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Dive into the research topics where Kohki Sowa is active.

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Featured researches published by Kohki Sowa.


Nature | 2011

Permanent El Nino during the Pliocene warm period not supported by coral evidence

Tsuyoshi Watanabe; Atsushi Suzuki; Shoshiro Minobe; Tatsunori Kawashima; Koji Kameo; Kayo Minoshima; Yolanda M. Aguilar; Ryoji Wani; Hodaka Kawahata; Kohki Sowa; Takaya Nagai; Tomoki Kase

The El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO) system during the Pliocene warm period (PWP; 3–5 million years ago) may have existed in a permanent El Niño state with a sharply reduced zonal sea surface temperature (SST) gradient in the equatorial Pacific Ocean. This suggests that during the PWP, when global mean temperatures and atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations were similar to those projected for near-term climate change, ENSO variability—and related global climate teleconnections—could have been radically different from that today. Yet, owing to a lack of observational evidence on seasonal and interannual SST variability from crucial low-latitude sites, this fundamental climate characteristic of the PWP remains controversial. Here we show that permanent El Niño conditions did not exist during the PWP. Our spectral analysis of the δ18O SST and salinity proxy, extracted from two 35-year, monthly resolved PWP Porites corals in the Philippines, reveals variability that is similar to present ENSO variation. Although our fossil corals cannot be directly compared with modern ENSO records, two lines of evidence suggest that Philippine corals are appropriate ENSO proxies. First, δ18O anomalies from a nearby live Porites coral are correlated with modern records of ENSO variability. Second, negative-δ18O events in the fossil corals closely resemble the decreases in δ18O seen in the live coral during El Niño events. Prior research advocating a permanent El Niño state may have been limited by the coarse resolution of many SST proxies, whereas our coral-based analysis identifies climate variability at the temporal scale required to resolve ENSO structure firmly.


Nature Communications | 2012

Past daily light cycle recorded in the strontium/calcium ratios of giant clam shells

Yuji Sano; Sayumi Kobayashi; Kotaro Shirai; Naoto Takahata; Katsumi Matsumoto; Tsuyoshi Watanabe; Kohki Sowa; Kenji Iwai

The historical record of daily light cycle in tropical and subtropical regions is short. Moreover, it remains difficult to extract this cycle in the past from natural archives such as biogenic marine carbonates. Here we describe the precise analysis of Sr/Ca, Mg/Ca, and Ba/Ca ratios in a cultivated giant clam shell, using a laterally high-resolution secondary ion mass spectrometer with 2 μm resolution. The Sr/Ca ratio exhibits striking diurnal variations, reflecting the daily light cycle. A clear seasonal variation in Sr/Ca is also observed in another longer set of measurements with 50 μm resolution. Light-enhanced calcification and elemental transportation processes, in giant clam and symbiotic algae, may explain these diurnal and annual variations. This opens the possibility to develop the Sr/Ca ratio from a giant clam shell as an effective proxy for parameters of the daily light cycle.


Coral Reefs | 2015

Response of Acropora digitifera to ocean acidification: constraints from δ11B, Sr, Mg, and Ba compositions of aragonitic skeletons cultured under variable seawater pH

Kentaro Tanaka; Michael Holcomb; Asami Takahashi; Haruko Kurihara; Ryuji Asami; Ryuichi Shinjo; Kohki Sowa; Kai Rankenburg; Tsuyoshi Watanabe; Malcolm T. McCulloch

The response of Acropora digitifera to ocean acidification is determined using geochemical proxy measurements of the skeletal composition of A. digitifera cultured under a range of pH levels. We show that the chemical composition (δ11B, Sr/Ca, Mg/Ca, and Ba/Ca) of the coral skeletons can provide quantitative constraints on the effects of seawater pH on the pH in the calcification fluid (pHCF) and the mechanisms controlling the incorporation of trace elements into coral aragonite. With the decline of seawater pH, the skeletal δ11B value decreased, while the Sr/Ca ratio showed an increasing trend. The relationship between Mg/Ca and Ba/Ca versus seawater pH was not significant. Inter-colony variation of δ11B was insignificant, although inter-colony variation was observed for Ba/Ca. The decreasing trend of pHCF calculated from δ11B was from ~8.5, 8.4, and 8.3 for seawater pH of ~8.1, 7.8, and 7.4, respectively. Model calculations based on Sr/Ca and pHCF suggest that upregulation of pHCF occurs via exchange of H+ with Ca2+ with kinetic effects (Rayleigh fractionation), reducing Sr/Ca relative to inorganic deposition of aragonite from seawater. We show that it is possible to constrain the overall carbonate chemistry of the calcifying fluid with estimates of the carbonate saturation of the calcifying fluid (ΩCF) being derived from skeletal Sr/Ca and pHCF (from δ11B). These estimates suggest that the aragonite saturation state of the calcifying fluid ΩCF is elevated by a factor of 5–10 relative to ambient seawater under all treatment conditions.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Influence of Land Development on Holocene Porites Coral Calcification at Nagura Bay, Ishigaki Island, Japan

Kohki Sowa; Tsuyoshi Watanabe; Hironobu Kan; Hiroya Yamano

To evaluate the relationships between coral calcification, thermal stress, and sedimentation and eutrophication linked to human impact (hereafter referred to as “land development”) by river discharge, we analyzed growth characteristics in the context of a paleoenvironment that was reconstructed from geochemical signals in modern and fossil (1.2 cal kyr BP and 3.5 cal kyr BP, respectively) massive Porites corals from Nagura Bay (“Nagura”) and from modern Porites corals from the estuary of the Todoroki River, Shiraho Reef (“Todoroki”). Both sites are on Ishigaki Island, Japan, and Nagura is located approximately 12 km west of Todoroki. At Nagura, the individual corals provide time windows of 13 (modern), 10 (1.2 cal kyr BP), and 38 yr in length (3.5 cal kyr BP). Here, we present the coral annual calcification for Nagura and Todoroki, and (bi) monthly resolved records of Sr/Ca (a proxy of sea surface temperature (SST)) and Ba/Ca (a proxy of sedimentation and nutrients related to land development) for Nagura. At Nagura, the winter SST was cooler by 2.8°C in the 1.2 cal kyr BP, and the annual and winter SSTs in the 3.5 cal kyr BP were cooler by 2.6°C and 4.6°C, respectively. The annual periodicity of Ba/Ca in modern coral is linked to river discharge and is associated with land development including sugar cane cultivation. Modern coral calcification also has declined with SST warming and increasing Ba/Ca peaks in winter. However, calcification of fossil corals does not appear to have been influenced by variations in Sr/Ca and Ba/Ca. Modern coral growth characteristics at Nagura and Todoroki indicate that coral growth is both spatially and temporally influenced by river discharge and land development. At Nagura, our findings suggest that land development induces negative thermal sensitivity for calcification in winter due to sugar cane harvest, which is a specifically modern phenomenon.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2012

Needle-like grains across growth lines in the coral skeleton of Porites lobata.

Satoko Motai; Takaya Nagai; Kohki Sowa; Tsuyoshi Watanabe; Naoya Sakamoto; Hisayoshi Yurimoto; Jun Kawano

The skeletal texture and crystal morphology of the massive reef-building coral Porites lobata were observed from the nano- to micrometer scale using an analytical transmission electron microscope (ATEM). The skeletal texture consists of centers of calcification (COCs) and fiber area. Fiber areas contain bundles of needle-like aragonite crystals that are elongated along the crystallographic c-axis and are several hundred nanometers to one micrometer in width and several micrometers in length. The size distribution of aragonite crystals is relatively homogeneous in the fibers. Growth lines are observed sub-perpendicular to the direction of aragonite growth. These growth lines occur in 1-2 μm intervals and reflect a periodic contrast in the thickness of an ion-spattered sample and pass through the interior of some aragonite crystals. These observations suggest that the medium filled in the calcification space maintains a CaCO₃-supersaturated state during fiber growth and that a physical change occurs periodically during the aragonite crystals of the fiber area.


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2008

Minor and trace element incorporation into branching coral Acropora nobilis skeleton

Kotaro Shirai; Tatsunori Kawashima; Kohki Sowa; Tsuyoshi Watanabe; Toru Nakamori; Naoto Takahata; Hiroshi Amakawa; Yuji Sano


Journal of Structural Biology | 2012

Visualization of sub-daily skeletal growth patterns in massive Porites corals grown in Sr-enriched seawater

Kotaro Shirai; Kohki Sowa; Tsuyoshi Watanabe; Yuji Sano; Takashi Nakamura; Peta L. Clode


Journal of The Japanese Coral Reef Society | 2009

Reconstructing palaeoenvironments of temperate regions based on high latitude corals at Tatsukushi Bay in Japan

Atsuko Yamazaki; Tsuyoshi Watanabe; Kohki Sowa; Shuu Nakachi; Hiroya Yamano; Fumihito Iwase


JAMSTEC Report of Research and Development | 2013

Estimation of uncertainty for massive Porites coral skeletal density

Kohki Sowa; Tsuyoshi Watanabe; Takashi Nakamura; Saburo Sakai; Tatsuhiko Sakamoto


European Journal of Mineralogy | 2016

Precipitation of halite during calcification of the massive reef-building coral Porites lobata

Satoko Motai; Jun Kawano; Takaya Nagai; Kohki Sowa; Tsuyoshi Watanabe

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Hiroya Yamano

National Institute for Environmental Studies

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Tatsuhiko Sakamoto

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Takashi Nakamura

Tokyo Institute of Technology

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