A small Japanese fleet caught their first whales on Monday in the first commercial hunt in more than three decades.
Five ships sailed out of Kushiro in northern Japan, on Monday, while three whaling boats left Shimonoseki in southwestern Japan.
According to reports, the ships have a permit to catch 227 whales - minke, Bryde's and sei - before the end of the year.
Tokyo had announced in December its decision to leave the International Whaling Commission (IWC) to resume hunting.
It was in 1986 that Japan had stopped commercial hunting and switched to so-called research whaling a year later.

Elon Musk, Ronaldo attend Trump's dinner for Saudi Crown Prince
Louvre museum to add 100 external cameras by 2026 after heist
Japan's biggest fire in nearly 50 years ravages 170 buildings, kills one
Cloudflare outage cuts access to X, ChatGPT and other web platforms
