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Dive into the research topics where Ayumi Imanishi is active.

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Featured researches published by Ayumi Imanishi.


Explore-the Journal of Science and Healing | 2013

Spiritual care of cancer patients by integrated medicine in urban green space: a pilot study.

Maiko Nakau; Jiro Imanishi; Junichi Imanishi; Satoko Watanabe; Ayumi Imanishi; Takeshi Baba; Kei Hirai; Toshinori Ito; Wataru Chiba; Yukihiro Morimoto

BACKGROUNDnPsycho-oncological care, including spiritual care, is essential for cancer patients. Integrated medicine, a therapy combining modern western medicine with various kinds of complementary and alternative medicine, can be appropriate for the spiritual care of cancer because of the multidimensional characteristics of the spirituality. In particular, therapies that enable patients to establish a deeper contact with nature, inspire feelings of life and growth of plants, and involve meditation may be useful for spiritual care as well as related aspects such as emotion. The purpose of the present study was to examine the effect of spiritual care of cancer patients by integrated medicine in a green environment.nnnMETHODSnThe present study involved 22 cancer patients. Integrated medicine consisted of forest therapy, horticultural therapy, yoga meditation, and support group therapy, and sessions were conducted once a week for 12 weeks. The spirituality (the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Spiritual well-being), quality of life (Short Form-36 Health Survey Questionnaire), fatigue (Cancer Fatigue Scale), psychological state (Profile of Mood States, short form, and State-Trait Anxiety Inventory) and natural killer cell activity were assessed before and after intervention.nnnRESULTSnIn Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Spiritual well-being, there were significant differences in functional well-being and spiritual well-being pre- and postintervention. This program improved quality of life and reduced cancer-associated fatigue. Furthermore, some aspects of psychological state were improved and natural killer cell activity was increased.nnnCONCLUSIONSnIt is indicated that integrated medicine performed in a green environment is potentially useful for the emotional and spiritual well-being of cancer patients.


Landscape and Ecological Engineering | 2010

Integrating ecological and cultural values toward conservation and utilization of shrine/temple forests as urban green space in Japanese cities

Hiroaki Ishii; Tohru Manabe; Keitaro Ito; Naoko Fujita; Ayumi Imanishi; Daisuke Hashimoto; Ayako Iwasaki

In Japan, forests associated with shrines and temples are recognized as important components of urban green space, which can potentially function as centers for ecosystem conservation in rapidly urbanizing Japanese cities. In addition to their ecological value, shrine/temple forests have social value, providing recreational and aesthetic needs to residents of urban areas. We review the historical development of shrine/temple forests in Japan and discuss current conservation issues from both ecological and sociological perspectives. Generally, shrine forests are minimally managed and public access is discouraged, whereas temple forests are intensively managed for public display. Shrines tend to be spatially scattered across the landscape but associated with specific geographical features, whereas temples tend to be clustered. Their wide and random distribution in urban areas suggests that shrine forests can potentially be used as stepping stones in the urban green space network, whereas spatially clustered temple forests can be integrated to form large areas of green space. Species diversity of shrine/temple forests declines with decreasing area. The distribution pattern of species is not completely nested, indicating that although conservation of large forest fragments may be effective for maintaining landscape-level biodiversity, smaller forest fragments and adjacent precincts are sometimes significant because rare species occasionally inhabit them. Active management and ecological restoration, such as removal of invasive species, are also important to maintain the desirable near-natural forest conditions. A working group including the owner, community, regional government, and ecologists should be involved in creating an effective, long-term management plan. Because social and cultural values are diverse, basic ecological studies of shrine/temple forests would contribute a scientific basis that fosters public confidence in the process.


Landscape and Ecological Engineering | 2010

Nondestructive determination of leaf chlorophyll content in two flowering cherries using reflectance and absorptance spectra

Junichi Imanishi; Aki Nakayama; Yoko Suzuki; Ayumi Imanishi; Nobuyuki Ueda; Yukihiro Morimoto; Minoru Yoneda

Leaf chlorophyll quantification is a key technique in tree vigor assessment. Although many studies have been conducted on nondestructive and in-field spectroscopic determination, it is reasonable to develop species-specific chlorophyll indices for accurate determination, because leaf spectra can vary independently of chlorophyll content due to leaf surface and structural differences among species. The present study aimed to develop optimal reflectance and absorptance indices for estimating the leaf chlorophyll content of Cerasus jamasakura (Siebold ex Koidz.) H. Ohba var. jamasakura and Cerasusxa0×xa0yedoensis ‘Somei-yoshino,’ and to examine their performance by comparing them with 46 published chlorophyll indices and SPAD. For 96 and 100 leaf samples, measurements were taken using a spectroradiometer with a leaf-clip attachment and a SPAD-502 chlorophyll meter, and chlorophyll content was determined by extraction with N,N′-dimethylformamide. The optimal leaf chlorophyll indices were then developed systematically by testing eight types of indices. As a result, we confirmed that the optimal chlorophyll indices performed better than any of the published leaf chlorophyll indices or SPAD, giving RMSEs that were approximately twice as good as those for SPAD, and found that the newly proposed index type—a difference and ratio combination type—may be a useful form of chlorophyll content estimation. We also found that absorptance indices achieved equivalent results to reflectance indices despite the hypothesis that absorptance measurement is direct and has more potential. Among the published indices, the reflectance ratio index of Datt [Datt B (1999) Int J Remote Sens 20(14):2741–2759] and the red edge chlorophyll index of Ciganda et al. [Ciganda V, Gitelson A, Schepers J (2009) J Plant Physiol 166:157–167] were effective at estimating the leaf chlorophyll contents of both flowering cherries.


Landscape and Ecological Engineering | 2010

Sprout initiation and growth for three years after cutting in an abandoned secondary forest in Kyoto, Japan

Ayumi Imanishi; Junko Morimoto; Junichi Imanishi; Shozo Shibata; Asami Nakanishi; Naoya Osawa; Shinjiro Sakai

Secondary forests in Japan have been abandoned and the ecosystem has degraded since the high economic growth period. We carried out cutting in January in three small areas of a long-abandoned secondary forest and investigated the sprout initiation and growth of woody plants for three years in order to reveal the early stage of sprout regeneration and to understand the sprouting ability and characteristics of each species for effective management. The percentage of sprouted stumps and the number of sprouting shoots was substantially maximized in autumn in the first year. These results suggest that autumn monitoring in the first year after cutting shows the maximum percentage of sprouted stumps and the maximum sprout number when cutting was conducted in the dormant season. With regards to species characteristics, Eurya japonica showed a low percentage of sprouted stumps in the lower plot, where the mean diameter at breast height for this species was smaller than in the other plots. The sprouting ability of E. japonica was deemed to be influenced by parent tree size. Ilex pedunculosa and Lyonia ovalifolia var. elliptica had high percentages of sprouted stumps and many sprouts. These species are useful for obtaining sprouting shoots (e.g., for firewood), but it is difficult to control their sprouting.


Journal of Forest Research | 2013

Ecological functions of persistent Japanese cedar litter in structuring stream macroinvertebrate assemblages

Masaru Sakai; Yosihiro Natuhara; Keitaro Fukushima; Ayumi Imanishi; Kensuke Imai; Makoto Kato

Stream macroinvertebrate assemblages are expected to be affected by the abundance and constitution of litter from surrounding forests. We compared forest floor cover, overland flow, stream environment, and stream macroinvertebrate assemblages between the catchments of a Japanese cedar plantation (CP) and a primary deciduous forest (DF). Both systems experience excessive deer browsing. Understory vegetation cover was higher in the DF than in the CP in summer, although cover was low (<20xa0%), possibly because of excessive deer browsing. Litter cover was much higher in the CP than in the DF in summer as a result of the long abscission period, slow breakdown, and low rate of dispersal of Japanese cedar litter compared to deciduous litter. Monthly overland flow was always lower in the CP than in the DF, and substrate size was smaller in the DF stream. In the CP, cedar litter accumulated in the stream, probably because of its low breakdown rate and morphology, and abundant shredder taxa characterized the macroinvertebrate assemblage. In contrast, abundant burrower taxa characterized the macroinvertebrate assemblage in the DF stream. These results imply that Japanese cedar litter functions in structuring the macroinvertebrate assemblage by supplying persistent food resources for detritivores, and by buffering fine sedimentation via overland flow under excessive deer browsing.


Landscape and Ecological Engineering | 2007

The independent detection of drought stress and leaf density using hyperspectral resolution data

Junichi Imanishi; Yukihiro Morimoto; Ayumi Imanishi; Kayoko Sugimoto; Kazutaka Isoda

Measurement of vegetation drought stress or leaf density is essential in ecosystem and agronomic studies. The normalized differential vegetation index (NDVI), a widely used vegetation index in remote sensing, seems to have some limitations as it is known to be affected by both drought stress and leaf density. A field experiment was conducted, using two-year-old potted Quercus serrata (a deciduous tree) and Q. glauca (an evergreen tree), to determine the optimal indices of vegetation drought stress or leaf density that have the least a simultaneous effect, and to test if the existing vegetation indices are useful for independently detecting drought stress or leaf density. The results showed that NDVI and similar indices, which utilize the difference or ratio between the reflectance of red and near infrared bands, such as the ratio vegetation index (RVI), the difference vegetation index (DVI), the atmospherically resistant vegetation index (ARVI), the renormalized difference vegetation index (RDVI), the enhanced vegetation index (EVI), the perpendicular vegetation index (PVI), soil-adjusted vegetation index (SAVI) and the improved variants of SAVI, were effective for the independent detection of leaf density but relatively ineffective for drought stress because they were significantly affected by leaf area index (LAI). Similarly, vegetation indices developed as detectors of vegetation stress, such as the water index (WI), the stress index (SI) and the derivative chlorophyll index (DCI), showed weak correlation (r) and partial correlation (rp) with leaf water content (LWC). The optimal hyperspectral indices were proposed as (F502.8xa0−xa0F852.0)/(F502.8xa0+xa0F852.0) for LWC (rxa0=xa00.847, rpxa0=xa00.849) and R750/R550 (R750R550; Lichtenthaler etxa0al. in J Plant Physiol 148:483–493, 1996) for LAI (rxa0=xa00.926, rpxa0=xa00.940) where Rλxa0and Fλ represent reflectance and first derivatives at wavelength λ nm, respectively. A simulation of lower spectral sampling intervals (ca. 3-nm intervals of original to 10-nm intervals) indicated that it will be necessary to check the appropriateness of the derivative indices approximate to the proposed indices before application because derivative spectra are less smooth as a function of wavelength than reflectance spectra.


Landscape and Ecological Engineering | 2012

Uses of trees in paddy fields in Champasak Province, southern Lao PDR

Yosihiro Natuhara; Ayumi Imanishi; M. Kanzaki; S. Southavong; I. Duangvongsa

The species and uses of trees located in paddy fields were investigated in three villages in Champasak Province, Lao PDR. The villages were different in their distance from Pakse City, the capital of the province, and age since foundation. A total of 71 species were recorded, and most were used by local people. The most frequent use was for fruit, firewood, and medicine, though most trees also offered shade for cattle and people. Species composition differed among villages. The youngest paddy supported more trees, remnants of the original forest, for timber. Older paddies supported fewer trees for timber but more for fruit and firewood. The introduced species increased according to the age of the paddy. Products other than timber obtained from the trees were common among villages. The significance of trees in rice cultivation in Laos was compared with that in the Satoyama landscape of Japan.


American Journal of Botany | 2011

Development of microsatellite markers for Euryale ferox (Nymphaeaceae), an endangered aquatic plant species in Japan

Ayumi Imanishi; Shingo Kaneko; Yuji Isagi; Junichi Imanishi; Yosihiro Natuhara; Yukihiro Morimoto

PREMISE OF THE STUDYnMicrosatellite markers were developed to investigate genetic diversity and genetic structure of Euryale ferox, a vulnerable aquatic plant.nnnMETHODS AND RESULTSnTen microsatellite loci were isolated and characterized for this species. Eight loci showed polymorphisms with two or three alleles per locus. As for the polymorphic markers, the expected and observed heterozygosities ranged from 0.00 to 0.08 and 0.17 to 0.64, respectively.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe 10 microsatellite markers described here will be useful for investigating genetic diversity, genetic structure, and gene flow between populations of E. ferox.


Landscape and Ecological Engineering | 2007

Changes in herbaceous plants in an urban habitat garden in Kyoto city, Japan, 9 years after construction

Ayumi Imanishi; Chieko Kitagawa; Susumu Nakamura; Hiroshi Hashimoto; Keizo Tabata; Junichi Imanishi; Kentaro Murakami; Yukihiro Morimoto; Mifumi Miyamoto

To understand the characteristics and problems of artificial urban ecological environments, we investigated the changes in herbaceous plants in an urban habitat garden for 9xa0years after construction and compared the results with 15 remnant semi-natural green spaces in Kyoto city, Japan. The area of the habitat garden is 0.6xa0ha and it was constructed approximately 3xa0km from the nearest mountains in 1996. From 1996 to 2004, 301 unplanted species, including 218 native species and 83 alien species, were recorded. Most newly recorded species were recorded in 1998 and the timing of colonization was different from ferns. The species turnover rate per year decreased from 30.8% in 1998 to 18.5% in 2004. This indicates that established species in the habitat garden have been gradually determined. In the species recorded in the habitat garden in 2004, the percentage of high-temperature species, which were relatively departed from the nested pattern of species composition for the 15 green spaces, was significantly high. It was considered that herbaceous plant succession in the habitat garden was at an early stage, even though it was 9xa0years ago since construction. Buried seeds and various environments are likely to contribute to higher species richness in the habitat garden as compared to remnant green spaces of approximately the same area. On the other hand, the high percentage of alien species and the low percentages of forest and forest edge species in the habitat garden indicate the problems of a habitat garden constructed in the center of a city.


Landscape Ecology | 2015

Factors affecting the genetic diversity of a perennial herb Viola grypoceras A. Gray var. grypoceras in urban fragmented forests

Yuichi Toma; Junichi Imanishi; Masashi Yokogawa; Hiroshi Hashimoto; Ayumi Imanishi; Yukihiro Morimoto; Yuki Hatanaka; Yuji Isagi; Shozo Shibata

ContextHabitat fragmentation is likely to have deleterious genetic consequences for plant populations. Although the genetic effects of fragmentation in plants have been investigated in various landscapes, such studies are scarce in urban landscapes where forests tend to be fragmented and have a complex internal structure.ObjectivesThis study aimed to determine the factors, including patch and sub-patch level spatial factors, affecting the genetic diversity of a herbaceous species in urban fragmented forests.MethodsWe collected 30–39 leaf samples of Viola grypoceras A. Gray var. grypoceras, a perennial herbaceous species with short-distance seed dispersal, from 12 fragmented and 12 suburban forests each at Kyoto City, Japan, and analyzed the genetic diversity of this species by developing six simple sequence repeat markers. Field survey was conducted to collect demographic and spatial data.ResultsThere was no significant difference in allelic richness between the urban fragmented and suburban forests. However, statistical analysis revealed that the area of vegetation, distribution pattern of populations in a forest, and average distance between nearest populations affected the genetic diversity of this species in urban fragmented forests.ConclusionAlthough V. grypoceras has traits that allow it to tolerate fragmentation, such as self-pollination and seed bank-formation ability, pure loss of habitat and reduced fragment size might have deleterious effects on this species, and these effects might become more apparent if fragmentation continues to proceed in the future.

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Yosihiro Natuhara

Osaka Prefecture University

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Kentaro Murakami

American Museum of Natural History

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