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Dive into the research topics where Norio Onikura is active.

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Featured researches published by Norio Onikura.


Chemosphere | 2002

Styrene dimers and trimers affect reproduction of daphnid (Ceriodaphnia dubia)

Norihisa Tatarazako; Yuji Takao; Katsuyuki Kishi; Norio Onikura; Koji Arizono; Taisen Iguchi

The endocrine disruptor activity of styrene in humans and other vertebrates appears to be negligible. However, offspring numbers were reduced in Ceriodaphnia dubia bred in polystyrene cups. Styrene dimers and trimers were found to be eluted from the polystyrene cups by hexane and methanol with gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Styrene dimers and trimers at concentrations of 0.04-1.7 microg/l affected C. dubia fertility (25% reduction after seven days), suggesting that styrenes have the potential to impair crustacean populations in the aquatic environment.


Landscape and Ecological Engineering | 2010

A review of the research on introduced freshwater fishes: New perspectives, the need for research, and management implications

Mayumi Sato; Yoichi Kawaguchi; Jun Nakajima; Takahiko Mukai; Yukihiro Shimatani; Norio Onikura

Although freshwater fishes have a long history of human-induced introduction, recent globalization has accelerated worldwide introduction events even more, and those introduced fish species are now perceived to be a major threat to ecosystems. Over the last two decades, numerous studies have been published on introduced fish species; however, it has been challenging for researchers to understand the magnitude of the impact and the underlying mechanism of invasions. Recently, new perspectives in understanding invasive freshwater fish biology have been presented in a number of studies, which can be largely attributed to advances in analytical techniques and also to a growing need for proactive analysis in management strategies. The aim of this paper is to summarize new ecological perspectives, the need for research, and/or management implications with emphasis on technological advances in, for example, statistics, molecular analysis, modeling techniques, and landscape analysis addressed under the following five categories: introduction pathways, predicting spatial patterns, biotic homogenization, hybridization, and control and eradication. The conservation of native fish fauna and the management of introduced fish species will benefit from combining these new perspectives with fundamental studies such as those on life history and population biology.


Ichthyological Research | 2011

Evaluating the potential for invasion by alien freshwater fishes in northern Kyushu Island, Japan, using the Fish Invasiveness Scoring Kit

Norio Onikura; Jun Nakajima; Ryutei Inui; Hiroshi Mizutani; Midori Kobayakawa; Shinji Fukuda; Takahiko Mukai

The potential invasiveness of 28 freshwater fishes in northern Kyushu Island, Japan, was evaluated using the Fish Invasiveness Scoring Kit (FISK). The five co-authors scored the level of invasiveness for each species and calculated the total FISK scores; the maximum and minimum scores were then eliminated, and the mean of the remaining three scores was used as the final score for each species. The mean scores ranged from 11.0 (Hypomesus nipponensis) to 31.0 (Cyprinus carpio). The receiver operating characteristic curve indicated that the threshold value between fishes that present a high risk of invasion and the other species were 19.8.


Zoological Science | 2009

Habitat use in irrigation channels by the golden venus chub (Hemigrammocypris rasborella) at different growth stages

Norio Onikura; Jun Nakajima; Hiromi Kouno; Yoshiko Sugimoto; Jun Kaneto

Ecological information on the golden venus chub (Hemigrammocypris rasborella Fowler, 1910) was collected during field surveys and used to analyze habitat use by this species at each growth stage. Surveys were conducted every month for approximately 2 years in an irrigation ditch near the Ushizu River, Kyushu Island, Japan. Based on the characteristic nuptial coloration of males, it was estimated that H. rasborella spawns between spring and summer. Size measurements of 2697 individuals indicated two size classes. The population of age class 1 decreased rapidly after the spawning period. On the basis of growth patterns, the life cycle of H. rasborella was classified into three stages: the growth stage (GS) of age class 0 fish from August to November, the no-growth stage (NGS) of age class 0 fish from December to March, and the growing and spawning stage (GSS) of age class 0 and 1 fish from April to August. Habitat use by GS, NGS, and GSS fish was analyzed with a stepwise multiple linear regression. The average number of fish was negatively correlated with the presence of a concrete revetment in the GS; positively and negatively correlated with minimum water depth and submerged plants, respectively, in the NGS; and positively correlated with maximum water temperature in the GSS. These results suggest that maintenance of the water level in the fallow season and not using concrete revetments are essential for the conservation of this species under the present conditions in Japanese rice fields.


Ichthyological Research | 1999

A note on the reproductive ecology of the catadromous fourspine sculpin,cottus kazika (scorpaeniformes: Cottidae)

Naohiko Takeshita; Norio Onikura; Shingo Nagata; Seiichi Matsui; Seirô Kimura

T he seven species of tYeshwater sculpins inhabiting the Japanese Archipelago (6 Corers and 1 Trachidermus) exhibit various life history characteristics, such as catadromous, amphidromous, lacustrine and fluvial (Goto, 1990). Both the fourspine sculpin, C. kazika, and roughskin sculpin, 77 jasciatus, have a catadromous life style. The forrner is indigenous to Japan, being found in Honshu, Shikoku and Kyushu Islands. The species migrates from the middle and lower reaches of rivers to the sea tbr spawning in late autumn and winter (Miyadi et al., 1976; Nakamura, 1963). However, little is known about its reproductive ecology, the only available evidence being a collection of egg clusters and attending males taken at the mouth of the Nagara River, where salinity ranged from 16 to 18 ppt (River Bureau, Ministry of Construction and Water Resources Development Public Corporation, t992). This paper reports further aspects of the reproductive ecology of (7. kazika.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2011

Tributyltin in blood of marine fish collected from a coastal area of northern Kyushu, Japan

Shizuho Miki; Koichi Ikeda; Yumi Oba; Hina Satone; Masato Honda; Yohei Shimasaki; Norio Onikura; Osamu Arakawa; Yuji Oshima

We investigated levels of the pollutant tributyltin (TBT) in blood of pufferfishes (six species), Japanese sea perch, red sea bream, Japanese common goby, Japanese flounder, rockfish, conger eel, and sea mullet collected off the coast of northern Kyushu, Japan. We found considerable levels of TBT (1.4-190 ng/mL) accumulated in the blood of these fish. Blood TBT concentrations were 1.3-22.5 times liver concentrations and 4.9-78 times muscle concentrations, except in conger eel and mullet. We detected TBT (16-111 ng/mL-blood) in the plasma of the fine-patterned puffer (Takifugupoecilonotus) year-round, without any apparent seasonal trend. These results suggest that fish inhabiting coastal areas of Kyushu, Japan, continue to be contaminated with TBT.


Ichthyological Research | 2002

Spawning grounds and nests of Trachidermus fasciatus (Cottidae) in the Kashima and Shiota estuaries system facing Ariake Bay, Japan

Norio Onikura; Naohiko Takeshita; Seiichi Matsui; Seirô Kimura

Abstract The spawning grounds of a cottid fish, Trachidermus fasciatus, were investigated off the mouth of the Kashima River in Ariake Bay from January to March, 1996–1999. The nests were found about 1.1–2.3 km off the mouth of the river, where the bottom salinity was 8‰–21‰ at low tides. Oyster shells were mainly found to be used as nests. A male, a pair, a male and egg clusters, a pair and egg clusters, or a female were found inside shells. The average number of guarded egg clusters per male in shells was 1.3 ± 0.4.


Ichthyological Research | 2012

Predicting distributions of seven bitterling fishes in northern Kyushu, Japan

Norio Onikura; Jun Nakajima; Takuya Miyake; Kouichi Kawamura; Shinji Fukuda

The distributions of seven bitterling species and subspecies—Tanakia lanceolata, T. limbata, Acheilognathus tabira nakamurae, A. rhombeus, Rhodeus ocellatus kurumeus, R. ocellatus ocellatus, and R. atremius atremius—in northern Kyushu were predicted using generalized linear models (GLMs) in order to provide information helpful for conserving native bitterlings and preventing the expansion of alien bitterling species. Predictions were made according to the following procedure: (1) a set of GLMs for each species was formulated using environmental data from 710 sites that were derived using digital maps and GIS software, from which the best fit model for each species was selected using the Akaike information criterion for predicting the fish occurrence, (2) model performance was evaluated based on the receiver-operating characteristics (ROC) analysis using occurrence and environmental data from 362 sites, and (3) potential distributions of the bitterling were analyzed using the best fit models and environmental data for 1,272 sites, of which 200 data points without occurrence data were prepared. The best fit models revealed that 4–6 environmental factors were important in predicting seven bitterling distributions, which was supported by the area under the ROC curve (AUC) values of these fishes ranging from 0.753 to 0.927. The AUC values in model evaluation were significantly greater than 0.5 for six fishes, suggesting the moderate accuracies of these best fit models for predicting the fish distributions. These predictive models can be used for evaluating potential native bitterling richness and the potential distribution expansion of an alien subspecies.


Fisheries Science | 2010

Selection of spawning habitat by several gobiid fishes in the subtidal zone of a small temperate estuary

Ryutei Inui; Norio Onikura; Motoyoshi Kawagishi; Masaya Nakatani; Yuta Tomiyama; Shin Oikawa

We examined the spawning sites of several gobiid fishes in the subtidal zone of a small temperate estuary and determined the relationship of the nest abundance of each species with several environmental conditions, including water temperature, salinity, median particle size, proportion of silt and clay, current width, maximum water depth, distance from each site to the river mouth, and density of objects (boulders, cobbles, empty oyster shells, and empty clam shells) in the water. During this study, we found 115 nests belonging to the following six species: Favonigobius gymnauchen, Tridentiger obscurus, Leucopsarion petersii, Acanthogobius lactipes, Rhinogobius giurinus, and Tridentiger trigonocephalus. Stepwise multiple regression analysis, which was used to determine the best model for the nest abundance of all species, revealed that the nest abundance of each species clearly increased with an increase in the density of spawning substrates, such as cobbles and bivalve shells. These results show that the density of spawning substrates is a crucial factor affecting the selection of spawning habitats by each species.


Ichthyological Research | 1997

Embryonic, larval and juvenile development of the roughskin sculpin,Trachidermus fasciatus (Scorpaeniformes: Cottidae)

Naohiko Takeshita; Norio Onikura; Seiichi Matsui; Seirô Kimura

Embryonic, larval and juvenile development of the catadromous roughskin sculpin,Trachidermus fasciatus, were described using eggs spawned in an aquarium. The eggs, measuring 1.98–2.21 mm in diameter, were light reddish-yellow and had many oil globules, 0.05–0.18 mm in diameter. Hatching occurred 30 days after spawning at 2.3–11.3°C. The newly-hatched larvae, measuring 6.9–7.3 mm BL, had a single oil globule, 9–10+25–26=34–36 myomeres and 6 or 7 large stellate melanophores dorsally along the gut. The yolk was almost resorbed, number of pectoral-fin rays attained 16–17, and two parietal, one nuchal and four preopercular spines were formed, 5 days after hatching, at 8.2–8.4 mm BL. The oil globule disappeared, and one supracleithral spine was formed, 11 days after hatching, at 8.9–9.5 mm BL. Notochord flexion began 15 days after hatching, at 9.7–10.3 mm BL. A posttemporal spine was formed 20 days after hatching, at 10.7–10.9 mm BL. The first dorsal fin spines (VII–VIII), second dorsal fin and anal fin rays (18–19, 16–18, respectively) appeared 23 days after hatching, at 12.0–13.7 mm BL. The pelvic fin spine and rays (I, 4) were formed and black bands on the head and sides of the body began to develop 27 days after hatching, at 13.8–15.8 mm BL.Newly-hatched larvae swam just below the surface in the aquaria. Preflexion larvae (8.9–9.5 mm BL), in which the oil globule had disappeared, swam in the middle layer, while juveniles (13.8–15.8 mm BL) began swimming on the bottom of the aquaria. Swimming behavior observed in the aquaria suggested that the fish started to change to a demersal existence at the juvenile stage.

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Ryutei Inui

University of Tokushima

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Shinji Fukuda

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

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