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Dive into the research topics where Kimio Asami is active.

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Featured researches published by Kimio Asami.


Fisheries Science | 2007

Post-release movement and diel activity patterns of hatchery-reared and wild black-spot tuskfish Choerodon schoenleinii determined by ultrasonic telemetry

Yuuki Kawabata; Junichi Okuyama; Hiromichi Mitamura; Kimio Asami; Kenzo Yoseda; Nobuaki Arai

Post-release movement and diel activity patterns of hatchery-reared and wild black-spot tuskfish were examined using ultrasonic telemetry. Five hatchery-reared and four wild fish were released in the sandy bottom of Urasoko Bay, Ishigaki Island, Okinawa, Japan, and monitored using automated monitoring receivers from November 2005 to February 2006. Both hatchery-reared and wild fish tended to stay near the release site for over two weeks, before leaving the release site. Both hatchery-reared and wild tuskfish showed diurnal rhythm intermittently; signals were recorded more frequently in the daytime and less frequently in the nighttime, suggesting that the fish of both origins were active during the day and inactive during the night. These findings indicate that the one-year-old hatchery-reared tuskfish have some consistent behavioral characteristics with those of the wild.


Fisheries Science | 2011

Effect of shelter acclimation on the post-release movement and putative predation mortality of hatchery-reared black-spot tuskfish Choerodon schoenleinii , determined by acoustic telemetry

Yuuki Kawabata; Kimio Asami; Masato Kobayashi; Taku Sato; Koichi Okuzawa; Hideaki Yamada; Kenzo Yoseda; Nobuaki Arai

In this study, the effect of shelter acclimation on the post-release movement and putative predation mortality of hatchery-reared black-spot tuskfish Choerodon schoenleinii was examined using acoustic telemetry. We acclimated four 1-year-old fish to shelters in cages before release and compared their movements with six nonacclimated fish. Since it was not possible to compare the behavioral pattern between the former and the latter fish due to the short periods the latter fish were available to be monitored, we also compared their movements with those of large nonacclimated fish that were less likely to be preyed upon. Sixty-seven percent of the nonacclimated fish showed atypical movements before the signals ceased to be detected, a pattern that suggested a predation event had occurred, whereas none of the acclimated and large nonacclimated fish showed the atypical movements. In addition, the probability of detection cessation was about 13 times lower in the acclimated than nonacclimated fish. The signal detection patterns suggest that the acclimated fish utilized night-time shelters from the first night after release, while the large nonacclimated fish started to utilize shelters several days after release. Therefore, it is likely that the shelter acclimation enhanced the shelter utilization by tuskfish, possibly decreasing post-release predation mortality.


Journal of Fish Biology | 2010

Effects of a tropical cyclone on the distribution of hatchery-reared black-spot tuskfish Choerodon schoenleinii determined by acoustic telemetry.

Yuki Kawabata; Junichi Okuyama; Kimio Asami; Koichi Okuzawa; Kenzo Yoseda; Nobuaki Arai

The effects of a tropical cyclone on the distribution of hatchery-reared black-spot tuskfish Choerodon schoenleinii were examined using acoustic telemetry. Nine fish were released in Urasoko Bay, Ishigaki Island, Japan, in September 2006, and another nine were released in June to July 2007, before a cyclones passing through the area in September 2007. Data for the fish released in 2006 were used as the cyclone-inexperienced group to compare their distribution pattern to that of the 2007 cyclone-experienced group. Both groups of fish were monitored for up to 150 days. Of the nine fish in each group, four (44%) and two (22%) were monitored for over 150 days in the cyclone-inexperienced and the cyclone-experienced groups, respectively. Three of the five fish that had settled in the monitoring area left the area within a few days of the cyclone event. To estimate the time of disappearance of the fish, maximum wind speed during a period of 7 days (indicating the occurrence and intensity of the tropical cyclone), fish size and release year were evaluated as explanatory variables using a Cox proportional hazards model with Akaikes information criterion. The best predictive model included the effect of maximum wind speed. One fish that left the monitoring area displayed movement patterns related to strong winds, suggesting that wind-associated strong currents swept the fish away. No relationships were found between the movement patterns of the other two fish and any physical environmental data. The daily detection periods of one of the two fish gradually decreased after the cyclone hit, and this fish eventually left the monitoring area within 3 days, suggesting that it shifted to a habitat outside the monitoring area. These results indicate that tropical cyclones have both direct and indirect effects on the distribution of hatchery-reared C. schoenleinii.


Fisheries Science | 2011

Effect of shelter acclimation on the post-release survival of hatchery-reared black-spot tuskfish Choerodon schoenleinii: laboratory experiments using the reef-resident predator white-streaked grouper Epinephelus ongus

Yuuki Kawabata; Kimio Asami; Masato Kobayashi; Taku Sato; Koichi Okuzawa; Hideaki Yamada; Kenzo Yoseda; Nobuaki Arai

A critical component of many releasing projects is the identification and subsequent implementation of optimal release strategies that can decrease post-release predation mortalities. We performed laboratory experiments to investigate whether acclimation to shelters affects the post-release survival of hatchery-reared black-spot tuskfish Choerodon schoenleinii in the presence of a reef-resident predator, the white-streaked grouper Epinephelus ongus. Tuskfish were exposed to groupers under three different experimental conditions/treatments: (1) acclimation of fish to shelters prior to their exposure to groupers; (2) no acclimation of fish to shelters, but with shelters available during their exposure to groupers; (3) fish not acclimated to shelters and no shelters available during their exposure to groupers. Tuskfish that were acclimated to shelters utilized shelters more frequently than did non-acclimated fish, and the survival rate of acclimated fish was higher than those of fish in the other treatments. These results suggest that pre-release acclimation to shelters improves the post-release survival of hatchery-reared black-spot tuskfish.


Fisheries Science | 2016

Pelvic fin removal modifies escape trajectory in a teleost fish

Yuuki Kawabata; Hideaki Yamada; Taku Sato; Masato Kobayashi; Koichi Okuzawa; Kimio Asami

Pelvic fin removal has been used in mark-recapture studies and non-lethal tissue samplings; however, there is limited knowledge on the effect of fin removal on the locomotor performance in fish. We investigated the effect of pelvic fin removal on the escape response in hatchery-reared black-spot tuskfish Choerodon schoenleinii. The left pelvic fins of the tuskfish were removed, and the escape response of the modified fish was compared with control fish. The modified fish and the control fish showed C-starts that consisted of an initial bend (stage 1) and a return tail flip (stage 2). The stage 1 angle and the escape trajectory angle were greater in modified fish that turned to the side missing the pelvic fin, compared with unmodified control fish. In contrast, when the modified fish turned towards the side with the intact pelvic fin, the angles were similar to the control fish. Since both pelvic fins were extended during the stage 1 turn, it is likely that they allowed maintenance of the turning angles that determine the escape trajectory. These results suggest that pelvic fin removal has potential to negatively affect predator evasion through the modification of the escape trajectory in fish.


Aquaculture | 2008

Influence of light intensity on feeding, growth, and early survival of leopard coral grouper (Plectropomus leopardus) larvae under mass-scale rearing conditions

Kenzo Yoseda; Kazuhisa Yamamoto; Kimio Asami; Masayuki Chimura; Koji Hashimoto; Shinichi Kosaka


Journal of Fish Biology | 2008

The post‐release process of establishing stable home ranges and diel movement patterns of hatchery‐reared black‐spot tuskfish Choerodon schoenleinii

Yuki Kawabata; Junichi Okuyama; Kimio Asami; Kenzo Yoseda; Nobuaki Arai


Fisheries Science | 2009

Otolith development and daily increment formation in laboratory-reared larval and juvenile black-spot tuskfish Choerodon schoenleinii

Hideaki Yamada; Masayuki Chimura; Kimio Asami; Taku Sato; Masato Kobayashi; Atsushi Nanami


Suisanzoshoku (Japan) | 2003

Effects of Two Types of Rotifer on First-feeding Success and Early Survival in Coral Trout Plectropomus leopardus Larvae

Kenzo Yoseda; Kimio Asami; Maiko Fukumoto; Sachi Takaira; Yuko Kurokawa; Shin'ichiro Kawai


Aquaculture Science (Japan) | 2006

Effects of Different Temperature and Delayed Initial Feeding on Larval Feeding, Early Survival, and the Growth of Coral Trout Grouper, Plectropomus leopardus Larvae

Kenzo Yoseda; Kazuhisa Teruya; Kazuhisa Yamamoto; Kimio Asami

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