Naoaki Tashiro
Kyushu University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Naoaki Tashiro.
Biology and Fertility of Soils | 2014
Takuo Hishi; Rieko Urakawa; Naoaki Tashiro; Yuka Maeda; Hideaki Shibata
This study aimed to evaluate the spatial patterns of soil nitrogen (N) transformations in relation to slope aspect and position, and to investigate the main factors controlling N transformation patterns during both the growing and dormant seasons in cool-temperate deciduous natural forests and larch plantations in eastern Hokkaido, northern Japan. Net rates of N mineralization (NRminN) and of nitrification (NRnit) in surface soils on north-facing and lower slopes were higher than those on south-facing and upper slopes, whereas the net rate of ammonium-N production (NRamm) on south-facing and upper slopes was higher than that on north-facing slopes in both the natural forests and larch plantations. Both NRminN and NRnit were higher in the growing than in the dormant season, whereas NRamm was higher in the dormant season. The soil C/N ratio, water content, soil pH and frequency of freeze–thaw cycles were important variables affecting N transformation patterns in any season. In relation to seasonality, the solar radiation index, daily temperature range and earthworm biomass were important controlling factors only during the growing season, and watershed area and soil N concentration only during the dormant season, suggesting that biological control accompanied with wet–dry events were important factors affecting N transformations during the growing season, but that run-off water and chemical controls were important determinants of spatial variation in N transformations during the dormant season.
Journal of Forest Research | 2009
Ikue Murata; Sigefumi Saruki; Katsuyoshi Kubota; Sachiko Inoue; Naoaki Tashiro; Tsutomu Enoki; Yasuhiro Utsumi; Susumu Inoue
Effects of sika deer (Cervus nippon) and dwarf bamboo (“sasa;” Sasamorpha borealis) on seedling emergence and survival were investigated in cool-temperate mixed forests in the Kyushu mountain range, Japan. We compared the effects of sika deer between two sites with different sika deer densities. One site (no-sasa forest) has sparse cover of S. borealis and a high density of sika deer, and the other site (sasa forest) has dense cover of S. borealis with a low density of sika deer. In the no-sasa forest, more seedlings emerged and the survival rate of the seedlings was higher compared with the sasa forest. Compared with the sasa forest, the canopy in the no-sasa forest was more open, the organic layer was shallower and drier, the mean daily soil temperature was higher, and soil temperature fluctuated more widely. Those environmental parameters did not differ between unfenced and fenced plots. The comparison between the sasa and no-sasa forests suggested that removal of S. borealis by sika deer had an indirect positive effect on seedling emergence and survival. However, the fenced-plot experiments indicated that sika deer inhibited seedling emergence and survival. These contradictory conclusions could result from the much larger negative effects of S. borealis on seedling emergence and survival compared with the effects of sika deer browsing.
Journal of Forest Research | 2008
Takafumi Inoue; Tsutomu Enoki; Naoaki Tashiro; Kotaro Sakuta; Susumu Inoue
We investigated factors affecting the distribution of naturally regenerated broad-leaved trees in a 140-year-old Cryptomeria japonica plantation. We used path analysis to examine the relationship among microtopography, the biomass of planted trees, and the biomasses of canopy and subcanopy trees of broad-leaved species. The study plot was divided into three topographic types (ridge, slope, and valley), and we discuss how the different topographic types are affected. For all topographic types, the biomass of canopy trees of broad-leaved species decreased with convexity. For slope and valley topographies, the biomass of subcanopy trees of broad-leaved species also decreased with convexity. For ridge topography, the biomass of subcanopy trees of broad-leaved species increased with the biomass of planted trees, and decreased with the biomass of canopy trees of broad-leaved species. These results suggest the effects of microtopography on the biomass of subcanopy trees were much larger than the effects of canopy trees for slope and valley topographies, while the effects of microtopography were smaller for ridge topography.
Ecological Research | 2012
Satoshi Suzuki; Masae I. Ishihara; Masahiro Nakamura; Shin Abe; Tsutom Hiura; Kosuke Homma; Motoki Higa; Daisuke Hoshino; Kazuhiko Hoshizaki; Hideyuki Ida; Ken Ishida; Motohiro Kawanishi; Kazutaka Kobayashi; Koichiro Kuraji; Shigeo Kuramoto; Takashi Masaki; Kaoru Niiyama; Mahoko Noguchi; Haruto Nomiya; Satoshi Saito; Takeshi Sakai; Michinori Sakimoto; Hitoshi Sakio; Tamotsu Sato; Hirofumi Shibano; Mitsue Shibata; Maki Suzuki; Atsushi Takashima; Hiroshi Tanaka; Masahiro Takagi
This data paper reports litter fall data collected in a network of 21 forest sites in Japan. This is the largest litter fall data set freely available in Japan to date. The network is a part of the Monitoring Sites 1000 Project launched by the Ministry of the Environment, Japan. It covers subarctic to subtropical climate zones and the four major forest types in Japan. Twenty-three permanent plots in which usually 25 litter traps were installed were established in old-growth or secondary natural forests. Litter falls were collected monthly from 2004, and sorted into leaves, branches, reproductive structures and miscellaneous. The data provide seasonal patterns and inter-annual dynamics of litter falls, and their geographical patterns, and offer good opportunities for meta-analyses and comparative studies among forests.
Journal of Wood Science | 2006
Yasuhiro Utsumi; Shinya Koga; Naoaki Tashiro; Atsushi Yamamoto; Yukie Saito; Takanori Arima; Hirokazu Yamamoto; Masahiko Kadomatsu; Nao Sakanoue
Of all plant materials used to cover the roofs of traditional Japanese buildings, Japanese cypress (Chamaecyparis obtusa) bark, hiwada, has the longest service life and has been used from ancient times. However, wood and bark properties after hiwada harvest have not been evaluated in detail. We studied whether decortication for hiwada production in winter affected xylem and phloem formation. Decorticated trees still preserved all inner bark and part of the outer bark, and both decorticated and control trees had similar annual ring structures at all stem heights in the xylem and phloem. In both xylem and inner bark, no significant difference in ring width at any stem height was found between annual rings before and after decortication. Thus, this study revealed that the decortication of bark for hiwada production does not affect the formation of xylem and the inner and outer bark if decortication is carried out by highly skilled workers in winter.
北海道大学農学部 演習林研究報告 = RESEARCH BULLETIN OF THE HOKKAIDO UNIVERSITY FORESTS | 1999
Koichi Takahashi; K. Yoshida; Mitsuo Suzuki; Tatsuyuki Seino; T. Tani; Naoaki Tashiro; T. Ishii; S. Sugata; E. Fujito; A. Naniwa; G. Kudo; Tsutom Hiura; Takashi Kohyama
Ecological Research | 2011
Masae I. Ishihara; Satoshi Suzuki; Masahiro Nakamura; Tsutomu Enoki; Akio Fujiwara; Tsutom Hiura; Kosuke Homma; Daisuke Hoshino; Kazuhiko Hoshizaki; Hideyuki Ida; Ken Ishida; Akira Itoh; Takayuki Kaneko; Kaname Kubota; Koichiro Kuraji; Shigeo Kuramoto; Akifumi Makita; Takashi Masaki; Kanji Namikawa; Kaoru Niiyama; Mahoko Noguchi; Haruto Nomiya; Tatsuhiro Ohkubo; Satoshi Saito; Takeshi Sakai; Michinori Sakimoto; Hitoshi Sakio; Hirofumi Shibano; Hisashi Sugita; Mitsuo Suzuki
Journal of Forest Research | 2011
Tsutomu Enoki; Takafumi Inoue; Naoaki Tashiro; Hiroaki Ishii
Bulletin of the Kyushu University Forests | 2010
拓雄 菱; 由香 前田; 直明 田代; Takuo Hishi; Yuka Maeda; Naoaki Tashiro
Journal of Plant Research | 2018
Yuko Yasuda; Yasuhiro Utsumi; Naoaki Tashiro; Shinya Koga; Kenji Fukuda