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Dive into the research topics where Midori Fukaya is active.

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Featured researches published by Midori Fukaya.


Journal of Chemical Ecology | 1996

Reproductive biology of the yellow-spotted longicorn beetle,Psacothea hilaris (pascoe) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). III. Identification of contact sex pheromone on female body surface

Midori Fukaya; Tetsuya Yasuda; Sadao Wakamura; Hiroshi Honda

A major component of female contact sex pheromone of the yellow-spotted longicorn beetle,Psacothea hilaris (Pascoe), was isolated from the elytra and identified as (Z)-21-methyl-8-pentatriacontene. The synthetic compound released the typical mating behavior including holding, mounting, and abdominal bending in males, although its activity was considerably lower than the extract of female elytra when treated on a gelatin capsule as an artificial female model.


Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 2004

Visual and olfactory cues for mate orientation behaviour in male white-spotted longicorn beetle, Anoplophora malasiaca

Midori Fukaya; Toshiharu Akino; Tetsuya Yasuda; Hiroe Yasui; Sadao Wakamura

Olfactory and visual cues were shown to mediate short‐distance orientation in Anoplophora malasiaca (Thomson) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae). In a laboratory test, more than 80% (n = 42) of males walked straight upward when presented with an untreated surface with a 75° slope. When a freshly killed female was fixed at a short distance (10 cm ahead and 5 cm to left/right) from the starting point, 50% of males (n = 30) were oriented toward the female before direct contact. Similar behavioural responses were observed when female extract was directly applied to the slope or to a glass rod model fixed on the slope. When black, white, and transparent coloured rods with the extract were presented, the orientation response was significantly greater for black than to white and transparent rods, to which only a negligible response was observed.


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.


Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 2003

Ketone components in the contact sex pheromone of the white‐spotted longicorn beetle, Anoplophora malasiaca, and pheromonal activity of synthetic ketones

Hiroe Yasui; Toshiharu Akino; Tetsuya Yasuda; Midori Fukaya; Hiroshi Ono; Sadao Wakamura

Two active fractions were found during the isolation of contact sex pheromone of female elytra of the white‐spotted longicorn beetle, Anoplophora malasiaca (Thomson) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae), in addition to fraction of hydrocarbons that had previously been identified. One fraction was essential to evoke a series of precopulatory behaviors of males toward a glass dummy when coated together with the hydrocarbon blend. The other fraction enhanced this activity when added to the mixture. From the latter synergistic fraction, we isolated five novel compounds and identified them as 10‐heptacosanone, (Z)‐18‐heptacosen‐10‐one, (18Z,21Z)‐heptacosa‐18,21‐dien‐10‐one, (18Z,21Z,24Z)‐heptacosa‐18,21,24‐trien‐10‐one, and 12‐heptacosanone by GC‐MS and NMR analyses. A blend of four of these synthetic ketones, without 12‐heptacosanone, in the ratio and concentration found in female elytra extract (250 : 400 : 1000 : 180 ng FE−1) showed greater synergistic effect than the natural fraction containing the ketones. This effect was canceled out by further addition of 12‐heptacosanone (100 ng FE−1), which was still comparable to the effect of the natural ketone fraction.


Physiological Entomology | 2008

Presence of larval and adult diapauses in a subtropical scarab beetle: graded thermal response for synchronized sexual maturation and reproduction

Seiji Tanaka; Fumiko Yukuhiro; Hiroe Yasui; Midori Fukaya; Toshiharu Akino; Sadao Wakamura

Abstract The white grub Dasylepida ishigakiensis has a 2‐year life cycle and spends approximately 9 months as a nonfeeding larva, pupa and adult on a subtropical island. Evidence is presented indicating that this beetle has two diapauses that appear to synchronize this long life cycle with the seasons. Larvae exposed to 20, 22.5, 25 and 27.5 °C late in the third (last) stadium pupate rapidly except for some individuals kept at the highest temperature. The latter pupate upon transfer to 22.5 °C, indicating that larval diapause is maintained at high temperature but terminates upon transfer to a lower temperature. Pupal development is directly temperature‐dependent in the range 20–30 °C. Adults develop reproductive organs (i.e. the ovary in females and the seminal vesicles and accessory glands in males) rapidly at 15 and 20 °C, whereas those kept at 25 °C take a long time to do so. Ovarian development is completely suppressed at 30 °C but initiated upon transfer to 20 °C. In the laboratory, males with well‐developed reproductive organs mate even with sexually immature females, whereas females with undeveloped ovaries show no sexual behaviour. Although the two diapauses of this species are thermally regulated (i.e. a characteristic commonly expressed by insects in summer diapause), adults of this beetle emerge from pupae late in the autumn and remain in the soil for 2 months. Adult diapause effectively serves to synchronize the time of sexual maturation with the coldest month of the year.


Chemoecology | 2008

Sesquiterpene Hydrocarbons: Kairomones with a releaser effect in the sexual communication of the white-spotted longicorn beetle, Anoplophora malasiaca (Thomson) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae)

Hiroe Yasui; Toshiharu Akino; Midori Fukaya; Sadao Wakamura; Hiroshi Ono

Summary.We conducted a series of experiments with the white-spotted longicorn beetle Anoplophora malasiaca (Thomson), and its host plant, Citrus unshiu, to examine the origin of the sesquiterpene hydrocarbons (SHCs; including β-elemene, β-caryophyllene, α-humulene, α-farnesene, and several unidentified compounds) that are contained in the elytra of the beetles and act as an attractant. In the laboratory, mechanically wounded citrus branches, as well as those fed upon by A. malasiaca, attracted males more frequently than intact branches. Solid phase microextraction (SPME) and subsequent analyses by gas chromatography (GC) analyses detected measurable SHCs from the air around both mechanically wounded and beetle-infested branches, as well as trace amounts from intact branches. The SHCs were also detected for a certain time from beetles that had fed on the citrus branches, but the amounts decreased rapidly after they were removed from the host. This decrease generally corresponded with a reduction of attractiveness of the beetles in a behavioural assay. Isolated females acquired the SHCs after exposure to, but not upon contact with, other females that had fed on C. unshiu branches. We hypothesize that the citrus SHCs are adsorbed in, retained on, and released from the wax layer of the beetle elytra. Since these compounds are released from branches when beetles feed, they may indirectly signal the presence of beetles to others in the field. The high response rate to SHCs by males is likely representing mate searching behavior. The SHCs act as kairomones with a releaser effect in the communication system of A. malasiaca.


Chemoecology | 2004

Effect of colour on male orientation to female pheromone in the black chafer Holotrichia loochooana loochooana

Midori Fukaya; Norio Arakaki; Hiroe Yasui; Sadao Wakamura

Summary.Under field conditions significantly more black chafer, Holotrichia loochooana loochooana (Sawada) (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) males landed on black and gray sources than white ones containing 10 mg of female pheromone, anthranilic acid. When a broader spectrum of colours was tested the frequency of male landing was intensively proportional to as the lightness of the colour of the lures. These findings demonstrated that mate location by H. l. loochooana males is dependent on both olfactory and visual stimuli of the source. In contrast, female aggregation was not affected by colour.


Entomologia Experimentalis Et Applicata | 2011

Kanzawa spider mites acquire enemy‐free space on a detrimental host plant, oleander

Hiroshi Suzuki; Kyoko Yasuda; Kazunori Ohashi; Hideo Takahashi; Midori Fukaya; Shuichi Yano; Masahiro Osakabe

Studies have proposed that predators of herbivores suffer significant fitness losses from the defense chemicals of host plants, and that herbivores adapted to these chemicals may experience reduced predation risk when residing on such plant species. We examined the effects of oleander, Nerium indicum Mill. (Apocynaceae), a host plant of the spider mite, Tetranychus kanzawai Kishida (Acari: Tetranychidae), on their prime predator, Neoseiulus womersleyi (Schicha) (Acari: Phytoseiidae), and tested the hypothesis that this host plant provides enemy‐free space. At the study sites, T. kanzawai occurred on oleander shrubs; in contrast, although N. womersleyi was present in the area, no individuals were found on oleander. Tetranychus kanzawai feeding on oleander negatively affected the settlement, development, and egg production of N. womersleyi. The lower egg production was a result of both the direct effects of oleander and the indirect effects via T. kanzawai. Previous studies showed that the fitness of T. kanzawai in the presence of N. womersleyi was lower than that in the absence of the predator, and lower on oleander than on other palatable host plant species in the absence of predators. Our findings suggest that N. womersleyi may not be able to invade T. kanzawai patches on oleander shrubs, which results in the fitness of T. kanzawai being higher on oleander than on other host plant species in the same area when N. womersleyi is present. This supports the hypothesis that T. kanzawai acquires enemy‐free space on oleander using the direct and indirect adverse effects of oleander on their predators as major defense mechanisms.


Entomological Science | 2000

Hydrocarbon components in contact sex pheromone of the white-spotted longicorn beetle, Anoplophora malasiaca (Thomson) (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) and pheromonal activity of synthetic hydrocarbons.

Midori Fukaya; Toshiharu Akino; Tetsuya Yasuda; Sadao Wakamura; Shiro Satoda; Shuji Senda


Applied Entomology and Zoology | 2004

Mating behavior of the scarab beetle Dasylepida ishigakiensis (Coleoptera : Scarabaeidae)

Norio Arakaki; Yasutsune Sadoyama; Mitsunobu Kishita; Atsushi Nagayama; Akira Oyafuso; Masato Ishimine; Moriya Ota; Toshiharu Akino; Midori Fukaya; Yoshio Hirai; Kohji Yamamura; Sadao Wakamura

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Toshiharu Akino

Kyoto Institute of Technology

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Tetsuya Yasuda

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Hiroe Yasui

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Norio Arakaki

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Seiji Tanaka

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Hiroe Yasui

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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