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Dive into the research topics where Hideaki Goto is active.

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Featured researches published by Hideaki Goto.


Journal of Forest Research | 2004

Ophiostoma species associated with bark beetles infesting three Abies species in Nikko, Japan

Yuichi Yamaoka; Hayato Masuya; Nobuaki Ohtaka; Hideaki Goto; Shigeru Kaneko; Yoshio Kuroda

Ophiostoma species were isolated from bark beetles and Abies mariesii, A. veitchii and A. homolepis attacked by the beetles in Nikko, Tochigi, central Honshu, Japan. One to two Ophiostoma species were frequently isolated from each species of bark beetle. Ophiostoma subalpinum was the most common associate of Cryphalus montanus. Ophiostoma sp. B as well as O. subalpinum was a common fungus associated with Polygraphus proximus. Ophiostoma europhioides was isolated from Dryocoetes hectographus and D. autographus as one of the common associates. Ophiostoma sp. J and Ophiostoma sp. S were frequently isolated from D. autographus and D. striatus, respectively. These fungi seem to have specific relationships with particular bark beetles. Ophiostoma sp. B, Ophiostoma sp. J and Ophiostoma sp. S have unique morphological characteristics and appear to be new species. Five trees of A. veitchii, approximately 43 years old, were inoculated with five Ophiostoma species to assess the relative virulence of the fungi. Ophiostoma subalpinum, Ophiostoma sp. B, and O. europhioides had relatively higher virulence than the other species studied.


Plant Disease | 2015

Comparison of Sapwood Discoloration in Fagaceae Trees After Inoculation with Isolates of Raffaelea quercivora, Cause of Mass Mortality of Japanese Oak Trees

Dai Kusumoto; Hayato Masuya; Toshihide Hirao; Hideaki Goto; Keiko Hamaguchi; Wen-I Chou; Wiwat Suasa-ard; Sawai Buranapanichpan; Sopon Uraichuen; Oraphan Kernasa; Sunisa Sanguansub; Aumporn Panmongkol; Quang Thu Pham; Sih Kahono; I Made Sudiana; Naoto Kamata

The mass mortality of oak trees has been prevalent in Japan since the late 1980s. The fungus Raffaelea quercivora is transmitted by an ambrosia beetle, Platypus quercivorus, which causes mortality. The beetle is able to bore galleries into the sapwood of most Fagaceae trees in Japan; however, the level of mortality caused by R. quercivora and P. quercivorus differs greatly among tree species. Previous studies by our research group have demonstrated that the virulence of R. quercivora differs among isolates when inoculated into Quercus serrata logs. However, interactions between the virulence of R. quercivora isolates and the susceptibility of other fagaceous species have yet to be elucidated. In this study, we inoculated the fresh logs of 11 fagaceous species with isolates of low and high virulence, and measured the tangential widths of discolored sapwoods 3 weeks after inoculation. Although the discoloration widths of Q. crispula sapwood were similar among all isolates, those of Q. serrata and Q. acutissima tended to increase with the more virulent isolates. Sapwood discoloration in Q. glauca, Q. acuta, Q. salicina, Lethocarpus edulis, and Castanopsis sieboldii was greatly increased by highly virulent isolates. Discoloration in Fagus japonica was not influenced by any of the isolates. The logs of Q. crispula and Q. serrata but not Q. glauca were significantly more discolored by a low-virulence isolate compared with standing trees. The various virulent isolates induced unique sapwood discoloration characteristics in each species, which may explain species-specific differences in mortality rates.


Entomological Science | 2012

Guild structure of ambrosia beetles attacking a deciduous oak tree Quercus serrata in relation to wood oldness and seasonality in three locations in the Central Japan

Sunisa Sanguansub; Hideaki Goto; Naoto Kamata

In order to determine factors influencing ambrosia beetle guilds on Quercus serrata, we investigated ambrosia beetles guilds by using Q. serrata bait logs in three locations in the Central Japan. Timing of cutting trees and timing of exposure were artificially controlled. Influences of location, timing of cutting, timing of exposure and wood oldness on species richness, abundances and guild structure were analyzed. Species richness and abundance peaked on bolts prepared in April–May, on bolts exposed in July, and on 2–3‐month‐old bolts. Eliminating greatest influences of location on abundance, results of hierarchical partitioning showed that timing of cutting trees had a strong influence on both species richness and abundance. LOC‐A (Aichi), in which Japanese oak wilt disease incidence occurred, showed the greatest species richness and the smallest value of Pielous evenness. Abundance of the most major species was more than twice that of the second major species, which was a likely cause of the smallest evenness in LOC‐A. Trees killed by the Japanese oak wilt disease may have increased the abundance of the major species. On the contrary, in LOC‐C (Chichibu), alpha and beta diversity both given by Shannon index and Pielous evenness were greatest among the three locations although species richness was smallest. High similarity between guilds in LOC‐A and LOC‐B (Chiba) was probably caused by similarity in vegetation. The location had the greatest effect on determining guild structure. Effect of timing of exposure was greater than timing of cutting. The effect of wood oldness was negligible. A hierarchical structure among the three factors was a likely cause of their relative importance determining guild structure.


Entomological Science | 2014

Ambrosia beetles (Curculionidae: Scolytinae and Platypodinae) on Fagus crenata Blume: community structure, seasonal population trends and resource utilization patterns

Hiroaki Iidzuka; Hideaki Goto; Michimasa Yamasaki; Naoya Osawa

Ambrosia beetles (many Scolytinae and all Platypodinae) are one of the most important insect pests for forestry worldwide, but little is known about the community structure of ambrosia beetles in terms of their vertical variations and resource utilization. We clarified the community structure and seasonal population trends of ambrosia beetles on 11 living and three newly dead Fagus crenata Blume trees using individual tube traps placed up to 10 m high from May to November in 2007 and 2008. We captured seven scolytine species (Ambrosiodmus lewisi (Blandford), Euwallacea validus (Eichhoff), Trypodendron proximum (Niisima), Xyleborinus saxeseni (Ratzeburg), Xyleborus atratus Eichhoff, Xylosandrus brevis (Eichhoff) and Xylosandrus germanus (Blandford)) and three platypodine species (Crossotarsus niponicus Blandford, Platypus hamatus Blandford and Platypus severini Blandford). The ambrosia beetles were suggested to breed at species‐specific height ranges, with the equal host resource use per individual among the species. Of the three major species, C. niponicus, P. hamatus and P. severini, two (C. niponicus and P. hamatus) had male‐biased sex ratios, which is considered a reproductive strategy to increase maternal fitness. Morphological characteristics of the mandibles may play an important role in the difference of sex roles on reproduction in the three major species.


Entomological Science | 2009

Clusiidae (Diptera) from log emergence traps in the Yambaru, a subtropical forest of Japan

Masahiro Sueyoshi; Hideaki Goto; Hiroki Sato; Tsutomu Hattori; Nobuhiko Kotaka; Kazuhiko Saito

Five species of Clusiidae (Diptera), Craspedochaeta biseta (Hendel), hendelia plumosa (Sasakawa), Heteromeringia sexramifera Sueyoshi, Phylloclusia yambarensis sp. n., and Sobarocephala uncinata Sueyoshi, were collected from log emergence traps installed in a subtropical forest of Japan from February 2006 to February 2008. Craspedochaeta biseta (Hendel) was newly recorded in Japan. Wood debris was gathered from 1–22 year old secondary stands managed by the improvement cutting of natural forest (ICNF) and unmanaged stands, and categorized by stage of decay and size, and then enveloped in fine net bags (emergence trap). In total, 84 clusiid adults were obtained. Most were reared from wood debris in an advanced stage of decay and from 2 year old or older managed and unmanaged forest stands, although P. yambarensis was reared from wood debris in an early stage of decay and from 1 year old forests after cuttings. Log emergence traps effectively sample clusiids, taking both sexes in approximately equal numbers. Specimens collected by this trap may resolve the difficulty in identifying male and female specimens of several clusiid species that show sexual dimorphism.


Journal of Forest Research | 2014

Discoloration induced by Raffaelea quercivora isolates in Quercus serrata logs and its relation to phylogeny: a comparison among isolates with and without the Japanese oak wilt incidence including outside of Japan

Dai Kusumoto; Hayato Masuya; Toshihide Hirao; Hideaki Goto; Keiko Hamaguchi; Wen-I Chou; Wiwat Suasa-ard; Sawai Buranapanichpan; Sopon Uraichuen; Oraphan Kernasa; Sunisa Sanguansub; Aumporn Panmongkol; Thu Pham Quang; Sih Kahono; Heddy Julistiono; Naoto Kamata

Japanese oak wilt (JOW) has been prevalent in Japan since the late 1980s. Infections of the fungus, Raffaelea quercivora Kubono et Shin. Ito, which is transmitted by an ambrosia beetle [Platypus quercivorus (Murayama)], can cause JOW. Although R. quercivora, P. quercivorus, and oak trees are distributed in other Asia–Pacific countries, the incidence of JOW has not been reported outside Japan. In this study, we collected R. quercivora isolates from 5 Asian countries, including Japan, and compared their ability to induce sapwood discoloration by inoculating Q. serrata logs. The tangential widths of the discoloration in sapwoods inoculated with non-Japanese isolates were equivalent to or greater than those of the 2 Japanese isolates. This indicates that a lack of JOW incidence outside Japan is not because of the lowered ability of R. quercivora to spread discoloration compared with the Japanese isolates. Statistical analyses of the relationship between discoloration and phylogeny based on DNA sequences of actin and chitin synthase showed that the discoloration width was independent of phylogenetic relatedness among the isolates. To discuss why the occurrence of JOW has not been reported outside Japan, further studies (e.g., on host susceptibility and P. quercivorus aggression) throughout Asia are needed.


Applied Entomology and Zoology | 2016

Gallery diameter of ambrosia beetles (Coleoptera: Scolytidae, Platypodidae) and insect fauna in Quercus serrata (Fagales: Fagaceae) suffering from Japanese oak wilt

Hiroaki Iidzuka; Hideaki Goto; Naoya Osawa

We dissected the trunk of a Quercus serrata Murray tree that had suffered from Japanese oak wilt, measured the gallery diameters of ambrosia beetles, and recorded the related insect fauna in the galleries of ambrosia beetles. In total, 545 individuals of nine species were captured from 494 galleries; these belonged to nine species [Cossoninae sp. (Curculionidae), Litargus japonicus Reitter (Mycetophagidae), Platypus calamus Blandford (Platypodidae), Platypus quercivorus (Murayama) (Platypodidae), Ambrosiodmus lewisi (Blandford) (Scolytidae), Ambrosiophilus atratus Eichhoff (Scolytidae), Xyleborus sp. (Scolytidae), Bitoma siccana Pascoe (Zopheridae), and Gempylodes ornamentalis (Reitter) (Zopheridae)]. The diameter of the gallery entrance on the surface of a debarked log may serve as a cue for species estimation of major ambrosia beetles in Q. serrata trees suffering from Japanese oak wilt in this study area. From the relationships between the body width and the gallery diameter, the distribution pattern within the tree, and the taxonomical analogy, a zopherid species, G. ornamentalis, was inferred as a possible predator and/or parasitoid of a causal agent in Japanese oak wilt, P. quercivorus.


Mycoscience | 2008

The teleomorph of Leptographium yunnanense, discovered in crosses among isolates from Thailand, China, and Japan

Yuichi Yamaoka; Hayato Masuya; Wen-Hsin Chung; Hideaki Goto; Chaiwat To-anun; Seiji Tokumasu; Xhudong Zhou; Michael J. Wingfield


Applied Entomology and Zoology | 2010

Genetic variation among Japanese populations of Platypus quercivorus (Coleoptera: Platypodidae), an insect vector of Japanese oak wilt disease, based on partial sequence of nuclear 28S rDNA.

Keiko Hamaguchi; Hideaki Goto


Mycoscience | 2007

Two species of Leptographium isolated from blue-stained sapwood of Pinus khasya and bark beetles in Thailand

Yuichi Yamaoka; Hayato Masuya; Wen-Hsin Chung; Hideaki Goto; Chaiwat To-anun; Seiji Tokumasu

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