Oh deer: famous hoofed residents of Japan’s Nara wander as far as Osaka
More green spaces in nearby cities and the deer’s adaptable nature have led to them straying as far as 40km away from their habitat

A male deer was recently spotted in the Zengenji district of Osaka, around 40km (25 miles) from its normal habitat and 3km from the city’s bustling main station.
Kevin Short, a naturalist and former professor of cultural anthropology at Tokyo University of Information Sciences, believes several factors may have caused the deer to abandon their traditional habitat in the spacious grounds of Nara Park.
“Japan’s big cities have in recent years introduced extensive urban greening programmes, which have opened up opportunities for wildlife to find their way to places that they would never have reached in the past,” he said.
“Deer are very adaptable, they eat a wide range of plant material, and new parks, green spaces and roads lined with trees could have encouraged them to expand their range. Officials have inadvertently created ‘green corridors’ that are bringing more wildlife into city centres.”
