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Featured researches published by Jun Noda.


Biological Trace Element Research | 2012

Particle-Induced X-ray Emission Analysis of Elements in Plasma from Wild and Captive Sea Turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata, Chelonia mydas, and Caretta caretta) in Okinawa, Japan

Kazuyuki Suzuki; Jun Noda; Makio Yanagisawa; Isao Kawazu; K. Sera; Daisuke Fukui; Mitsuhiko Asakawa; Hiroshi Yokota

The aim of this study was to evaluate the reliability of direct determination of trace and major element concentrations in plasma samples from wild (six hawksbill, nine green, and nine loggerhead) and captive sea turtles (25 howksbill, five green, and three loggerhead) in Okinawa, Japan. The particle induced X-ray emission method allowed detection of 23 trace and major elements (Al, As, Br, Ca, Cl, Cr, Cu, Fe, Hg, K, Mg, Mn, Mo, Ni, P, Pb, S, Se, Si, Sr, Ti, Y, and Zn). The wild sea turtles were found to have high concentrations of As and Pb in plasma compared with captive, but there were no significant changes in the Al and Hg concentrations. Loggerhead sea turtles were found to have significantly higher accumulation of As and Pb in plasma in comparison to other species. These findings may be useful when adjusting environmental and species-related factors in severely polluted marine ecosystems. Our results indicate that measuring the plasma As and Pb concentrations in wild sea turtles might be of help to assess the level of pollution in marine ecosystems, keeping in mind that loggerhead sea turtles had been shown to have higher levels of As and Pb in plasma.


Research in Veterinary Science | 2012

Factors associated with antimicrobial-resistant Escherichia coli in zoo animals.

Kanako Ishihara; Yuko Hosokawa; Kohei Makita; Jun Noda; Hiroshi Ueno; Yasukazu Muramatsu; Takeshi Mukai; Hideaki Yamamoto; Masaki Ito; Yutaka Tamura

Factors associated with the carriage of antimicrobial-resistant Escherichia coli isolates were analysed among zoo animals. An association was observed between selection of amoxicillin as the first-line therapy and a significantly higher percentage of resistance to ampicillin (54.5%) from 11 animals treated with antimicrobials, compared with isolates from 32 untreated animals (9.4%). In addition, the percentage resistance to kanamycin (36.4%), gentamicin (27.3%), trimethoprim (27.3%) and tetracycline (63.6%) from 11 treated animals was significantly higher than those from 32 untreated animals (3.1%, 3.1%, 3.1% and 25%, respectively), although these antimicrobials were rarely used. All kanamycin-, gentamicin- and trimethoprim-resistant isolates and more than half of the tetracycline-resistant isolates from treated animals were also resistant to ampicillin. Co-resistance to other antimicrobials with ampicillin was suggested to contribute to an increasing of resistance towards antimicrobials that were rarely administered. The present investigation revealed an association of antimicrobial treatment with the spread of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria among zoo animals.


International Journal of PIXE | 2015

Environmental contamination by arsenic and lead in some rural villages in India

Jun Noda; Reika Hakamada; Kazuyki Suzuki; Teruo Miura; Koichiro Sera

This investigation focuses on the arsenic contamination problems in tube well groundwater systems and the different forms of arsenic and other toxic elements accumulated in human hair samples taken in a rural area of Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India. The local residents at the study site depend on groundwater as their major source of household water. The oxidation reduction potential (ORP) and pH of groundwater samples were measured directly after the sampling of groundwater. Arsenic concentrations were measured directly in water samples by a colorimetric arsenic analysis kit after the water was pumped from a tube well and/or at a nearby laboratory. Human hair samples from the residents of the villages in the study site were analyzed by PIXE to measure a wide range of elements. An atomic absorption spectrometer was also used to measure arsenic concentrations. The results indicated that the concentrations of arsenic in groundwater and human hair were significantly higher in the village of Bada Kanjasa than in the villages of Kanua and Chota Kanjasa (P< 0.05), clearly indicating that the higher arsenic concentration in groundwater reflected the accumulation of arsenic in human hair in the residents of Bada Kanjasa. The PIXE analysis also revealed an unusually high concentration of lead in human hair samples from Chota Kanjasa. Although the actual health effects and the detailed exposure mechanisms remain to be investigated, lead pollution is suspected to be the source of the exposure.


Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 2018

Contamination Status of Seven Elements in Hooded Cranes Wintering in South-West Kyushu, Japan: Comparison with Red-Crowned Cranes in Hokkaido, Japan

Hiroki Teraoka; Hasumi Miyagi; Yuko Haraguchi; Kozo Takase; Takio Kitazawa; Jun Noda

The hooded crane is designated as an endangered species. The cranes breed primarily in wetlands in southeast Russia and China in summer. Most of the hooded crane population winters in the Izumi plain in Japan. It is difficult to know the contamination status of their habitat because of their vast breeding area. We determined the levels of Cd, Pb, As, (total) Hg, Se, Zn, and Cu in the liver, kidney, and muscle of hooded cranes that were found dead in Izumi in the periods 2003–2006 and 2014–2015 compared with the levels in red-crowned cranes in Hokkaido, Japan, as the only cranes in which these elements had been studied extensively. There were no notable differences between levels of the seven elements in the two periods. Overall, tissue levels of the elements examined in hooded cranes were comparable to those in red-crowned cranes except for Hg and Se. Tissue levels of Hg and Se were clearly lower in hooded cranes than in red-crowned cranes that were found dead from 2000. One lead poisoning case was confirmed. The results suggest that Hooded cranes wintering in Izumi are not extensively contaminated with the seven elements examined.


Journal of Veterinary Medical Science | 2017

Plasma lead, silicon and titanium concentrations are considerably higher in green sea turtle from the suburban coast than in those from the rural coast in Okinawa, Japan

Kenji Tsukano; Kazuyuki Suzuki; Jun Noda; Makio Yanagisawa; Kazunari Kameda; Koichiro Sera; Yasunobu Nishi; Toshio Shimamori; Yasuyo Morimoto; Hiroshi Yokota; Mitsuhiko Asakawa

The purpose of this study was to compare the concentration of trace elements in the plasma of sea turtles that inhabited the suburban (Okinawa Main Island, n=8) and the rural coast (Yaeyama Island, n=57) in Okinawa, Japan. Particle induced X-ray emission allowed detection of 20 trace and major elements. The wild sea turtles in the suburban coast in Okinawa were found to have high concentrations of Pb, Si and Ti in the plasma when compared to the rural area but there were no significant changes in the Al, As and Hg concentrations. These results may help to suggest the status of some elements in a marine environment. Further, monitoring the plasma trace and major element status in sea turtles can be used as a bio-monitoring approach by which specific types of elements found here could indicate effects that are related to human activities.


Journal of Veterinary Medical Science | 2012

Relationships between carapace sizes and plasma major and trace element status in captive hawksbill sea turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata).

Kazuyuki Suzuki; Jun Noda; Makio Yanagisawa; Isao Kawazu; K. Sera; Daisuke Fukui; Mitsuhiko Asakawa; Hiroshi Yokota


Environment and Pollution | 2013

Temporal changes in environmental health risks and socio-psychological status in areas affected by the 2011 tsunami in Ishinomaki, Japan

Kohei Makita; Kazuto Inoshita; Taishi Kayano; Kei Uenoyama; Katsuro Hagiwara; Mitsuhiko Asakawa; Kenta Ogawa; Shin’ya Kawamura; Jun Noda; Koichiro Sera; Hitoshi Sasaki; Nobutake Nakatani; Hidetoshi Higuchi; Naohito Ishikawa; Hidetomo Iwano; Yutaka Tamura


Sola | 2018

Large-Scale Dust Event in East Asia in May 2017: Dust Emission and Transport from Multiple Source Regions

Yuki Minamoto; Kotaro Nakamura; Minrui Wang; Kei Kawai; Kazuma Ohara; Jun Noda; Enkhbaatar Davaanyam; Nobuo Sugimoto; Kenji Kai


Japanese Journal of Veterinary Research | 2018

Investigation of chromated copper arsenate-treated waste wood used for bedding material in the Hokkaido area

Jun Noda; Kenichi Izumi; Yutaka Tamura


Land | 2017

Determining the Frequency of Dry Lake Bed Formation in Semi-Arid Mongolia From Satellite Data

Yuta Demura; Buho Hoshino; Kenji Baba; Christopher McCarthy; Yuki Sofue; Kenji Kai; Tsedendamba Purevsuren; Katsuro Hagiwara; Jun Noda

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Hiroshi Yokota

Rakuno Gakuen University

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K. Sera

Iwate Medical University

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Yutaka Tamura

Rakuno Gakuen University

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Daisuke Fukui

Rakuno Gakuen University

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Kenji Baba

Rakuno Gakuen University

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Kenji Tsukano

Rakuno Gakuen University

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