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Dive into the research topics where Shogo Imada is active.

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Featured researches published by Shogo Imada.


Journal of General and Applied Microbiology | 2015

Effect of soil salinity and nutrient levels on the community structure of the root-associated bacteria of the facultative halophyte, tamarix ramosissima, in southwestern united states

Takeshi Taniguchi; Shogo Imada; Kumud Acharya; Fumiko Iwanaga; Norikazu Yamanaka

Tamarix ramosissima is a tree species that is highly resistant to salt and drought. The Tamarix species survives in a broad range of environmental salt levels, and invades major river systems in southwestern United States. It may affect root-associated bacteria (RB) by increasing soil salts and nutrients. The effects of RB on host plants may vary even under saline conditions, and the relationship may be important for T. ramosissima. However, to the best of our knowledge, there have been no reports relating to T. ramosissima RB and its association with salinity and nutrient levels. In this study, we have examined this association and the effect of arbuscular mycorrhizal colonization of T. ramosissima on RB because a previous study has reported that colonization of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi affected the rhizobacterial community (Marschner et al., 2001). T. ramosissima roots were collected from five locations with varying soil salinity and nutrient levels. RB community structures were examined by terminal restriction fragment (T-RF) length polymorphism, cloning, and sequencing analyses. The results suggest that RB richness, or the diversity of T. ramosissima, have significant negative relationships with electrical conductivity (EC), sodium concentration (Na), and the colonization of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, but have a significant positive relationship with phosphorus in the soil. However, at each T-RF level, positive correlations between the emergence of some T-RFs and EC or Na were observed. These results indicate that high salinity decreased the total number of RB species, but some saline-tolerant RB species multiplied with increasing salinity levels. The ordination scores of nonmetric multidimensional scale analysis of RB community composition show significant relationships with water content, calcium concentration, available phosphorus, and total nitrogen. These results indicate that the RB diversity and community composition of T. ramosissima are affected by soil salinity and nutrient levels. Sequence analysis detected one Bacteroidetes and eight Proteobacteria species. Most 16S rRNA gene sequences had high similarities with the bacteria isolated from saline conditions, indicating that at least a portion of the RB species observed in T. ramosissima was halotolerant.


Microbial Ecology | 2018

The Impacts of Soil Fertility and Salinity on Soil Nitrogen Dynamics Mediated by the Soil Microbial Community Beneath the Halophytic Shrub Tamarisk

Chikae Iwaoka; Shogo Imada; Takeshi Taniguchi; Sheng Du; Norikazu Yamanaka; Ryunosuke Tateno

Nitrogen (N) is one of the most common limiting nutrients for primary production in terrestrial ecosystems. Soil microbes transform organic N into inorganic N, which is available to plants, but soil microbe activity in drylands is sometimes critically suppressed by environmental factors, such as low soil substrate availability or high salinity. Tamarisk (Tamarix spp.) is a halophytic shrub species that is widely distributed in the drylands of China; it produces litter enriched in nutrients and salts that are thought to increase soil fertility and salinity under its crown. To elucidate the effects of tamarisks on the soil microbial community, and thus N dynamics, by creating “islands of fertility” and “islands of salinity,” we collected soil samples from under tamarisk crowns and adjacent barren areas at three habitats in the summer and fall. We analyzed soil physicochemical properties, inorganic N dynamics, and prokaryotic community abundance and composition. In soils sampled beneath tamarisks, the N mineralization rate was significantly higher, and the prokaryotic community structure was significantly different, from soils sampled in barren areas, irrespective of site and season. Tamarisks provided suitable nutrient conditions for one of the important decomposers in the area, Verrucomicrobia, by creating “islands of fertility,” but provided unsuitable salinity conditions for other important decomposers, Flavobacteria, Gammaproteobacteria, and Deltaproteobacteria, by mitigating salt accumulation. However, the quantity of these decomposers tended to be higher beneath tamarisks, because they were relatively unaffected by the small salinity gradient created by the tamarisks, which may explain the higher N mineralization rate beneath tamarisks.


Landscape and Ecological Engineering | 2015

Osmolyte accumulation in leaves of Tamarix ramosissima growing under various soil conditions in the Colorado River basin

Fumiko Iwanaga; Kumud Acharya; Shogo Imada; Takeshi Taniguchi; Yukio Kawamura; Kiyoshi Tanaka; Nobuhiro Mori; Fukuju Yamamoto; Norikazu Yamanaka

Tamarixramosissima is a dominant species in desert riparian ecosystems in the western USA. It is a phreatophytic halophyte, with salt glands on the leaves. While osmoregulation is essential for turgor maintenance under high salinity, the dose–response relationship to salinity of various osmolytes in plants with salt glands is still unknown. We profiled crude leaf extracts of T. ramosissima to identify the metabolic compounds that contribute to its salt tolerance. We compared leaf cation, soluble sugar, amino acid, and betaine content among T. ramosissima samples from five points along the Colorado River. The leaf sodium content of T. ramosissima trees increased with increasing soil salinity. Under high salinity conditions, soluble sugar and betaine content did not increase, but amino acids did. The increase in proline accumulation was highly and positively correlated with leaf sodium content. Thus, proline appears to be the essential osmolyte that T. ramosissima accumulates in response to severe salt stress in desert riparian areas of the USA.


Functional Ecology | 2008

Water table depth affects Populus alba fine root growth and whole plant biomass

Shogo Imada; Norikazu Yamanaka; Shigenobu Tamai


Journal of Arid Environments | 2009

Effects of salinity on the growth, Na partitioning, and Na dynamics of a salt-tolerant tree, Populus alba L

Shogo Imada; Norikazu Yamanaka; Shigenobu Tamai


Ecological Engineering | 2013

Estimation of root cohesion for desert shrub species in the Lower Colorado riparian ecosystem and its potential for streambank stabilization

Achyut R. Adhikari; Mahesh R. Gautam; Zhongbo Yu; Shogo Imada; Kumud Acharya


Journal of Arid Environments | 2013

Vertical distribution of fine roots of Tamarix ramosissima in an arid region of southern Nevada

Shogo Imada; Takeshi Taniguchi; Kumud Acharya; Norikazu Yamanaka


Environmental and Experimental Botany | 2012

Significant improvement of salt tolerance with 2-day acclimatization treatment in Elaeagnus oxycarpa seedlings

Naoki Murata; Fumiko Iwanaga; Ailijiang Maimaiti; Shogo Imada; Nobuhiro Mori; Kiyoshi Tanaka; Norikazu Yamanaka


Trees-structure and Function | 2010

Fine-root growth, fine root mortality, and leaf morphological change of Populus alba in response to fluctuating water tables

Shogo Imada; Norikazu Yamanaka; Shigenobu Tamai


Journal of Arid Environments | 2015

Effects of salinity on fine root distribution and whole plant biomass of Tamarix ramosissima cuttings

Shogo Imada; Naoko Matsuo; Kumud Acharya; Norikazu Yamanaka

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Kumud Acharya

Desert Research Institute

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