Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Masaaki Sudo is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Masaaki Sudo.


Experimental and Applied Acarology | 2011

Do plant mites commonly prefer the underside of leaves

Masaaki Sudo; Masahiro Osakabe

The adaxial (upper) and abaxial (lower) surfaces of a plant leaf provide heterogeneous habitats for small arthropods with different environmental conditions, such as light, humidity, and surface morphology. As for plant mites, some agricultural pest species and their natural enemies have been observed to favor the abaxial leaf surface, which is considered an adaptation to avoid rain or solar ultraviolet radiation. However, whether such a preference for the leaf underside is a common behavioral trait in mites on wild vegetation remains unknown. The authors conducted a 2-year survey on the foliar mite assemblage found on Viburnum erosum var. punctatum, a deciduous shrub on which several mite taxa occur throughout the seasons, and 14 sympatric tree or shrub species in secondary broadleaf-forest sites in Kyoto, west–central Japan. We compared adaxial–abaxial surface distributions of mites among mite taxa, seasons, and morphology of host leaves (presence/absence of hairs and domatia). On V. erosum var. punctatum, seven of 11 distinguished mite taxa were significantly distributed in favor of abaxial leaf surfaces and the trend was seasonally stable, except for Eriophyoidea. Mite assemblages on 15 plant species were significantly biased towards the abaxial leaf surfaces, regardless of surface morphology. Our data suggest that many mite taxa commonly prefer to stay on abaxial leaf surfaces in wild vegetation. Oribatida displayed a relatively neutral distribution, and in Tenuipalpidae, the ratio of eggs collected from the adaxial versus the abaxial side was significantly higher than the ratio of the motile individuals, implying that some mite taxa exploit adaxial leaf surfaces as habitat.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2013

Tolerance to Solar Ultraviolet-B Radiation in the Citrus Red Mite, An Upper Surface User of Host Plant Leaves

Midori Fukaya; Ryuji Uesugi; Hirokazu Ohashi; Yuta Sakai; Masaaki Sudo; Atsushi Kasai; Hidenari Kishimoto; Masahiro Osakabe

Plant‐dwelling mites are potentially exposed to solar ultraviolet‐B (UVB) radiation that causes deleterious and often lethal effects, leading most mites to inhabit the lower (underside) leaf surfaces. However, in species of spider mite belonging to the Genus Panonychus, a substantial portion of individuals occur on upper leaf surfaces. We investigated whether the upper leaf surfaces of citrus trees are favorable for P. citri, and to what extent they are tolerant to UVB radiation. If eggs are not adequately protected from UVB damage, females may avoid ovipositing on the upper surfaces of sunny leaves. To test this, we conducted laboratory experiments using a UVB lamp, and semioutdoor manipulative experiments. As a result, P. citri eggs are tolerant to UVB. Field studies revealed that the ratio of eggs and adult females on upper leaf surfaces were larger for shaded than for sunny leaves. However, 64–89% of eggs hatched successfully even on sunny upper leaf surfaces. Nutritional evaluation revealed that whether on sunny or shaded leaves, in fecundity and juvenile development P. citri reaped the fitness benefits of upper leaf surfaces. Consequently, P. citri is tolerant to UVB damage, and inhabiting the upper surfaces of shaded leaves is advantageous to this mite.


Applied Entomology and Zoology | 2012

Seasonal changes in the deleterious effects of solar ultraviolet-B radiation on eggs of the twospotted spider mite, Tetranychus urticae (Acari: Tetranychidae)

Yuta Sakai; Masaaki Sudo; Masahiro Osakabe

Solar ultraviolet-B (UVB) radiation has deleterious effects on plant-dwelling mites. We assessed the biological effects of UVB radiation on the eggs of the twospotted spider mite, Tetranychus urticae Koch, under both near ambient (UV+) and UV-attenuated (UV−) conditions from spring to autumn and compared them to the effects of temperature and humidity. The ambient daily UVB irradiance increased from January to August and then decreased rapidly until December, whereas egg hatchability under UV+ was lowest in April (10.7%) and increased almost linearly until October (74.9–92.3%). In contrast, hatchability under UV− was consistently high (96.2–99.8%) through all seasons. For UV+, the stepwise multiple linear regression analysis supported the negative correlation of hatchability with cumulative UVB irradiance during egg periods (cumulative dose), but did not support that with the mean daily UVB irradiance (dose rate), suggesting that UVB-induced mortality in T. urticae eggs is cumulative dose dependent rather than dose rate dependent. The high mortality in April may have reflected the slower development caused by the relatively lower temperature and higher UVB radiation, increasing the cumulative dose, while the low mortality in October may have reflected the faster development caused by the relatively higher temperature and lower UVB radiation, decreasing the cumulative dose.


Experimental and Applied Acarology | 2013

Stellate hairs on leaves of a deciduous shrub Viburnum erosum var. punctatum (Adoxaceae) effectively protect Brevipalpus obovatus (Acari: Tenuipalpidae) eggs from the predator Phytoseius nipponicus (Acari: Phytoseiidae).

Masaaki Sudo; Masahiro Osakabe

The eggs of the herbivorous false spider mite Brevipalpusobovatus Donnadieu have a longer incubation period than those of spider mites and are not protected by webs. Brevipalpusobovatus often lays its eggs in the gaps among the hairs on host leaves. We examined the effects of stellate hairs of Viburnumerosum var. punctatum (VEP) leaves on the survival of B. obovatus eggs. Adult B. obovatus and Phytoseiusnipponicus Ehara, a generalist predator, were introduced to VEP leaf disks; each B. obovatus egg was inspected daily until hatching. More eggs (63 vs. 42xa0%) survived on the abaxial surfaces of VEP leaves, where the stellate hairs are more complicated, than on the adaxial surfaces. Predation hazard decreased rapidly with increasing egg age and a substantial portion of the eggs hatched. Phytoseiusnipponicus preyed on eggs regardless of egg age when mixed-age eggs were provided. Manipulative experiments with bent stellate hairs showed that the normal hairs reduced the predation risk of B. obovatus eggs by P. nipponicus. Therefore, the predation hazard was considered to decrease since the stellate hairs hindered the search for B. obovatus eggs by the phytoseiid mite.


Experimental and Applied Acarology | 2013

Geotaxis and leaf-surface preferences mitigate negative effects of a predatory mite on an herbivorous mite.

Masaaki Sudo; Masahiro Osakabe

Reproductive success and population growth of an herbivorous mite are limited by activities of phytoseiid predators. However, occurrences on upper versus lower leaf surfaces are sometimes mismatched between these prey and predators. The mismatch potentially mitigates predation risk for the prey species. We assessed factors that affect mite distributions on leaf surfaces, testing whether the presence of the phytoseiid mite Phytoseius nipponicus alters the leaf-surface distribution and reproductive success of the herbivorous false spider mite Brevipalpus obovatus. The host plant was Viburnum erosum var. punctatum (Adoxaceae). Leaves were set in natural (TRUE) and reversed (upside down; INVERTED) orientations using experimental devices. Both surfaces were accessible to mites. We detected lower and abaxial leaf-surface preferences in P. nipponicus. In contrast, upper and adaxial surfaces were preferred by B. obovatus. Thus, prey and predatory mites accumulated on different sides of leaves. Presence of the predator also indirectly decreased egg production in B. obovatus. Brevipalpusobovatus females actively avoided leaf surfaces with elevated predator numbers; these females shifted their distributions and changed oviposition sites to leaf surfaces with fewer predators. In consequence, B.obovatus eggs on the upper sides of leaves were less frequently preyed upon than were those on lower sides. We suggest that upper leaf-surface exploitation in this particular herbivorous mite species mitigates predation risk from phytoseiid mites, which prefer lower leaf surfaces.


Evolutionary Applications | 2018

Optimal management strategy of insecticide resistance under various insect life histories : heterogeneous timing of selection and interpatch dispersal

Masaaki Sudo; Daisuke Takahashi; David A. Andow; Yoshito Suzuki; Takehiko Yamanaka

Although theoretical studies have shown that the mixture strategy, which uses multiple toxins simultaneously, can effectively delay the evolution of insecticide resistance, whether it is the optimal management strategy under different insect life histories and insecticide types remains unknown. To test the robustness of this management strategy over different life histories, we developed a series of simulation models that cover almost all the diploid insect types and have the same basic structure describing pest population dynamics and resistance evolution with discrete time steps. For each of two insecticidal toxins, independent one‐locus two‐allele autosomal inheritance of resistance was assumed. The simulations demonstrated the optimality of the mixture strategy either when insecticide efficacy was incomplete or when some part of the population disperses between patches before mating. The rotation strategy, which uses one insecticide on one pest generation and a different one on the next, did not differ from sequential usage in the time to resistance, except when dominance was low. It was the optimal strategy when insecticide efficacy was high and premating selection and dispersal occur.


Environmental Entomology | 2015

Joint Effect of Solar UVB and Heat Stress on the Seasonal Change of Egg Hatching Success in the Herbivorous False Spider Mite (Acari: Tenuipalpidae).

Masaaki Sudo; Masahiro Osakabe

ABSTRACT Seasonal population dynamics of an herbivorous mite has been documented in terms of the relationship between thermoresponses and temporal biological factors such as resource availability or predation risk. Although recent studies emphasize the deleterious effects of solar ultraviolet-B (UVB; 280–320 nm wavelengths) radiation on plant-dwelling mites, how UVB affects mite population remains largely unknown. On a wild shrub Viburnum erosum var. punctatum in Kyoto, an herbivorous false spider mite, Brevipalpus obovatus Donnadieu, occurs only in autumn. Females of this species lay one-third of their eggs on upper leaf surfaces. Oviposition on upper surfaces is beneficial for avoiding predation by phytoseiids, but exposes eggs to solar UVB and heat stress. To test the hypothesis that the seasonal occurrence of this mite is determined by interactions between solar UVB radiation and temperature, we examined variation in egg hatching success under near-ambient and UV-attenuated sunlight conditions from spring to autumn. The UV-attenuation significantly improved hatching success. However, most eggs died under heat stress regardless of UV treatments in July and August. We established a deterministic heat stress—cumulative UVB dose—egg hatching success response model, which we applied to meteorological data. The model analyses illustrated lower and higher survivability peaks in late May and October, respectively, which partly corresponded to data for annual field occurrence, indicating the importance of solar UVB radiation and heat stress as determinants of the seasonal occurrence of this mite.


Mammal Study | 2013

Density of Japanese Macaque (Macaca fuscata yakui) Males Ranging Alone: Seasonal and Regional Variation in Male Cohesiveness with the Group

Yosuke Otani; Shinichi Yoshihiro; Yukio Takahata; Koichiro Zamma; Makiko Nagai; Masato Kanie; Shuhei Hayaishi; Masaya Fujino; Kazusa Sugaya; Masaaki Sudo; Shiori Amanai; Masato Kaneda; Yoshiharu Tachikawa; Yoshihiro Fukunaga; Yuji Okahisa; Kanako Higashi; Goro Hanya

Abstract. n We conducted point censuses in Yakushima island to estimate the density of Japanese macaque (Macaca fuscata yakui) males ranging alone, focusing on its vegetational, seasonal, and regional variation. In highland areas, the detection frequency of males ranging alone did not differ among different types of vegetation, despite the latters effect on overall population density. The detection frequency of males ranging alone in the mating season was a third of that in the non-mating season. In the mating season, males exhibit strong cohesiveness with a group, probably in search of resident estrous females. Outside of the mating season, we detected 25% fewer males ranging alone in lowland areas, which have high population densities and strong inter-group competition, than in highland areas. The absolute density of males ranging alone was estimated to be 1.2–5.7 individuals/km2. Meanwhile, the group and population densities were 1.25/km2 and 19.3/km2, respectively. A considerable number of males therefore remained outside of groups, and male cohesiveness with groups is flexible in relation to ecological and social circumstances.


Evolution | 2017

Is a larger refuge always better? Dispersal and dose in pesticide resistance evolution

Daisuke Takahashi; Takehiko Yamanaka; Masaaki Sudo; David A. Andow

The evolution of resistance against pesticides is an important problem of modern agriculture. The high‐dose/refuge strategy, which divides the landscape into treated and nontreated (refuge) patches, has proven effective at delaying resistance evolution. However, theoretical understanding is still incomplete, especially for combinations of limited dispersal and partially recessive resistance. We reformulate a two‐patch model based on the Comins model and derive a simple quadratic approximation to analyze the effects of limited dispersal, refuge size, and dominance for high efficacy treatments on the rate of evolution. When a small but substantial number of heterozygotes can survive in the treated patch, a larger refuge always reduces the rate of resistance evolution. However, when dominance is small enough, the evolutionary dynamics in the refuge population, which is indirectly driven by migrants from the treated patch, mainly describes the resistance evolution in the landscape. In this case, for small refuges, increasing the refuge size will increase the rate of resistance evolution. Our analysis distils major driving forces from the model, and can provide a framework for understanding directional selection in source‐sink environments.


Applied Entomology and Zoology | 2010

Seasonal fluctuations in foliar mite populations on Viburnum erosum Thunb. var. punctatum Franch. et Sav. (Adoxaceae) and sympatric shrubs in temperate secondary forests in western Japan.

Masaaki Sudo; Sachiko Nishida; Takao Itioka

Collaboration


Dive into the Masaaki Sudo's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Goro Hanya

Primate Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Makiko Nagai

Yokohama National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge