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Dive into the research topics where Hiroshi Kiyosawa is active.

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Featured researches published by Hiroshi Kiyosawa.


Nature | 2004

The decline and fate of an iron-induced subarctic phytoplankton bloom

Philip W. Boyd; Cliff S Law; C.S. Wong; Yukihiro Nojiri; Atsushi Tsuda; Maurice Levasseur; Shigenobu Takeda; Richard B. Rivkin; Paul J. Harrison; Robert F. Strzepek; Jim Gower; R. Mike McKay; Edward Abraham; Mike Arychuk; Janet Barwell-Clarke; William R. Crawford; David F. Crawford; Michelle S. Hale; Koh Harada; Keith Johnson; Hiroshi Kiyosawa; Isao Kudo; Adrian Marchetti; William C. Miller; Joe Needoba; Jun Nishioka; Hiroshi Ogawa; J.S. Page; Marie Robert; Hiroaki Saito

Iron supply has a key role in stimulating phytoplankton blooms in high-nitrate low-chlorophyll oceanic waters. However, the fate of the carbon fixed by these blooms, and how efficiently it is exported into the oceans interior, remains largely unknown. Here we report on the decline and fate of an iron-stimulated diatom bloom in the Gulf of Alaska. The bloom terminated on day 18, following the depletion of iron and then silicic acid, after which mixed-layer particulate organic carbon (POC) concentrations declined over six days. Increased particulate silica export via sinking diatoms was recorded in sediment traps at depths between 50 and 125 m from day 21, yet increased POC export was not evident until day 24. Only a small proportion of the mixed-layer POC was intercepted by the traps, with more than half of the mixed-layer POC deficit attributable to bacterial remineralization and mesozooplankton grazing. The depletion of silicic acid and the inefficient transfer of iron-increased POC below the permanent thermocline have major implications both for the biogeochemical interpretation of times of greater iron supply in the geological past, and also for proposed geo-engineering schemes to increase oceanic carbon sequestration.


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 1997

Size and taxonomic plankton community structure and carbon flow at the equator, 175‡E during 1990–1994

Joji Ishizaka; K. Harada; K. Ishikawa; Hiroshi Kiyosawa; H. Furusawa; Yutaka W. Watanabe; H. Ishida; Koji Suzuki; Nobuhiko Handa; Masayuki Takahashi

Abstract Size and taxonomic structure of plankton community carbon biomass for the 0.2–2000 μm equivalent spherical diameter range were determined at the equator at 175°E in September 1990–1993 and April 1994. Total biomass of the plankton community ranged from 1944 to 3448 mg C m −2 . Phytoplankton, zooplankton and bacteria carbon biomasses were 604–1669 mg C m -2 , 300–797 mg C m 2 , and 968–1200 mg C m -2 , and the percentages were 31–54%, 15–26%, and 29–54%, respectively. Biomass of heterotrophic bacteria was always the largest fraction and Prochlorococcus biomass was second. Heterotrophic and autotrophic flagellates and dinoflagellates in the nanoplankton size range and copepods (adults and copepodites) in the mesoplankton range were also high. Relatively small biomass was observed in the microplankton size range. The differences in integrated biomass of plankton community for El Nin˜o type oligotrophic conditions of September 1990–1993 and non-El Nifio type mesotrophic conditions of April 1994 were generally small compared with the interannual difference during 1990–1993. However, the percentage of Prochlorococcus in phytoplankton carbon biomass was larger in non-El Nin˜o year. Biomasses of cyanobacteria, diatom, dinoflagellates, nauplii of copepods, and crustaceans other than copepods were larger in the non-El Nin˜o year. Primary production increased significantly from El Nin˜o to non-El Nin˜o years. Carbon flow through the plankton food chain was estimated using the plankton carbon biomass data, primary production measurements, and published empirical relationships.


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 2002

Grazing impact of microzooplankton on a diatom bloom in a mesocosm as estimated by pigment-specific dilution technique

Koji Suzuki; Atsushi Tsuda; Hiroshi Kiyosawa; Shigenobu Takeda; Jun Nishioka; Toshiro Saino; Masayuki Mac Takahashi; C. S. Wong

To investigate the impact of microzooplankton grazing on phytoplankton bloom in coastal waters, an enclosure experiment was conducted in Saanich Inlet, Canada during the summer of 1996. Daily changes in the microzooplankton grazing rate on each phytoplankton group were investigated with the growth rates of each phytoplankton group from the beginning toward the end of bloom using the dilution technique with high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). On Day 1 when nitrate and iron were artificially added, chlorophyll a concentration was relatively low (4.3 μg l−1) and 19′-hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin-containing prymnesiophytes were predominant in the chlorophyll biomass. However, both the synthetic rates and concentrations of 19′-hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin declined before bloom, suggesting that 19′-hexanoyloxyfucoxanthin-containing prymnesiophytes weakened. Chlorophyll a concentration peaked at 23 μg l−1 on Day 4 and the bloom consisted of the small chain-forming diatoms Chaetoceros spp. (4 μm in cell diameter). Diatoms were secondary constituents in the chlorophyll biomass at the beginning of the experiment, and the growth rates of diatoms (fucoxanthin) were consistently high (>0.5 d−1) until Day 3. Microzooplankton grazing rates on each phytoplankton group remarkably increased except on alloxanthin-containing cryptophytes after the nutrient enrichments, and peaked with >0.6 d−1 on Day 3, indicating that >45% of the standing stock of each phytoplankton group was removed per day. Both the growth and mortality rates of alloxanthin-containing cryptophytes were relatively high (>1 and >0.5 d−1, respectively) until the bloom, suggesting that a homeostatic mechanism might exist between predators and their prey. Overall, microzooplankton grazing showed a rapid response to the increase in phytoplankton abundance after the nutrient enrichments, and affected the magnitude of the bloom significantly. High grazing activity of microzooplankton contributed to an increase in the abundance of heterotrophic dinoflagellates with 7–24 μm in cell size, the fraction of large-sized (>10 μm) chlorophyll a, and stimulated the growth of larger-sized ciliates after the bloom.


Journal of Oceanography | 2013

Impacts of elevated CO 2 on particulate and dissolved organic matter production: microcosm experiments using iron-deficient plankton communities in open subarctic waters

Takeshi Yoshimura; Koji Suzuki; Hiroshi Kiyosawa; Tsuneo Ono; Hiroshi Hattori; Kenshi Kuma; Jun Nishioka

Response of phytoplankton to increasing CO2 in seawater in terms of physiology and ecology is key to predicting changes in marine ecosystems. However, responses of natural plankton communities especially in the open ocean to higher CO2 levels have not been fully examined. We conducted CO2 manipulation experiments in the Bering Sea and the central subarctic Pacific, known as high nutrient and low chlorophyll regions, in summer 2007 to investigate the response of organic matter production in iron-deficient plankton communities to CO2 increases. During the 14-day incubations of surface waters with natural plankton assemblages in microcosms under multiple pCO2 levels, the dynamics of particulate organic carbon (POC) and nitrogen (PN), and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and phosphorus (DOP) were examined with the plankton community compositions. In the Bering site, net production of POC, PN, and DOP relative to net chlorophyll-a production decreased with increasing pCO2. While net produced POC:PN did not show any CO2-related variations, net produced DOC:DOP increased with increasing pCO2. On the other hand, no apparent trends for these parameters were observed in the Pacific site. The contrasting results observed were probably due to the different plankton community compositions between the two sites, with plankton biomass dominated by large-sized diatoms in the Bering Sea versus ultra-eukaryotes in the Pacific Ocean. We conclude that the quantity and quality of the production of particulate and dissolved organic matter may be altered under future elevated CO2 environments in some iron-deficient ecosystems, while the impacts may be negligible in some systems.


Archive | 2000

Distribution and Non-Dominancy of Large Diatoms in Planktonic Algal Communities in the Central Pacific Ocean along 175°E

Masayuki Takahashi; Hideyuki Kanazawa; Hiroshi Kiyosawa; Joji Ishizaka

The abundance and biomass of large diatoms retained in 100 μm mesh nets have been determined from 46°N to 15°S along 175°E in the central Pacific Ocean during August and October, 1991. Twenty-seven diatom species ranging from 13 × 103 to 34 × 106 μm3 in single cell volume were recognized in the samples obtained by a NORPAC net in the top 200 m of the water column at 13 stations in the area. Numerical abundance of each species within the top 50 m or 100 m which covered most of the euphotic zone, were mostly 100 μm fraction which included large diatoms and dinoflagellates were always less than 5% of the total chlorophyll a in the water, and then the fraction of the large diatoms as a group in the total chlorophyll a were much less. The distribution of large diatoms in the area was largely classified into three types; distributed only at 44°N or north, at 30°N or north, and at 36°N or south. The second type partly overlapped the distribution of the first type at 44°N or north and the 3rd type at 30–36°N. There was the sub-Arctic front locating between 43°N and 42°N and a subtropical convergence at 28°N, which seems to be important for controlling the large diatom distributions.


Science | 2003

A mesoscale iron enrichment in the western subarctic Pacific induces a large centric diatom bloom.

Atsushi Tsuda; Shigenobu Takeda; Hiroaki Saito; Jun Nishioka; Yukihiro Nojiri; Isao Kudo; Hiroshi Kiyosawa; Akihiro Shiomoto; Keiri Imai; Tsuneo Ono; Akifumi Shimamoto; Daisuke Tsumune; Takeshi Yoshimura; Tatsuo Aono; Akira Hinuma; Masatoshi Kinugasa; Koji Suzuki; Yoshiki Sohrin; Yoshifumi Noiri; Heihachiro Tani; Yuji Deguchi; Nobuo Tsurushima; Hiroshi Ogawa; Kimio Fukami; Kenshi Kuma; Toshiro Saino


Limnology and Oceanography | 2005

The evolution and termination of an iron‐induced mesoscale bloom in the northeast subarctic Pacific

Philip W. Boyd; Robert F. Strzepek; Shigenobu Takeda; George A. Jackson; C. S. Wong; R. Mike McKay; Cliff S. Law; Hiroshi Kiyosawa; Hiroaki Saito; Nelson D. Sherry; Keith Johnson; Jim Gower; Neelam Ramaiah


Journal of Oceanography | 2007

Evidence for the grazing hypothesis: Grazing reduces phytoplankton responses of the HNLC ecosystem to iron enrichment in the western subarctic pacific (SEEDS II)

Atsushi Tsuda; Shigenobu Takeda; Hiroaki Saito; Jun Nishioka; Isao Kudo; Yukihiro Nojiri; Koji Suzuki; Mitsuo Uematsu; Mark L. Wells; Daisuke Tsumune; Takeshi Yoshimura; Tatsuo Aono; Takafumi Aramaki; William P. Cochlan; Maki Hayakawa; Keiri Imai; Tomoshi Isada; Yoko Iwamoto; William Keith Johnson; Sohiko Kameyama; Shungo Kato; Hiroshi Kiyosawa; Y. Kondo; Maurice Levasseur; Ryuji J. Machida; Ippei Nagao; Fumiko Nakagawa; Takahiro Nakanishi; Seiji Nakatsuka; Akira Narita


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2006

Phytoplankton processes during a mesoscale iron enrichment in the NE subarctic Pacific: Part I—Biomass and assemblage

Adrian Marchetti; Nelson D. Sherry; Hiroshi Kiyosawa; Atsushi Tsuda; Paul J. Harrison


Progress in Oceanography | 2005

Responses of phytoplankton and heterotrophic bacteria in the northwest subarctic Pacific to in situ iron fertilization as estimated by HPLC pigment analysis and flow cytometry

Koji Suzuki; Akira Hinuma; Hiroaki Saito; Hiroshi Kiyosawa; Hongbin Liu; Toshiro Saino; Atsushi Tsuda

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Takeshi Yoshimura

Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry

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