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 Isopods Asellus hilgendorfi were collected from a small lake in northern Japan and examined to determine whether their body size and reproduction were affected by infection with larval acanthocephalans (Acanthocephalus sp.). Seasonal changes in the breeding ratio of isopods and the prevalence of larval acanthocephalan infection showed a reverse trend. Acanthocephalan larvae occurred mainly in males and immature females and were rarely found in mature females. In late immature females, the body size, as indicated by the width of the pleotelson, of infected isopods was significantly larger than that of uninfected ones. These results suggest that acanthocephalans can prevent female isopods from attaining sexual maturity and increasing their body size. Received: January 9, 2002 / Accepted: December 16, 2002 Acknowledgments We thank Professor Shōichi Saito, Faculty of Education, Hirosaki University, for his encouragement of the present study. Thanks are also due to the Iwasaki Village Office and the Fukaura Forestry Office for giving us permission for the survey. Correspondence to:A. Ohtaka  相似文献   

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 Lake Hovsgol is a large tectonic lake located in northern Mongolia, which has extremely transparent lake water. In our survey, the dissolved organic carbon of the lake water was 80–100 μM-C, and the fluorescence intensity in an excitation and emission matrix was very low. The brown color and high content of humic substances in river water flowing from a watershed consisting of grassland and forests rapidly declined in the coastal area of the lake. The decrease in humic content may be due not only to dilution by the lake water but also to flocculation and photobleaching. Among tectonic lakes in Asia, Lake Hovsgol would appear to have unique biological and hydrological features that reduce humic content and help to maintain water transparency. Received: June 25, 2002 / Accepted: January 10, 2003 Acknowledgments The authors acknowledge helpful discussion with Dr. J. Urabe. We thank Dr. T. Galbaatar, Mongolian Academy of Science, Mongolia, for his arrangements on the expeditions in 1999. We are also indebted to Mr. D. Hadbaatar, B. Ganbat, and the cruise staff of the R/V Suchbaatar for their assistance in the course of the study. This study was supported by Grant-in-Aid No. 09041159 and 13575034 for Scientific Research from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan. Correspondence to:K. Hayakawa  相似文献   

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 A Scleroderma species collected on sandy soil under trees of Lithocarpus edulis in Saitama Prefecture, central Japan, is identified as Scleroderma laeve, a new record for Japan. Macroscopic and microscopic features are given. Received: May 24, 2002 / Accepted: September 9, 2002 Acknowledgments We thank Ms. Ryoko Onuma, who offered some useful literature on Scleroderma. We are also grateful to Dr. Toshimitsu Fukiharu (Natural History Museum and Institute, Chiba) for his help with preserving the specimens. For collecting specimens, we are grateful to Ms. Ayano Kimura, Mr. Tomoya Matsuyama, and Mr. Takahiro Uchida. Correspondence to:T. Kasuya  相似文献   

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 The trophic interaction in the pelagic food web of oligotrophic-dystrophic Lake Shirakoma-ike was investigated by a stable isotope technique. Carbon and nitrogen isotope analyses revealed the trophic interaction among Piona carnea (a water mite), Chaoborus sp. (a phantom midge), Daphnia longispina (a cladoceran), and Acanthodiaptomus pacificus (a calanoida copepoda). The δ13C values for estimating the relative contributions of D. longispina and A. pacificus to carnivores were used, and they were also used for the constraint of the trophic enrichment factor of δ15N. Both Chaoborus sp. and P. carnea were suggested to consume D. longispina and A. pacificus at almost the same ratio (1 : 1). However, both carnivores preferred A. pacificus to D. longispina, because D. longispina was much more abundant in the lake than A. pacificus. Omnivory of P. carnea was also analyzed by the mixing model. Received: February 28, 2002 / Accepted: July 10, 2002 Present address: Hydrospheric Atmospheric Research Center, Nagoya University, Furo-cho, Chikusa-ku, Nagoya 464-8601, Japan Tel. +81-52-789-3434; Fax +81-52-789-3436 e-mail: lee@ihas.nagoya-u.ac.jp Present address: Research Institute for Humanity and Nauture, Kyoto, Japan Acknowledgments We would like to thank Professor Kikuo Kato for providing useful comments and colleagues in the Laboratory of Biogeochemical Data Analysis, Nagoya University, for their support with the sample collection. We are in debt to Dr. R. Coucett for the kind suggestion on the trophic enrichment factors for blood-sucking insects. We also thank the members of the Suwa Hydrobiological Station, Shinshu University, who kindly allowed us to use facilities for sampling in Lake Shirakoma-ike. The zooplankton samples were partly provided by Mr. Masataka Yoshida. Correspondence to:J.-Y. Lee  相似文献   

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Our studies on Bracon F. fauna of Turkey started in 1979 and 107 species have been determined so far belonging to the subgenera Habrobracon Ashmead, Asiabracon Tobias, Rostrobracon Tobias, Bracon Fahringer, Cyanopterobracon Tobias, Glabrobracon Fahringer and Lucobracon Fahringer. Thirteen new Bracon species were published from Turkey. With this present study Bracon (Lucobracon) achterbergi Beyarslan sp. n. is described and its diagnostic characters are illustrated. The distribution of Bracon species are discussed according to the Euxin, Subeuxin, Mediterranean, Xeroeuxin, Iran Steppe, Anatolia Steppe, Central Anatolia Steppe and Mesopotamian Steppe phytogeographical provinces of Turkey.  相似文献   

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K. Hata  R. Atari  K. Sone 《Mycoscience》2002,43(5):0369-0373
 Endophytic fungi were isolated from leaves of Pasania edulis, one of the most important trees of the warm temperate forests in southern Kyushu, by the surface sterilization method using H2O2 as a sterilizing agent. From a tree in the Experimental Nursery of Kagoshima University, located at the city of Kagoshima, Phyllosticta sp. and Colletotrichum spp. were frequently isolated. From a stand in a laurel forest in Mt. Takakuma, an ascomycetous fungus (Ascomycete sp. 1) and Phomopsis sp. were frequently isolated. Phyllosticta sp. was isolated more frequently from petiole segments and leaf segments with midrib and Phomopsis sp. from petiole segments and leaf-base segments with midrib than other segments. Colletotrichum spp. were isolated less frequently from petioles and Ascomycete sp. 1 from petiole segments and leaf-base segments with midrib than other segments. As possible causes of such biases in within-leaf distributions of the endophytes, differences in infection modes and negative interactions of major endophytes within leaves are suggested. Received: December 13, 2001 / Accepted: June 7, 2002 Acknowledgments The authors thank the staff members of the Experimental Forests of Kagoshima University for enabling the present study. Correspondence to:K. Hata  相似文献   

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Study on rugose coral fauna of the Sifengya Formation (early Telychian) and Daluzhai Formation (mid-late Telychian) in Daguan area, northeast Yunnan Province, China was carried out. Rugose coral fauna of the Sifengya Formation included 18 genera and 34 species, while Daluzhai Formation with nine genera, ten species. We described rugose coral fauna (12 genera, 19 species) including one new genus and five new species, i.e. Protoketophyllum daguanense gen. et sp. nov., Crassilasma huanggexiense sp. nov., Pseudophaulactis heae sp. nov., P. convolutus sp. nov., and Shensiphyllum minor sp. nov. The characteristics and geological significance of rugose coral fauna of Sifengya Formation and Daluzhai Formation were analyzed. Particularly, rugose coral fauna of the Sifengya Formation represent early Telychian rugosan fauna in the Upper Yangtze region and improve the sequences of early Silurian (Llandovery) rugose coral assemblages in Yangtze region. It is therefore very meaningful to further analyze radiation period of rugose coral fauna in such epoch. __________ Translated from Acta Palaeontologica Sinica, 2005, 44(2): 229–246 [译自: 古生物学报, 2005, 44(2): 229–246]  相似文献   

10.
S. Kawakami  H. Hagiwara 《Mycoscience》2002,43(6):0453-0457
 Seven strains representative of Polysphondylium pallidum were examined in terms of mating relationship and morphology. By mating tests, two heterothallic mating groups were detected. By morphological comparisons, they were clearly different in number of branches and in shape of bases and tip cells of sorophores. These results suggested that these two mating groups were distinct taxa. Received: January 23, 2002 / Accepted: August 30, 2002 Present address:Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of Natural History, Odawara, Kanagawa, Japan (visiting researcher) Acknowledgments I thank Dr. James C. Cavender, Department of Environmental and Plant Biology, Ohio University, Athens, OH, USA, for providing the cultures of three strains, V-1, WS320, and WS543. Correspondence to:H. Hagiwara  相似文献   

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 The echinorhynchid acanthocephalan Acanthocephalus sp. was collected and described from four species of fishes (rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss, Sakhalin huchen Hucho perryi, Japanese pond smelt Hypomesus nipponensis, and threespine stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus) from a lake system, the Tsugaru-Jūniko Lakes, in Aomori Prefecture, northern Japan. In rainbow trout, the prevalence and intensity of infection markedly differed between lakes, and the fish were most frequently and most heavily infected in the lakes with a dense population of the isopod intermediate host Asellus hilgendorfi. In isopods, the prevalence of acanthocephalan larvae increased in the late winter and reached its highest level in March or April. In rainbow trout, male worms were abundant from winter to spring, and female worms were immature during these seasons. Gravid females were abundant in summer and autumn. These findings indicate that Acanthocephalus sp. is an annual species and its recruitment from the intermediate host to the fish occurs mainly in winter and spring. Received: January 9, 2002 / Accepted: April 18, 2002 Acknowledgments We thank Professor Shōichi Saito, Faculty of Education, Hirosaki University, for his encouragement during this study. Thanks are also due to many students of the Nature Study Laboratory, Faculty of Education, Hirosaki University, for their assistance in the field. We are greatly indebted to the Iwasaki Village Office and Fukaura Forestry Office for giving us permission for the survey. Correspondence to:A. Ohtaka  相似文献   

13.
F. Usuki  J. P. Abe  M. Kakishima 《Mycoscience》2003,44(2):0097-0102
 The diversity of ericoid mycorrhizal fungi of Rhododendron obtusum var. kaempferi was examined in a stand of Pinus densiflora at Tsukuba, Japan. In total, 153 slow-growing fungal isolates were obtained from roots of R. obtusum var. kaempferi, in which 113 isolates formed an ericoid mycorrhizal structure in vitro. Among them, 53 isolates were morphologically identified as Oidiodendron maius, but the others were not identified due to their sterilities. PCR-RFLP analysis in the rDNA-ITS region divided them into four different RFLP types. Phylogenetic analysis from sequence data of the region suggested that the four RFLP types belonging to distinct taxa and one sterile type are considered to be Hymenoscyphus ericae. This study is the first report of ericoid mycorrhizal fungi in a natural habitat in Japan. Received: August 23, 2002 / Accepted: December 11, 2002 Acknowledgments We thank Dr. K. Narisawa, Plant Biotechnology Institute, Ibaraki Agricultural Center, and Dr. R.S. Currah, Department of Biological Science, University of Alberta, for their helpful advice. Contribution no. 176, Laboratory of Plant Parasitic Mycology, Institute of Agriculture and Forestry, University of Tsukuba, Japan Correspondence to:M. Kakishima  相似文献   

14.
H. Takahashi 《Mycoscience》2003,44(2):0103-0107
 Three new species of Agaricales from eastern Honshu, Japan, are described and illustrated. (1) Clitocybe minutella sp. nov. (section Vernae), having white, very small, clitocyboid basidiomata with white, strigose mycelial tomentum at the base of the stipe and trichodermial elements in the pileipellis, occurs on leaf litter in deciduous oak forests. (2) Crepidotus longicomatus sp.nov. (section Echinospori), forms very small (up to 3.5 mm in diameter), reniform basidiomata densely covered overall with white to pale yellow, erect, thick-walled, long hairs. It has melleous, echinulate basidiospores, and was found on fallen dead branches in lowland oak forests. (3) Crepidotus virgineus sp. nov. (section Crepidotus), forming pure white, reniform basidiomata, has smooth, ellipsoid basidiospores, subfusiform-pedicellate to irregularly cylindrical cheilocystidia, and abundant clamp connections. It occurs on fallen dead branches in lowland oak forests. Received: August 22, 2002 / Accepted: January 8, 2003 Acknowledgments I am grateful to Dr. Yousuke Degawa (KPM) for allowing the specimens cited to be kept in the Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of Natural History. Correspondence to:H. Takahashi  相似文献   

15.
T. Tsuruishi 《Limnology》2003,4(1):0011-0018
 The life cycle of a giant carnivorous caddisfly, Himalopsyche japonica (Morton), was studied in two mountain streams in Nagano Prefecture, Central Japan. Field surveys and rearing experiments in the laboratory were conducted from October 1997 to September 2001. The life cycle of H. japonica was estimated to be a complex univoltine cycle that partly includes bivoltine populations. The adults had a long flight period, from April to September, with three distinct peaks of emergence. First to third instar larvae were collected from June to February, and the last (fifth) instar larvae and pupae appeared throughout the year. In autumn, the larvae belonging to all instars were found, and younger ones overwintered in the fourth instar stage and others in the fifth instar stage. On the other hand, fifth instar larvae and pupae ceased developing in autumn even though the water temperature was higher than the developmental zero temperature. The overwintered pupae emerged as adults in April, and the overwintered fifth instar larvae pupated in May and emerged in June. The larvae which overwintered in the fourth instar stage probably emerged after June. Received: March 19, 2002 / Accepted: January 10, 2003 Present address: United Graduate School of Agricultural Science, Gifu University, 1-1 Yanagido, Gifu 501-1193, Japan Tel. +81-265-77-1401; Fax +81-265-74-7496 e-mail: himalo@f8.dion.ne.jp Acknowledgments The author thanks Prof. T. Yoshida, Prof. H. Nakamura, and Associate professor K. Soma, Shinshu University; Mr. T. Nozaki, Kanagawa Environmental Research Center; and Mr. N. Kubota, Environmental Assessment Center in Matsumoto laboratory for their advice and help in accomplishing this research. The author is also grateful to Prof. K. Tanida, Osaka Prefecture University; Dr. T. Ito, Hokkaido Fish Hatchery; Mr. K. Okazaki, Kutchan City Museum; and Mrs. Y. Isobe, Nara Women's University, for suggesting references. Miss. T. Ishiyama, Mr. H. Kojima, Mr. M. Yagyu, and the students of the Forest Animals Laboratory in Shinshu University kindly provided field samples. Correspondence to:T. Tsuruishi  相似文献   

16.
Umbelopsis gibberispora is described as a new species in the genus Umbelopsis, Umbelopsidaceae, Mucorales. The species differs from others in this genus by ellipsoidal sporangiospores with unilaterally thickened walls. Phylogenetic analyses based on nuclear large subunit ribosomal DNA (nLSU rDNA) partial sequences suggest that U. gibberispora, U. swartii, and U. westeae form a clade together with the strains of Umbelopsis ramanniana. The ex-type strain of Micromucor ramannianus var. angulisporus is found to be very close to Umbelopsis vinacea, whereas other isolates identified under the former name in the sense of Linnemann fall in the U. ramanniana subclade. For these isolates, a new species, Umbelopsis angularis, is introduced. Phylogenetic relationships among Umbelopsis species are discussed related to their attributes of the sporangial wall and mature spore shapes. Received: August 27, 2002 / Accepted: March 11, 2003 Acknowledgments We thank Dr. Takashi Ohsono, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University, Japan, for providing the strain of U. gibberispora (CBS 109328). We also thank Dr. Wieland Meyer, University of Sydney, Australia for access to the phylogenetic tree based on ITS sequence data before publishing, and Dr. Richard C. Summerbell, Centraalbureau von Schimmelcultures, the Netherlands, for linguistic corrections.  相似文献   

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T. Kobayashi 《Mycoscience》2002,43(3):0207-0211
 Three species of the genus Inocybe are reported as new species or new records from Japan. Inocybe phaeodisca Kühner var. geophylloides Kühner is redescribed by specimens collected in Chiba Prefecture; this is the first record of I. phaeodisca var. geophylloides for Japan. Inocybe pseudoreducta Stangl & Glowinski is also redescribed by materials collected in Hokkaido and Chiba Prefecture, new to Japan. Inocybe subtilis Takahito Kobayashi sp. nov. is proposed for material collected from Tokyo. The sectional position of this species is noted. Received: January 4, 2002 / Accepted: February 25, 2002  相似文献   

20.
The problematic lizard family Changjiangosauridae, representatives of which inhabited Asia in the Early Paleogene, is discussed. Six new species of this group, including Acrodontopsis robustus gen. et sp. nov., Agamimus gracilis gen. et sp. nov., Graminisaurus interruptus gen. et sp. nov., Khaichinsaurus reshetovi gen. et sp. nov., Lavatisaurus elegans gen. et sp. nov., and Lentisaurus giganteus gen. et sp. nov., from the Middle Eocene of the Khaichin Uul 2 locality (southern Gobi, Mongolia) are described. It is shown that Changjiangosauridae are probably related to the Late Cretaceous Isodontosauridae and recent Uromastycidae; independent development of a number of dental features in different lineages of Acrodonta (Iguania) is corroborated.  相似文献   

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