Swelling deer herd hems in South Korean islanders

Swelling deer herd hems in South Korean islanders
A deer licks another deer on Anma Island in Yeonggwang, South Korea, May 21, 2024. The deer came to the island around 1985, when about 10 were brought by three farmers, hoping to harvest their antlers, shed annually and highly prized in traditional medicine. The budding antler replacements, covered in soft short hair as they grow, are cut and marketed before they harden.
PHOTO: Reuters file

ANMA ISLAND, South Korea — Under the light of a moon partially obscured by cloud, the eyes of a dozen deer glow uncannily in the dark on South Korea's island of Anma.

They destroy crops and damage trees in their nocturnal wanderings, but by day the spot is deceptively peaceful, though the humans here must live behind fences, penned into homes and fields, as the animals outnumber them seven to one.

The people of a village nestled beside peaks and a rocky shoreline near South Jeolla province have all but given up their fight against the deer, whose numbers have exploded since the mid-1980s. Now, they say the only option is to cull the herd.

"I'm sorry to say this, but we need to get rid of them, which is our intention, even if that means we have to kill them," said Jang Jin-young, 43, one of the leaders of the village, which numbers about 150.

Since the rules ban such efforts, he says the government is weighing a petition from the villagers to designate the deer as "harmful wildlife", rather than livestock, so clearing the way for the herd to be thinned by hunting or other measures.

Deer roam around the town on Anma Island in Yeonggwang, South Korea, May 22, 2024. Under the light of a moon partially obscured by cloud, the eyes of a dozen deer glow uncannily in the dark. They destroy crops and damage trees in their nocturnal wanderings, but by day the spot is deceptively peaceful, though the humans here must live behind fences, penned into homes and fields, as the animals outnumber them seven to one. 
PHOTO: Reuters file

"There are so many deer, I've never seen as many as this before," said Kim Seung-man, who left his job digging up ginseng to anaesthetise the deer with blowgun darts so that they can be carried off the island in the effort to reduce their numbers.

Still, sparkling in its serene setting, the island has a lot to offer visitors, said Jang, as the deer are a menace only to residents, particularly the few who still farm.

Spread over an area just slightly larger than Central Park in Manhattan, the deer are now estimated to number 1,000, after years of grazing and breeding freely in the absence of predators.

"I just want all the deer on the island to disappear forever," said 80-year-old Han Jeong-rye, working in her vegetable garden surrounded by a mesh net that is 1.8 metres high, yet presents no obstacle for the deer, who jump over or rip through it.

"It's totally useless, I can't stand it. I'd be happy if somebody could please, please catch them."

Similar rows of nets, some as tall as 2 meters, and even fences of barbed wire, surround rice seedlings in the island's fields, but the deer eventually get around them, defeating the efforts of the ageing.

1.8-meter-high mesh nets separate rice seed beds and a former rice field, which was abandoned after elderly locals gave up on their fight to protect it from the local deer population, on Anma Island in Yeonggwang, South Korea, May 24, 2024. Rows of nets, some as tall as 2 meters (6.6 ft), and even fences of barbed wire, surround rice seedlings in the island's fields, but the deer eventually get around them, defeating the efforts. 
PHOTO: Reuters file

The deer came to the island around 1985, when about 10 were brought by three farmers, hoping to harvest their antlers, shed annually and highly prized in traditional medicine.

The budding antler replacements, covered in soft short hair as they grow, are cut and marketed before they harden.

Prescribed along with ginseng and medicinal herbs, they are boiled in water to make a traditional remedy, whose cost grows with the quality and number of antler slices in the brew.

A deer antler is seen on a hiking trail on Anma Island in Yeonggwang, South Korea, May 22, 2024. The government is weighing a petition from the villagers to designate the deer as "harmful wildlife", rather than livestock, so clearing the way for the herd to be thinned by hunting or other measures. 
PHOTO: Reuters file

But dwindling interest in such medicines after the mid-1980s quickly dried up the market for antlers, leading the deer farmers to abandon the animals and leave.

Now the sheer number running wild in wide swathes of the island's forest makes it practically impossible to harvest antlers, said Kang Dae-rin, who trades them and runs a deer farm near the capital, Seoul.

The weight of numbers also makes it futile to sedate the deer, who also have a severe tick infestation that makes it hard to ship out the animals, or their antlers, added Kang.

Deer run into the woods on Anma Island in Yeonggwang, South Korea, May 23, 2024. The deer came to the island around 1985, when about 10 were brought by three farmers, hoping to harvest their antlers, shed annually and highly prized in traditional medicine. The budding antler replacements, covered in soft short hair as they grow, are cut and marketed before they harden. 
PHOTO: Reuters file

He has made several trips to gauge the island's potential as a source of the material.

"There are a lot more of them than I thought," said Kang, as he waited to board a ferry for the two-hour journey out.

ALSO READ: Protecting 1.2% of Earth would prevent most extinctions, study says

Source: Reuters

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