Akihiko Inamura
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Akihiko Inamura.
Aquatic Geochemistry | 2015
Takuya Manaka; Hiroyuki Ushie; Daisuke Araoka; Souya Otani; Akihiko Inamura; Atsushi Suzuki; H. M. Zakir Hossain; Hodaka Kawahata
Recent studies have remarked on the importance of direct CO2 release from river water into the atmosphere on the global carbon cycle over a short timescale. In this study, we investigated carbonate systems, including spatial and seasonal variations of pCO2, in three major Himalayan rivers in Bangladesh: the Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna Rivers, and their potential importance. Although pCO2 is known to be low in the upper reaches of these rivers, owing to active chemical weathering, we observed pCO2 values higher than the atmospheric pCO2 level along their lower reaches, where deep soils have developed and where high air temperatures promote active soil respiration. By a simple mixing calculation, we found that seasonal variations in these river water carbonate systems are controlled by subsurface water flows. In the rainy season, most of the lowlands are inundated, and the contribution of subsurface flow to river water carbonate systems increases, resulting in higher pCO2 values. In future research, more detailed spatial and seasonal investigations are required to clarify the role of terrestrial ecosystems, including rivers and the CO2 flux to the atmosphere, in the global carbon cycle and to examine how that role will change under global warming.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015
Takuya Manaka; Souya Otani; Akihiko Inamura; Atsushi Suzuki; Thura Aung; Raywadee Roachanakanan; Takeshige Ishiwa; Hodaka Kawahata
The role of terrestrial river systems in the global carbon cycle on a long timescale has been a subject of interest, especially in the context of past climate changes such as the global cooling in the Cenozoic. The discharges of water and carbon into the ocean from the Himalayan watersheds are among the highest in the world. However, there are few reliable geochemical data from the Ayeyarwady River. This study focused on reevaluating chemical weathering in the Himalayan watersheds based on samples taken from the Ayeyarwady, Mekong, and Chao Phraya Rivers and on chemical analysis of the composition of dissolved substances in these rivers. Comparisons of water quality showed that, unlike in previous studies, the total alkalinity budgets of the Ayeyarwady are dominated by carbonate rather than silicate weathering. Long-term CO2 consumption by silicate weathering in the Ayeyarwady is estimated to be only 63–145 × 109 mol yr−1, which is only 10% of the previous estimate. Our results also suggest that the total Himalayan watersheds account for only about 10% of the total global CO2 consumption by silicate weathering. Although we need further studies, chemical weathering and associated CO2 uptake in the Himalayas likely played a lesser role in long-term global cooling in the past than previously appreciated.
Aquatic Geochemistry | 2013
Takuya Manaka; Hiroyuki Ushie; Daisuke Araoka; Akihiko Inamura; Atsushi Suzuki; Hodaka Kawahata
The global carbon cycle, one of the important biogeochemical cycles controlling the surface environment of the Earth, has been greatly affected by human activity. Anthropogenic nutrient loading from urban sewage and agricultural runoff has caused eutrophication of aquatic systems. The impact of this eutrophication and consequent photosynthetic activity on CO2 exchange between freshwater systems and the atmosphere is unclear. In this study, we focused on how nutrient loading to lakes affects their carbonate system. Here, we report results of surveys of lakes in Japan at different stages of eutrophication. Alkalization due to photosynthetic activity and decreases in PCO2 had occurred in eutrophic lakes (e.g., Lake Kasumigaura), whereas in an acidotrophic lake (Lake Inawashiro) that was impacted by volcanic hot springs, nutrient loading was changing the pH and carbon cycling. When the influence of volcanic activity was stronger in the past in Lake Inawashiro, precipitation of volcanic-derived iron and aluminum had removed nutrients by co-precipitation. During the last three decades, volcanic activity has weakened and the lake water has become alkalized. We inferred that this rapid alkalization did not result just from the reduction in acid inputs but was also strongly affected by increased photosynthetic activity during this period. Human activities affect many lakes in the world. These lakes may play an important part in the global carbon cycle through their influence on CO2 exchange between freshwater and the atmosphere. Biogeochemical changes and processes in these systems have important implications for future changes in aquatic carbonate systems on land.
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2011
Hisato Izumida; Toshihiro Yoshimura; Atsushi Suzuki; Rei Nakashima; Toyoho Ishimura; Masaya Yasuhara; Akihiko Inamura; Naotatsu Shikazono; Hodaka Kawahata
Geophysical Research Letters | 2005
Noritoshi Morikawa; Kohei Kazahaya; Masaya Yasuhara; Akihiko Inamura; Katashi Nagao; Hirochika Sumino; Michiko Ohwada
Journal of Japanese Association of Hydrological Sciences | 2014
Kohei Kazahaya; Masaaki Takahashi; Masaya Yasuhara; Yoshiro Nishio; Akihiko Inamura; Noritoshi Morikawa; Tsutomu Sato; Hiroshi Takahashi; Koichi Kitaoka; Shinji Ohsawa; Yoichi Oyama; Michiko Ohwada; Hitoshi Tsukamoto; Keika Horiguchi; Yuki Tosaki; Tsukasa Kirita
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2016
Noritoshi Morikawa; Kohei Kazahaya; Masaaki Takahashi; Akihiko Inamura; Hiroshi A. Takahashi; Masaya Yasuhara; Michiko Ohwada; Tsutomu Sato; Atsuko Nakama; Hiroko Handa; Hirochika Sumino; Keisuke Nagao
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012
Michiko Ohwada; Kohei Kazahaya; Jun'ich Itoh; Noritoshi Morikawa; Masaaki Takahashi; Hiroshi A. Takahashi; Akihiko Inamura; Masaya Yasuhara; Hitoshi Tsukamoto
Archive | 2009
Kohei Kazahaya; Noritoshi Morikawa; Moriaki Yasuhara; Hitoshi Tsukamoto; Hiroshi Takahashi; Taku J. Sato; Maiko Takahashi; Michiko Ohwada; Akihiko Inamura; Yuichi Oyama
Journal of Nuclear Fuel Cycle and Environment | 2011
Yoichi Oyama; Masaaki Takahashi; Hitoshi Tsukamoto; Kohei Kazahaya; Masaya Yasuhara; Hiroshi A. Takahashi; Noritoshi Morikawa; Michiko Ohwada; Akihiko Shibahara; Akihiko Inamura
Collaboration
Dive into the Akihiko Inamura's collaboration.
National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputsNational Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology
View shared research outputs