Martin Clunes has revealed he turned down the opportunity to dine on a bear delicacy for his new TV show.

The Doc Martin star was offered a meal of wild bear casserole after he met surviving members of the ancient Matagi tribe in northern Japan for his two-part ITV documentary, Man And Beast With Martin Clunes.

Martin Clunes couldn't face eating a meal made from Asian black bear (Richard W Rodriguez/AP)
Martin Clunes couldn’t face eating a meal made from Asian black bear (Richard W Rodriguez/AP)

The tribe hunts and kills the Asian black bear partly for their own safety, but also as a source of food.

“I knew it was something I would be offered. I thought I would be fine, I eat my own lambs. But as we got there, there was something to do with the act of filming it – it was kind of entertainment, and I didn’t want to eat a bear for fun, for entertainment,” he said.

“I will be honest, I had people like (wildlife campaigner) Virginia McKenna in my mind, also my involvement with animal welfare issues and charities. So I said no.

“Also it didn’t look very nice. It looked like puddle water with bones, not a nice thick brown stew as I had imagined.”

(Buffalo Pictures/ITV)
Martin Clunes meets an elephant in Thailand (Buffalo Pictures/ITV)

Martin, who explores the relationship between humans and animals in the show, revealed he was asked to carve the head of a sheep at the dining table when he was visiting Mongolia.

“It was a ritual for the visitor to carve the head, and give the tenderest cut to the oldest person there, and then the sweetest, which is the ear, goes to the youngest person there, and then I have to serve myself. It would have been rude to refuse,” he said.

“Then they pass round a bowl with the juice of the mutton has been boiled in and we all had to drink that. Then we had fermented mare’s milk, which is alcoholic. I survived all that without getting tummy upsets.”

Man And Beast With Martin Clunes begins on ITV on May 15.