and
on the acid soil near sulphurous fumaroles there is a solfatara
community. Offshore, southern species of seaweed grow in the
warm Soya current, not far from northern species growing in
the cold winter waters of the east Sakhalin current where
there is distinct zonation of species by depth. On the west
coast ice algae growing in the relatively mineral rich waters
under the sea ice, and other algae which bloom on the melting
of the ice, produce an explosive growth of phytoplankton which
is said to be ten times greater than that off the east coast
of the peninsula, which forms the basis for the very productive
food chain.
FAUNA
The undisturbed richness of the peninsula’s resources
enables animals to feed on prey from both land and sea. The
quality of the habitat is so high that the home territories
of the brown bear Ursus arctos yesoensis for example
are the smallest in the world. The marine diversity is enriched
in summer by the surface-flowing Soya current and by the numerous
rivers in which many of the region’s fish spend some
time. The abundant phytoplankton in the melting sea ice feeds
a rich zooplankton, which sustains 28 species of marine mammals
and 223 species of marine fish, 150 of which live in on the
continental shelf in waters less than 200m deep. There are
also 42 species of freshwater fish. Among the marine species
are kaluga Huso dauricus (EN), green sturgeon Acipenser
medirostris (EN) and walleye pollack Theragra chalcogramma,
a main food of the sea lion. 70% of these fish are northern,
but 14% are also southern species, mostly in the warmer upper
layer of the sea. Alongside northern species like halibut
Hippoglossus stenolepis there are southern species
such as ocean sunfish Mola mola. There are 10 salmonid
fish such as chum, pink and masu salmon Onchorhyncus keta,
O. gorbuscha and O. masu, Dolly Varden char
Salvelinus malma, white-spotted char Salvelinus
leucomaenis, and Japanese hucho Hucho perryi.
Wild salmon are declining rapidly throughout their range along
the Pacific Rim, and there are very few large areas like Shiretoko
left in the Pacific to preserve not only native runs of salmon
and steelhead, but also the intact ecosystems that they support
and that support them.
These waters are essential habitat for the Steller sealion
Eumetopias jubatus (EN) which feeds about 3 km offshore,
and for feeding, breeding and migrating cetaceans and seabirds,
as well as salmonid fishes. Other marine mammals are larga
seal Phoca largha, northern fur seal Callorhinus
ursinus (VU), killer whale Orcinus orca, minke
whale Balaenoptera acutirostrata, Baird’s beaked
whale, Berardius bairdii, grey whale Eschrichtius
robustus (CR), humpback whale Megaptera novaeangliae
(VU), sperm whale Physeter macrocephalus (VU) and,
more rarely, sei whale Balaenoptera borealis (EN).
Two little known beaked whales have also been discovered:
Mesplodon ginkodens and arch-beaked whale M.
carlhubbsi. There are also harbor porpoise Phocaena
phocaena (VU), Pacific whitesided dolphin Lagenorhychus
obliquidens and Dall’s porpoise Phocaenoides
dalli for the last of which the peninsula is the only
confirmed breeding ground in the west Pacific. The spring
abundance of zooplankton and krill attracts many of the animals
to give birth in these waters.
On land, fish travelling upriver feed raptors such as foxes
Vulpes vulpes schrenki and a dense population of
brown bears Ursus arctos, which is amongst the densest
in the world with average range of 15 sq.km. There are 33
other species of terrestrial mammals including the nationally
rare Ikonnikov’s and Nillson’s bats Myotis
ikonnikovi and Eptesicus nilssonii, and, from
the south, Yeso sika deer Cervus nippon yesoensis.
7 species of reptile and three amphibians are known, perhaps
originally attracted by the volcanic sources of geothermal
heat. Leatherback turtle Dermochelys coriacea (CR)
occur offshore. The wealth of habitats supports 264 species
of birds, 49% of the Japanese total. 9 are globally threatened
and this is one of Birdlife International’s Important
Bird Areas. Stellar’s sea eagle Haliaeetus pelagicus
(VU: 2000 individuals), whitetailed eagle H. albacilla
(600), two subspecies of the large Blakiston’s fish-owl
Ketupa blakistoni (EN) and the black woodpecker Dryocopus
martius are all designated Natural Monuments for which
the area provides valuable protection. Other notable species
include Japanese night heron Gorsachius goisagi (EN),
Baikal teal Anas formosa (VU), Japanese cormorant
Phalacrocorax capillatus in great numbers; Japanese
crane Grus japonensis (EN), and yellow bunting Emberiza
sulphurata (VU). The wide variety of habitats support
2,500 species of insects, including site-endemic and southern
species, 1,850 moths and 500 beetles. The butterfly Vaciniina
optilete daisetsuzuana was designated a Natural Monument
in 1967.
LOCAL HUMAN POPULATION
The peninsula was settled between 1912 and 1967 but farming
was given up because of the harsh conditions. There was never
any forestry, except for a brief attempt within the National
Park in 1986-7. There are two small towns, Shari and Rausu,
just outside the Park and, after tourism; a traditional self-regulating
sustainable fishery for salmonid fish, calamari and kelp is
the chief activity. Recent measures to protect the fish have
led to a halving of the number of fishing boats. No-one lives
in the protected area today and only seven people inhabit
the buffer zone. There is one major road crossing the peninsula,
between Shari and Rausu towns.
VISITORS AND VISITOR FACILITIES
There were 2.34 million visitors in 2001, a figure that has
remained fairly constant for the last ten years. Most visit
between June and October, but some 300,000 come to see the
sea-ice in February. Ecotourism is being developed through
the Shiretoko Ecotourism Promotion Council. Many tourists
sightsee from tour boats. Other activities are walking, guided
trekking and nature observation, climbing, sea-kayaking and
fishing. The Shiretoko-goko lakes near the west coast are
very popular. In Shari are the Shiretoko Nature Foundation
and Shiretoko Museum, and near Rausu a group facility complex
and Visitors’ Centre. There are also 5 hotels, 4 inns
and 3 restaurants, a campsite and 4 picnic areas, some within
the protected area. Beyond it there are many hotels and other
facilities, especially in Shari.
SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND FACILITIES
The Onnebetsudake Wilderness has been extensively studied.
Over the last 25 years intensive monitoring of animal populations,
especially sika deer and bear, and the ecology of the area,
has been undertaken. Most of the 135 references in the nomination
bibliography record research into various aspects of Shiretoko’s
climate, geology, flora and fauna and history. Future monitoring
of the sea ice is important, as it is sensitive to fluctuations
in air temperature and could be a key indicator of climatic
change. A Marine Area Working Group has established by the
Shiretoko World Heritage Nominated Site Scientific Council
to make an inclusive survey of the area as the basis for a
Multiple Use Integrated Marine Management Plan (Onadera, 2005).
CONSERVATION VALUE
The peninsula of Shiretoko is one of the world’s richest
north temperate marine ecosystems and an outstanding example
of the interaction between terrestrial and marine ecosystems.
The sea is enriched by melting sea ice in spring and by a
warm current in summer, which produce and maintain an explosive
growth of phytoplankton, the basis of extremely abundant life.
Many rivers connect the sea with 560 sq.km of pristine vegetation
from coastline to the volcanic mountaintops. Both on land
and in the sea, northern and southern species intermingle,
resulting in great diversity.
CONSERVATION MANAGEMENT
The nominated site is protected by separate laws
covering each of the component areas. Plans for the National
Park and the National Forest were integrated in a Management
Plan which was finalised in 2003. The Shiretoko Nominated
Site Regional Liaison Committee now combines staff from the
Ministry of the Environment, the Forestry Agency, Hokkaido
Prefectural and local town governments with fishermens’
and tourist associations in its collaborative execution. It
is advised by a panel of experts. The Plan’s main aim
is conservation of the area with appropriate uses such as
monitoring, recreation, education and research which are permitted
except when they might disturb nesting animals. Nearly all
other types of activity (such as open fires or plant-gathering)
are forbidden except with permission from the Ministry of
the Environment. The fishing industry is closely monitored
and controlled by the Prefectural government and fishing organisations.
Fishing for trout and salmon in all rivers, near the mouths
of the main five main rivers and in certain offshore areas
on the Rausu side, is forbidden (Onadera, 2005).
The Steller’s sea-eagle, white-tailed eagle, Blakiston’s
fish-owl, black woodpecker and Vaciniina butterfly are all
given special protection as Natural Monuments. The first three,
with sea lions, bears and the Viola kitamiana, walleye Pollack,
salmonid fish, the impacts of deer and the numbers of tourists
are regarded and will be monitored as indicator species. The
Shiretoko 100-Square-Meter Forest Trust was established in
1977 to buy land north of Shari to prevent settlement and
restore it to a natural state. By 1997 nation-wide donations
of 520 million yen (US$4,300,000 in 1997) were used to secure
land and to plant 420,000 seedling trees and riverbanks. Adjacent
national forests are to be managed to avoid any drastic environmental
change to the protected area. This initiative has had world-wide
influence. A Multiple Use Integral Marine Management Plan
is to be developed by 2008 to safeguard fish stocks and areas
important to sea lions and cetaceans. Any future Salmonid
Management Plan would investigate the impact of the dams on
these populations. A transboundary park with the pristine
Russian Kurile Islands is a future possibility (IUCN, 2005).
MANAGEMENT CONSTRAINTS
There are few constraints on management except for erosion
caused by increasing numbers of tourists and occasional conflicts
with bears. In mid season, cars are replaced by coach travel
over one popular road on the west coast, and popular trekking
and climbing routes on Mt. Rausu need protection against erosion.
Precautions have been taken against landslides, rockfalls
and volcanic events. The impacts of increased tourism will
be lessened by dispersal and limits on numbers.
COMPARISON WITH SIMILAR SITES
Only one natural World Heritage site lies in the same biogeographic
province – the Manchu-Japanese Mixed Forest. This is
Central Sikhote-Alin northeast of Vladivostok in the Russian
Federation, at almost the same latitude, on the east coast
of Siberia and in the mountains behind it. At 1,631,923ha
in area this serial site of four reserves in the east Siberian
taiga is almost thirty times larger than Shiretoko. It contains
fifteen faunal assemblages, plants of northern and southern
origin totalling 1,200 species and protects the habitat of
a notable critically endangered species, the Amur tiger. It
has somewhat higher mountains but rather less coastline than
Shiretoko and contains 65 mammal, 241 bird and 51 fish species.
20 plants and 38 birds are listed as globally endangered.
By comparison Shiretoko, one of the world’s richest
north temperate marine and terrestrial ecosystems, within
a much smaller area has over two-thirds as many plant species
(817, of which 233 are alpine and several also of southern
origin), 63 mammal species, 28 being marine, 264 birds, 213
saltwater fish, 42 freshwater fish and 2,500 insects. The
peninsula’s vegetation is 90% undisturbed and grades
with altitude from warm coastal conditions with broadleaf
forest with species of southern origin to a cool coast across
a 1,660m altitudinal range containing at least 5 vegetation
types, plus a solfatara plant community on the active volcano.
Among its globally threatened species are 6 birds, 5 marine
mammals and 2 large fish and its bird species are 49% of Japan’s
total count.
The Volcanoes of Kamchatka World Heritage site further north
is said to have the world’s largest concentration of
salmonid fish with 11 species, though Shiretoko has 10 of
these. This larger more northern serial site is similar in
being a volcanic Pacific peninsula and its flora is almost
as rich as that of Sikhote-Alin. But it has only 145 bird
species and its fauna, though numerous and endemic, is not
so diverse nor does it share the distinctive sea-ice ecosystem.
The nearest Japanese site is Shirakami-Sanchi in the far north
of Honshu which preserves the last virgin Japanese beech forest
and the vulnerable Japanese black bear but is not at all comparable
in richness of species except for insects. The other Japanese
World Heritage site, Yakushima in the Ryukuyu archipelago,
is a warm-temperate forest ecosystem.
The Kluane/Wrangel-St.Elias/GlacierBayTatshenchini-Alsek
site which is far more northerly is mountainous and topographically
very varied but has a less diverse biota, less close connection
with its coast and no periodic sea-ice. The Tasmanian Wilderness
is very rich in many respects, especially in endemic species
of a rather different flora and in diversity of habitats but
it has fewer species of all kinds than Shiretoku despite being
25 times the area. Te Wahipounamu in New Zealand is a large
densely forested marine landscape with a very rich endemic
flora and birdlife but is very dissimilar mountainous fjord
country, again without sea-ice.
Shiretoko resembles an island in its untouched isolation
and closeness to the sea. Except for the ice algae its terrestrial
and marine ecosystems are not unique but the distinctive and
close integration between them and the fertility of the sea
produce a more diverse and numerous fauna than any other cool
temperate site of comparable area, and it is well protected
by both its location and the law. In addition, BirdLife International
has identified Shiretoko as a candidate area for Asian Important
Bird Area status. The WWF has also recognised the Okhotsk
Sea, which Shiretoko borders, as one of the richest north
temperate marine regions of the world, and designated it one
of the Earth’s Global 200 biologically most outstanding
habitats.
STAFF
Administrative and conservation staff total 82 (MoE 17, FA
20, Hokkaido 25, Shari 2, Rausu 7 and Natural Parks Foundation
11). The MoE employs 3 rangers, the FA 25 foresters and 4
rangers, Hokkaido 2 research and 5 educational staff, in Shari
the Shiretoko Nature Foundation has 25 staff, the Shari Museum
5 and there are 5 Natural Monument guardians.
BUDGET
The present annual budget totals ? 1,284million (US$11.6million)
from various sources: ? 78 million (US$ 0.7million) from the
Ministry of the Environment, ? 960 mil.(US$ 8.7mil.) from
the Forestry Agency, ? 21 mil. (US$ 0.2mil.) from Hokkaido
Prefecture, ? 150 mil. (US$1.4mil.) from Shari town ? 26mil.
(US$0.2mil.) from Rausu town and ? 49 mil.(US$0.4mil) from
the Natural Parks Foundation, Shari.
LOCAL ADDRESSES
Ministry of the Environment, East Hokkaido Regional Office
for Nature Conservation, 4F Kushiro National Government Building,
10-3 Saiwai town, Kushiro City, Hokkaido 085-8639.
Forestry Agency, Hokkaido District Forest Office, 7-70 Miyanomori,
3-jyo, Chuo-ku, Sapporo City, Hokkaido 064-8537.
Hokkaido Prefectural Government, Natural Environment Division,
Office of Environmental Affairs, Dept. of Environment &
Lifestyle, Kita 3-jyo, Nishi 6-chome, Chuo-ku, Sapporo City,
Hokkaido, 060-8588.
Natural Parks Foundation, 208, Utoro-higashi, Shari town,
Shari-gun, Hokkaido 099-4355.
REFERENCES
Nature Conservation Bureau (2004). Shiretoko. Nomination
of the Shiretoko for Inscription on the World Heritage List.
+ Appendices. Ministry of the Environment, Tokyo. 120pp +
235pp. [Contains a bibliography of 136 references, most based
on research in the area.]
Onadera, H. (2004, 2005). Responses to two letters from the
World Conservation Union. Nature Conservation Bureau, Ministry
of the Environment, Tokyo.
IUCN. (2005). World Heritage Nomination Technical Evaluation,
Shiretoko (Japan). IUCN, Gland, Switzerland.
DATE July 2005, December 2005.
|