Some lakes around Abashiri in Hokkaido prefecture, Japan, are unique for thepractice of under-ice net fishing, but it's contemporary and historical situation has not been systematically researched until now. There we can find some types of winter fishing have been practiced: seine fishing in Lake Abashiri and Lake Akan, gillnet fishing in Lake Notoro and Lake Saroma and set net fishing in Lake Notoro and Saroma and several lakes in the east part of Hokkaido. Especially the under-ice seine fishing in Lake Abashiri is important in that it has been practiced regularly from the moment of propagation from Lake Hachiro, Akita prefecture in 1920's. The under-ice seine fishing in Lake Abashiri has some features: seining rope and net by gasoline engine from 1970's, Wakasagi-Japanese smelt as main target with low bycatch of other fishes, corrective fishing with sharing the catch income among 10 groups of workers. This article has put special accent on the relationship between environmental change and this type of fishing activity in local economic and cultural aspects. Abashiri region is not the place of exception of the climate change process and warming tendency of local climate might has affected the fish resource and ecology, but such researches are mostly under process. Generally, the winter seine fishing has been executed by local communities around the lake coast because of the necessity of numbers of workers. It is one of factors why this type of winter fishing has been existed until now. As for the influence of the climate change we can't detect corresponding factors of the fishing catch change directly, even if some resource decline is reported by fishery researchers. In the last 20 years or so the ratio of winter (under-ice) fishing in the all season's Wakasagi catch is relatively high - about half or more and we can estimate that the vulnerability of this winter fishing exists but it has functioned as a subsistence activity for this region.
This article concerns about the analysis of recent reindeer herding situation among the Tundra Nenets in the Yamal-Nenets Autonomous District, Russian Far North. After the breakdown of the U.S.S.R. in this District, apart from other regions, the number of domestic reindeer has constantly increased and they constitute over 400f the total number of domestic reindeer in Russia (circ. 1.3million head), over 601143501444f which are kept under private herders. The author analyzes structure of the reindeer herds inside the District, especially among the Gydan Nenets in the Tazovsky administrational region. The result of this analysis shows that ratio of certain categories of the herds (female, male deer and the castrates) reflect the herds' scale and character, and that among private herders the Nenets have routine practice of using female deer as sledders. The author's observation of the reindeer herding in some spring camps inside Gydan Tundra in 2005 made some characteristics of private herds clear, for example: birth season's special care for the herders, the female deer with antler in power, usage of ''longali'' (hanging wooden stick for obstacle to running fast) for the castrates and so on. Beside that, the contemporary practice of using of property marker for reindeer (earmark/khavontir/and body marker/pidte''ma/) is described with concrete examples, corrected during author's fieldwork.
T. Hiyama, H. Takakura (担当:共著, 範囲:Chapter 9: Reindeer Herding and Environmental Change in Reindeer Herding Regions of the Sakha Republic: Comparison with the Yamal-Nenets Autonomous District, Pp.145-160.)