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Dive into the research topics where Akihisa Hattori is active.

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Featured researches published by Akihisa Hattori.


Ecological Research | 2001

Habitat use and diversity of waterbirds in a coastal lagoon around Lake Biwa, Japan

Akihisa Hattori; Satoshi Mae

We investigated habitat use and diversity of waterbirds at one of the coastal and satellite lagoons around Lake Biwa, which is a registered wetland of the Ramsar Convention in Japan. To evaluate the importance for waterbirds of a lagoon around the freshwater lake, we conducted 26 censuses over 1 year on seven blocks with different landscape elements in a small lagoon. A total of 25 species were found and most of them (72%) belonged to a guild in which birds forage without diving. Species density (per ha) and diversity was high in blocks where Zizania latifolia Turcz and Phragmites australis L. reed beds existed. Not all of the waterbird species were feeding all the time, but were often resting in their preferred blocks, suggesting that they use the lagoon as both a refuge and a feeding site. Habitats with a structural reed bed community and shallow waters (<1 m depth) may be crucial determinants of high waterbird diversity in this small lagoon around which many people live.


Ichthyological Research | 2005

High mobility of the protandrous anemonefish Amphiprion frenatus : nonrandom pair formation in limited shelter space

Akihisa Hattori

Protandry in anemonefishes has been attributed to random pair formation, which results from their limited mobility after random recruitment to isolated host anemones. The recruitment and movement of the anemonefish Amphiprion frenatus were investigated in relation to its group structure and the spatial distribution of its host anemone on a coral reef, where it inhabits isolated single hosts and interhost movement is rare. A juvenile tended to be recruited to a host from which a former resident(s) had disappeared, indicating that larval recruitment is not random. After mass bleaching of corals during which many hosts died, a quarter of adults moved between hosts on average 42 m in 3 weeks, indicating that their mobility is potentially high. The few migrations under normal conditions were probably due to the low benefit of movements. Even after the movements, a female was much larger than her mate in a host, and a large female tended to pair with a large male. Although body size of females was positively correlated with their host size, that of males was not. It is suggested that the size of a single host does not allow the coexistence of two or more large fish, and the size composition of each pair is affected by the host size. Protandry in the monogamous fish may be attributed to the nonrandom pair formation in the limited space of a host.


Ecological Research | 2009

Incorporating fine-scale seascape composition in an assessment of habitat quality for the giant sea anemone Stichodactyla gigantea in a coral reef shore zone

Akihisa Hattori; Miyako Kobayashi

Habitat loss due to land reclamation often occurs in sandy coral reef shore zones. The giant sea anemone Stichodactyla gigantea, which harbors the false clown anemonefish Amphiprion ocellaris, both of which are potentially flagship species, inhabit these places. To assess habitat quality for S. gigantea, we examined correlative associations between the number and the body size of S. gigantea and the amount of habitat types in fine-scale seascape composition quantified from an enlarged section of a high-resolution (1/2,500) color aerial photograph of the shallow shore zone of Shiraho Reef, Ishigaki Island, Japan. This study confirmed that anemones were most abundant at the edges of dense seagrass beds characterized by shallow sandy bottoms, rock beds, and sparse seagrass beds, while they were less abundant in coral patch reefs. However, anemones inhabiting coral patch reefs were significantly larger and their rate of disappearance over 3 years was lower than those inhabiting other habitats. This suggests that coral patch reefs may be more suitable habitats supporting larger animals and greater persistence of S. gigantea. The visual census techniques applied here, combined with aerial photography and image-analysis software, may be useful as a simple analytical tool for local assessment of suitable habitats for relatively small-bodied marine fauna in shallow-water seascapes.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2013

Habitat use and coexistence of three territorial herbivorous damselfish on different-size patch reefs

Akihisa Hattori; Takuro Shibuno

In local reef fish communities, species richness increases with increasing reef area. At Ishigaki Island, Japan, species richness is much lower on large reefs in the shallow back reef than that expected from random placement model simulations (RPMS). As three aggressive territorial herbivorous damselfish, Stegastes nigricans , Stegastes lividus and Hemiglyphidodon plagiometopon , coexist only on such large reefs, we focused on these species and examined patterns of their distribution and abundance on 84 patch reefs of various sizes (area and height). We also examined their aggressive intra- and interspecific behavioural interactions and habitat use on the two large reefs (the largest complex patch reef and the large flat patch reef) among the 84 patch reefs. While the abundance of both S. lividus and H. plagiometopon was highly correlated with patch reef area, that of S. nigricans was closely correlated with patch reef height. For S. nigricans and S. lividus , interspecific interactions occurred significantly more frequently than intraspecific interactions on the large flat patch reef. However, there was no significant difference in frequencies of the two interaction types on the largest complex patch reef, where they three-dimensionally segregated conspecific territories. This study suggested that reef height as well as reef area influence the distribution and abundance of these territorial herbivorous damselfish in the shallow back reef. As large patch reefs cannot be tall allometrically in shallow back reefs, relatively flat patch reefs may not have the high species richness expected from RPMS based on reef area.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2006

When cleanerfish become anemonefish

Michael Arvedlund; Akihisa Hattori; Kenji Iwao; Akihiro Takemura

Here we report on a previously undocumented facultative symbiosis involving the wrasses Labroides dimidiatus and Thallasoma amblycephalum living in association with two species of sea anemones, on coral reefs in the north-western Pacific. By SCUBA diving we observed juvenile L. dimidiatus occurring in Entacmaea quadricolor (solitary type) cleaning the anemonefish Amphiprion frenatus and in Heteractis magnifica cleaning the anemonefish Dascyllus trimaculatus . Thallasoma amblycephalum co-existed in H. magnifica with the anemonefish D. trimaculatus , A. ocellaris and L. dimidiatus .


Journal of Animal Ecology | 2002

Small and large anemonefishes can coexist using the same patchy resources on a coral reef, before habitat destruction

Akihisa Hattori


Austral Ecology | 2000

Social and mating systems of the protandrous anemonefish Amphiprion perideraion under the influence of a larger congener

Akihisa Hattori


Journal of Ethology | 2006

Vertical and horizontal distribution patterns of the giant sea anemone Heteractis crispa with symbiotic anemonefish on a fringing coral reef

Akihisa Hattori


Ichthyological Research | 2006

Spacing pattern and body size composition of the protandrous anemonefish Amphiprion frenatus inhabiting colonial host anemones

Miyako Kobayashi; Akihisa Hattori


Behavioral Ecology | 2012

Determinants of body size composition in limited shelter space: why are anemonefishes protandrous?

Akihisa Hattori

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Takuro Shibuno

Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center

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