Hiroyuki Tobita
Kyoto University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hiroyuki Tobita.
Photosynthetica | 2004
Norikazu Eguchi; Eitaro Fukatsu; Ryo Funada; Hiroyuki Tobita; Mitsutoshi Kitao; Yutaka Maruyama; Takayoshi Koike
Photosynthetic traits of two-year-old Japanese larch seedlings (Larix kaempferi Carr.) grown at elevated CO2 concentrations were studied in relation to structural changes in the needles. Seedlings were grown at two CO2 concentrations, 360 (AC) and 720 (EC) μmol mol−1 at high and low nutrient supply rates, high N (HN) and low N (LN). The photosynthetic capacity fell significantly in EC+LN, but increased significantly in EC+HN. Since the mesophyll surface area exposed to intercellular space per unit leaf area (Ames/A) is correlated with the photosynthetic rate, we measured Ames/A for larch needles growing in EC. Changes of Ames/A in both EC+HN and EC+LN were very similar to the changes in photosynthetic capacity. This suggests that the changes of Ames/A in EC probably caused the changes in the photosynthetic capacity. The changes of Ames/A in EC were attributed to changes in the mesophyll cell size and mesophyll cell number. The photosynthetic capacity in EC can be explained by taking morphological and structural adaptations into account as well as biochemical factors.
Population Ecology | 2006
Takayoshi Koike; Hiroyuki Tobita; Takanori Shibata; Sawako Matsuki; Kotaro Konno; Mitsutoshi Kitao; Naoko Yamashita; Yutaka Maruyama
Mixed broad-leaved forests are abundantly populated by several kinds of herbivore species in northern Japan. The life of herbivores depends strongly on the quality of food leaves. Leaf quality is changing with increasing atmospheric CO2 and nitrogen deposition. Four seral species of deciduous broad-leaved tree seedlings (alder, birch, oak and maple) were raised in all four combinations of two levels of CO2 and two levels of nutrient, to examine foliar defense traits. To evaluate the relative defense capacity of the four tree species, we used wild silkworms (Erisan; a generalist herbivore) as a bioassay material. Except with alder, the survival rate and longevity (ML50) of the silkworms were least when they were fed with leaves of seedlings raised under high CO2 and infertile soil conditions, and longest on a diet of leaves grown in ambient CO2 and fertile soil, especially in birch and maple. The longevity of Erisan decreased in the order birch, oak, and maple. The longevity of Erisan fed with alder leaves was independent of CO2 levels and was longer on alder seedlings grown in infertile soil conditions. Alder is an actinorhizal plant that can fix atmospheric nitrogen in root nodules formed by the actinomycetes Frankia sp. The activity of symbiotic microbes would have been enhanced by the greater amount of photosynthates received from the host plants at high CO2, improving the food quality for the silkworms. It was concluded that in all but alder, leaf chemical traits, especially C/N ratio, affect the ML50 of Erisan larvae.
Trees-structure and Function | 2006
Masazumi Kayama; Dongsu Choi; Hiroyuki Tobita; Hajime Utsugi; Mitsutoshi Kitao; Yutaka Maruyama; Mutsumi Nomura; Takayoshi Koike
Picea glehnii is distributed widely on serpentine soils in northern Japan. Serpentine soil is characterised by the presence of heavy metals (Ni, Cr) and excessive Mg; these elements often suppress plant growth. We have examined the tolerance to serpentine soil and its effects on growth of P. glehnii, P. jezoensis (distributed in the same region) and P. abies (planted for timber production).The dry mass of each organ was not reduced in P. glehnii planted in serpentine soil contained nursery (serpentine nursery). In contrast, growth of P. jezoensis and P. abies was suppressed. Concentrations of Ni and Mg in needles and roots of P. glehnii planted in serpentine nursery were the lowest of the three species. Moreover, the photosynthetic rate of P. glehnii planted in the serpentine nursery was not reduced. P. glehnii has high capability to maintain low concentration of Ni, and ectomycorrhizal symbiosis may have a positive effect to excluding Ni. As a result, P. glehnii has a high tolerance against Ni toxicity, and its photosynthetic capacity is not suppressed by accumulation of Ni.
Trees-structure and Function | 2006
Mitsutoshi Kitao; Reiji Yoneda; Hiroyuki Tobita; Yoosuke Matsumoto; Yutaka Maruyama; Abdu Arifin; Alias Mohamad Azani; Majid Nik Muhamad
To investigate the adaptive capacity to a strong light environment when planted on degraded land, we examined photosynthetic properties in relation to photoinhibition for the sun-leaves of six tropical fruit tree species native to Malaysia before and after transplanting. The six species were: Bouea macrophylla (Bm), Callerya atropurpurea (Ca), Canarium pilosum (Cp), Cynometra cauliflora (Cc), Morinda citrifolia (Mc) and Syzygium sp. (Ssp), which produce edible fruit for endemic animals and birds, and are candidates for corridor plantations. Based on the measurements performed before transplanting, the degree of chronic photoinhibition indicated by the decrease in pre-dawn Fv/Fm was well associated with an accumulation of excessive excitation energy in PSII indicated by a decrease in photochemical quenching (qP). Among the species, Ca and Mc showed lower degrees of photoinhibition with higher qP. Higher electron transport rates (ETR) were observed with higher qP whereas there was no significant relationship between regulatory thermal dissipation (indicated by
Tree Physiology | 2012
Mai Kamakura; Yoshiko Kosugi; Satoru Takanashi; Hiroyuki Tobita; Akira Uemura; Hajime Utsugi
PLOS ONE | 2015
Kenichi Yazaki; Katsushi Kuroda; Takashi Nakano; Mitsutoshi Kitao; Hiroyuki Tobita; Mayumi Y. Ogasa; Atsushi Ishida
F_{\rm v} /F_{\rm m}\,-\,F^\prime_{\rm v} /F^\prime _{\rm m}
Physiologia Plantarum | 2015
Mitsutoshi Kitao; Kenichi Yazaki; Satoshi Kitaoka; Eitaro Fukatsu; Hiroyuki Tobita; Masabumi Komatsu; Yutaka Maruyama; Takayoshi Koike
Physiologia Plantarum | 2012
Mitsutoshi Kitao; Satoshi Kitaoka; Masabumi Komatsu; Hajime Utsugi; Hiroyuki Tobita; Takayoshi Koike; Yutaka Maruyama
) and qP. Energy dissipation via electron transport was suggested to be important in keeping qP high and preventing photoinhibition when compared among species. Cc and Bm showed lower ETR and higher susceptibility to photoinhibition before and after transplanting. New Cp and Mc leaves developed after transplanting showed increased area-based leaf nitrogen content (Narea) and stomatal conductance (gs) compared with those before transplanting resulting in higher light-saturated net photosynthetic rates (Amax) and ETR, and contributing to mitigate photoinhibition. In contrast to these species, Ca achieved high Amax with a water conservative manner (indicated by its relatively lower gs), where the higher carboxylation efficiency accompanied with the higher Narea allowed them to maintain relatively high Amax and ETR at lower intercellular CO2 concentration.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Mitsutoshi Kitao; Yukio Yasuda; Yuji Kominami; Katsumi Yamanoi; Masabumi Komatsu; Takafumi Miyama; Yasuko Mizoguchi; Satoshi Kitaoka; Kenichi Yazaki; Hiroyuki Tobita; Kenichi Yoshimura; Takayoshi Koike; Takeshi Izuta
Patchy stomatal closure occurs in plants with heterobaric leaves, in which vertical extensions of bundle sheath cells delimit the mesophyll and restrict the diffusion of CO(2). The scale of patchy stomatal behavior was investigated in this study. The distribution of PSII quantum yield (Φ(II)) obtained from chlorophyll fluorescence images was used to evaluate the scale of stomatal patchiness and its relationship with leaf photosynthesis in the sun leaves of 2-year-old saplings of Quercus crispula Blume. Fluorescent patches were observed only during the day with low stomatal conductance. Comparison of numerical simulation of leaf gas exchange and chlorophyll fluorescence images showed that heterogeneous distribution of electron transport rate through PSII (J) was observed following stomatal closure with a bimodal manner under both natural and saturated photosynthetic photon flux densities. Thus, fluorescence patterns can be interpreted in terms of patchy stomatal closure. The mapping of J from chlorophyll fluorescence images showed that the scale of stomatal patchiness was approximately 2.5-fold larger than that of anatomical patches (lamina areas bounded by bundle sheath extensions within lamina). Our results suggest the spatial scale of stomatal patches in Q. crispula leaves.
Archive | 2013
Hiroyuki Tobita; Takashi Yamanaka
Partial leaf shedding induced by hydraulic failure under prolonged drought can prevent excess water consumption, resulting in delayed recovery of carbon productivity following rainfall. To understand the manner of water use of invasive species in oceanic island forests under a fluctuating water regime, leaf shedding, multiple physiological traits, and the progress of embolism in the stem xylem under repeated drought-irrigation cycles were examined in the potted saplings of an invasive species, Bischofia javanica Blume, and three endemic native species, Schima mertensiana (Sieb. Et Zucc,) Koitz., Hibiscus glaber Matsum, and Distylium lepidotum Nakai, from the Bonin Islands, Japan. The progress of xylem embolism was observed by cryo-scanning electron microscopy. The samples exhibited different processes of water saving and drought tolerance based on the different combinations of partial leaf shedding involved in embolized conduits following repeated de-rehydration. Predawn leaf water potential largely decreased with each successive drought-irrigation cycle for all tree species, except for B. javanica. B. javanica shed leaves conspicuously under drought and showed responsive stomatal conductance to VPD, which contributed to recover leaf gas exchange in the remaining leaves, following a restored water supply. In contrast, native tree species did not completely recover photosynthetic rates during the repeated drought-irrigation cycles. H. glaber and D. lepidotum preserved water in vessels and adjusted leaf osmotic rates but did not actively shed leaves. S. mertensiana exhibited partial leaf shedding during the first cycle with an osmotic adjustment, but they showed less responsive stomatal conductance to VPD. Our data indicate that invasive B. javanica saplings can effectively use water supplied suddenly under drought conditions. We predict that fluctuating precipitation in the future may change tree distributions even in mesic or moist sites in the Bonin Islands.
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