Classroom lesson 路 Wildlife馃嚡馃嚨 Japan

The tanuki - Japan's real-life cuddly looking animal

A wild Japanese animal that looks part dog, part raccoon, part teddy bear

A round, fluffy tanuki (Japanese raccoon dog) sitting on a wall in front of green plants

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The tanuki is a real animal that lives wild across Japan. It looks like a chubby raccoon with a fox's face, but it is actually a kind of dog - one of the few wild dogs in the world that can climb trees. The full English name is 'Japanese raccoon dog'.

Tell me more

Tanuki live in forests, mountains and even on the edges of cities. They eat fruit, nuts, insects, frogs and pretty much whatever they can find. In autumn they fatten up so much that they look like furry little footballs. The extra fat helps them stay warm in winter.

Tanuki live in pairs and look after their babies together. The dad helps look after the pups, which is unusual in the animal world - in many species, the babies are raised only by the mum. Tanuki dads bring food back to the den and stand guard.

Unlike many wild dogs, tanuki can climb trees. They use their sharp claws to grip the bark, then sit in the branches eating berries. They are also strong swimmers. Some scientists call them the 'Swiss army knife' of wild dogs because they're good at so many different things.

Tanuki are a beloved character in Japanese stories - usually shown as friendly, a bit cheeky, and very fond of food. You can spot little stone statues of tanuki outside restaurants and shops all over Japan, often holding a paper umbrella. Many children grow up with cuddly tanuki toys.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01If you could be related to a dog, a fox, or a raccoon - which would you choose, and why?
  2. 02Why might it help an animal to be good at lots of different things instead of just one?
  3. 03What is your favourite animal that appears in stories from your country?
Try this

Classroom activity

Design your own friendly Japanese-style 'shop statue' animal - the kind that might stand outside a school or a caf茅. What animal is it? What does it hold? What does it stand for? Draw it on A4 and explain to the class.