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Japan reports mass oyster deaths as sea temperatures rise

by admineconai December 3, 2025
written by admineconai December 3, 2025
157

Latest reports have shown that Oysters in Japan are dying in their numbers in parts of the country’s top production area, likely due to warmer sea temperatures.

In some coastal areas surrounding the Seto Inland Sea in western Japan — an area that accounts for more than three quarters of Japan’s farmed oyster production, around 90 percent of cultivated oysters have been reported to have died.

“I’ve never experienced this in my whole career,” Tatsuya Morio, who has farmed oysters for more than 20 years, told the media.

Shoichi Yokouchi, an official in the Hiroshima area, which borders the Seto Inland Sea, said he suspected “high water temperatures, together with other factors, are the culprit of oysters dying en masse”.

This year average water temperatures along Hiroshima’s coast from July to October — an important period for oyster cultivation — were 1.5-1.9C higher than the 1991-2020 average, according to prefecture data.

“If higher temperatures remain for a few weeks, that weakens oysters and makes them more susceptible to viruses and bacteria,” said Yokouchi, head of the marine products division.

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But interviews conducted by the fisheries agency in mid-November revealed rates of 60-90 percent in the central-eastern part of Hiroshima Prefecture, and normal to slightly elevated rates in the rest of western part, the ministry of agriculture, forestry and fisheries (MAFF) said last week.

“Little rain in July this year, in addition to high water temperatures, led to a rise in salt concentration, damaging oysters,” said Shinichiro Toi, an official in charge of marine product technology research.

A MAFF official said “We are investigating the cause of the oyster deaths together with local governments”.

Farmer Morio told local broadcaster Hiroshima Home Television that even oysters thought to be more resilient to higher temperatures had been hit.

And in nearby Hyogo prefecture, oyster farmer Daiki Takeuchi said those that had survived “had grown poorly”.

Story was adapted from the Guardian.

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