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Dive into the research topics where Madoka Ohji is active.

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Featured researches published by Madoka Ohji.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2002

Differences in the acute toxicities of tributyltin between the Caprellidea and the Gammaridea (Crustacea: Amphipoda)

Madoka Ohji; Ichiro Takeuchi; Shin Takahashi; Shinsuke Tanabe; Nobuyuki Miyazaki

Tests for the acute toxicity of tributyltin (TBT) were conducted on amphipod crustaceans collected from Otsuchi Bay, Japan. Five species of caprellids and three species of gammarids, which belong to a closely related ecological niche, were used for the exposure experiments at seven test concentrations (0, 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, 1, 10 and 100 microg TBTCl/l) for 48 h at 20 degrees C. The 48-h LC50 values of the caprellids were 1.2-6.6 microg TBTCl/l, and these were significantly lower than those of the gammarids (17.8-23.1 microg TBTCl/l). This suggests that caprellids are more sensitive to TBT than gammarids. Furthermore, the proportions of TBT and its derivatives, dibutyltin (DBT) and monobutyltin (MBT), were measured in the amphipods collected from Otsuchi Bay. In the caprellids, TBT was the predominant compound, accounting for 72% of the total butyltin which reflected the butyltin ratio in seawater, while in the gammarids, TBTs breakdown products (DBT and MBT) predominated, accounting for 75% of the total butyltin. This difference suggests that caprellids may have lower metabolic capacity to degrade TBT than gammarids. Therefore, the difference in sensitivity to TBT among the amphipods is thought to be related to the species-specific capacity to metabolize TBT.


Ichthyological Research | 2003

Occurrence of sea eels of Anguilla japonica along the Sanriku Coast of Japan

Takaomi Arai; Aya Kotake; Madoka Ohji; Michael J. Miller; Katsumi Tsukamoto; Nobuyuki Miyazaki

Abstract The age and migratory history of the Japanese eel, Anguilla japonica, collected along the Sanriku Coast of Japan, were examined using otolith microstructure and analysis of strontium (Sr) and calcium (Ca) concentrations. The mean Sr : Ca ratios from the elver mark to the otolith edge indicated that there were eels with several general categories of migratory history, including sea eels that never entered freshwater and others which had entered freshwater for brief periods but returned to the estuary or bay. This first evidence of the occurrence of sea eels in this northern area indicates that Japanese eels of the Sanriku Coast do not necessarily migrate into freshwater rivers.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2006

Concentrations of booster biocides in sediment and clams from Vietnam

Hiroya Harino; Sayaka Midorikawa; Takaomi Arai; Madoka Ohji; Nguyen Duc Cu; Nobuyuki Miyazaki

An analytical method for the simultaneous determination of five booster biocides (Sea-Nine 211, Dichlofluanid, Duiron, Irgarol 1051 and Pyrithiones) and degradation product of Irgarol 1051 (Ml) in sediment from Vietnam was developed by LC/MS-MS. The recovery rates and relative standard deviation of the booster biocides in the sediment were in the range of 71-108% and 1.5-12%, respectively, and the detection limits were in the range of 0.04-2 μg kg -1 dry. An analytical method for the simultaneous determination of three booster biocides (Sea-Nine 211, Duiron and Irgarol 1051) and Ml in clams was also developed by LC/MS-MS. The recovery rates and relative standard deviations of the booster biocides in the biological samples were in the range of 60-99% and 3.4 -6.8%, respectively, and the detection limits were in the range of 0.24-1.1 μg kg -1 . The booster biocides in sediment from the coastal area of northern and central Vietnam were measured using this analytical method. Sea-Nine 211, Dichlofluanid, Duiron, Irgarol 1051, Ml and Pyrithiones were detected in the range of 0.09-1.3 μg kg -1 dry, <0.10 13 μg kg -1 dry, 0.11-3.0 μg kg -1 dry, 0.05-4.0 μg kg -1 dry, <0.1 -0.43 μg kg -1 dry and < 2-420 μg kg -1 dry, respectively. The detection frequencies of Dichlofluanid, Ml and Pyrithiones were low. The species and levels of detected booster biocides varied between sampling stations. Irgarol 1051 and its degradation product Ml were not detected in clams.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2003

Chronic effects of tributyltin on the caprellid amphipod Caprella danilevskii

Madoka Ohji; Takaomi Arai; Nobuyuki Miyazaki

In order to examine the biological effects by TBT exposure, experiments involving the exposure of five levels of TBT concentrations (0, 10, 100, 1000 and 10,000 ngl(-1)) were conducted on the caprellid amphipod Caprella danilevskii, over a generation after hatching. Marked delays in growth and molting during the early developmental stage and maturation were found in both 100 and 1000 ng TBTCl l(-1) concentrations in spite of the sex. All specimens died in 10,000 ng TBTCl l(-1) within 4 days after hatching. Inhibition of maturation and reproduction such as delaying in the achievement of maturity and a decrease in the number of juveniles hatched was apparent in 10 and 100 ng TBTCl l(-1) concentrations. Furthermore, brood loss, and failure in egg formation and hatching were observed as the TBT concentration became higher. No significant changes in sex ratio were seen at any of the TBT exposure levels during hatching and maturation in the present study. This phenomenon was different from a previous study in which the proportion of females was increased with an increase in TBT concentrations in the embryonic exposure experiment. This suggests that sex disturbance is induced during the embryonic stage of the species. A drastic decrease in survival rate was observed at 10 ng TBTCl l(-1) (25%) which corresponds to the mean level in coastal waters. Therefore, the present encountering ambient TBT concentration may influence populations of C. danilevskii in the coastal environment.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2008

Variation in migratory history of Japanese eels, Anguilla japonica , collected in the northernmost part of its distribution

Takaomi Arai; Aya Kotake; Madoka Ohji

In order to examine the variation of migratory histories in the Japanese eel, Anguilla japonica , we measured otolith strontium (Sr) and calcium (Ca) concentrations by X-ray electron microprobe analysis in A. japonica collected in a coastal brackish water lake in the northernmost part of its distribution. Two migratory types that were categorized as river eels and estuarine eels were found. Estuarine eels were dominant (85%), while ordinary diadromous eels that had entered the freshwater habitat made up only 15% of the population. The low proportion of river eels suggested that the estuarine eels that inhabit the nearby coastal areas might make a larger reproductive contribution to the next generation in this area. There was no significant difference in growth between the river and estuarine eels, which suggested that the limited carrying capacity of the adjacent river and geographical features might be more effective in determining the habitat use of the Japanese eel than the genetic feature and food abundance at the northern edge of its distribution.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2011

Differences in organotin accumulation in relation to life history in the white-spotted charr Salvelinus leucomaenis

Madoka Ohji; Hiroya Harino; Takaomi Arai

To examine the accumulation pattern of organotins (OTs) in relation to the migration of diadromous fish, tributyltin (TBT) and triphenyltin (TPT) and their derivatives were determined in the muscle tissue of both sea-run (anadromous) and freshwater-resident (nonanadromous) types of the white-spotted charr Salvelinus leucomaenis. Ontogenic changes in otolith strontium (Sr) and calcium (Ca) concentrations were examined along life history transect to discriminate migration type. Mean Sr:Ca ratio from the core to the edge of the otolith in sea-run individuals was significantly higher than those in freshwater-resident one. There were no significant correlations in S. leucomaenis between OT accumulation and various biological characteristics. It is noteworthy that TBT and TPT concentrations in sea-run type were significantly higher than those in freshwater-resident individuals, although they are both of the same species. These results suggest that sea-run S. leucomaenis have a higher ecological risk of OT exposure than freshwater-residents during their life histories.


Archive | 2009

Biological Effects of Tributyltin on the Caprellidea (Crustacea: Amphipoda)

Madoka Ohji

During the past several decades, butyltin compounds (BTs), one of the representative groups of organotin compounds (OTs), have been widely used as an antifouling agent in paints for boats, ships, and aquaculture nets (Fent 1996, Champ and Seligman 1996), thus these compounds have been found in a variety of marine organisms, often at concentrations exceeding acute or chronic toxicity levels (Bryan and Gibbs 1991; Alzieu 1996). The hazardous effects of antifouling paints containing BTs in marine ecosystem have become a significant environmental issue all over the world (Champ and Wade 1996; Bosselmann 1996). To prevent the destruction of marine ecosystems, BT application to small boats and fish farming equipment has been banned or regulated in developed countries since the late 1980s (Champ and Wade 1996; Bosselmann 1996). Nevertheless, significant accumulation of BTs has been noted at various trophic levels in the marine food chain including plankton, algae, crustaceans, fishes and cetaceans, indicating that BTs impact continues to be felt in marine ecosystems. Tri-organotins, tributyltin (TBT) are reported to be the most toxic compounds, and at nanogram-per-liter levels, TBT has adverse effects on many aquatic organisms, for example, producing retardation of regenerative growth, delayed molting, reduction in burrowing activity and deformities in limbs in the fiddler crab (Weis and Perlmutter 1987; Weis et al. 1987; Weis and Kim 1988), impairment of egg


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2008

Environmental habitat use and migration of Plecoglossidae and Osmeridae fish

Madoka Ohji; Aya Kotake; Takaomi Arai

The life histories of Plecoglossidae and Osmeridaefish collected from Japanese fresh, brackish, and seawaters were studied by examining the strontium (Sr) to calcium (Ca) ratios in their otoliths. The Sr:Ca ratios in the otoliths changed with the salinity of the habitat. The fish living in a freshwater environment showed consistently low Sr:Ca ratios throughout the otolith. The fish were identified as a standard freshwater type. In contrast, fish collected from the intertidal zone showed higher otolith Sr:Ca ratios than those in the standard freshwater type, and the ratios fluctuated along the growth phase. In the present study, in addition to the representative migration pattern reported previously, other migration patterns were found to show consistently high Sr:Ca ratios throughout the otolith in several Osmeridae fish. Those results indicate that these fish have a flexible migration strategy with a high degree of behavioural plasticity and an ability to utilize the full range of salinity throughout their life history.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2017

Differences in bioaccumulation and transfer ability between tributyltin and triphenyltin from parental female to offspring in viviparous surfperch Ditrema temmincki

Madoka Ohji; Hiroya Harino; William John Langston

To examine the risk of transgenerational transfer of organotin compounds (OTs) in fish, tributyltin (TBT) and triphenyltin (TPT) compounds and their breakdown products were determined in both parental females and offspring of viviparous surfperch Ditrema temmincki collected from Japanese coastal waters. TBT concentrations (Mean ± SD) in the offspring (34 ± 5.7 ng Sn g −1 wet wt) were significantly higher (10–17 times) than in the parental females (2.8 ± 1.0 ng Sn g −1 wet wt). In the offspring, TBT was the predominant butyltin compound (82 ± 1.6% ∑BTs = TBT + DBT + MBT), and represented a greater proportion than in the parental females (51 ± 9.3% as TBT). TPT concentrations were significantly lower than TBT, and the ratio of TPT in parental females, relative to offspring, was different from TBT. TPT concentrations in the offspring (0.8 ± 0.3 ng Sn g −1 wet wt) were almost identical to those in the parental females (1.0 ± 0.5 ng Sn g −1 wet wt). TPT was the predominant phenyltin (∑PTs = TPT + DPT + MPT) in both offspring (73 ± 12% as TPT) and parental females (72 ± 18% as TPT). Results suggest that the transfer rate of TBT from parent to offspring could be much faster than its degradation rate in the offspring, accounting for higher accumulation of TBT in the latter. In contrast, the transfer rate of TPT is slower than its biodegradation, leading to a lower concentration of TPT in the offspring. It is therefore likely that the offspring might be at a higher risk from TBT than the parental females during their early growth stage in ovary in the viviparous surfperch whereas exposure to TPT is comparable in both generations.


Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology | 2007

Concentrations of Antifouling Biocides in Sediment and Mussel Samples Collected from Otsuchi Bay, Japan

Hiroya Harino; Yoshikazu Yamamoto; Sayaka Eguchi; Shini’chiro Kawai; Yuko Kurokawa; Takaomi Arai; Madoka Ohji; Hideo Okamura; Nobuyuki Miyazaki

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Takaomi Arai

Universiti Malaysia Terengganu

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Zainal Arifin

Indonesian Institute of Sciences

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