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Featured researches published by Takakazu Yumoto.


American Journal of Botany | 1998

Pollination biology in a lowland dipterocarp forest in Sarawak, Malaysia. I. Characteristics of the plant-pollinator community in a lowland dipterocarp forest

Kuniyasu Momose; Takakazu Yumoto; Teruyoshi Nagamitsu; Makoto Kato; Hidetoshi Nagamasu; Shoko Sakai; Rhett D. Harrison; Takao Itioka; Abang Abdul Hamid; Tamiji Inoue

Flowerings and flower visitors were observed continuously in alowland dipterocarp forest in Sarawak, Malaysia, for 53 mo in1992-1996. Flower visitors of 270 plant species were observed orcollected, and pollinators were assessed by observing body contact tostigmas and anthers. We recognized 12 categories of pollination systems.Among them, plants pollinated by social bees included the largest numberof species (32%) and were followed by beetle-pollinated species(20%). Pollination systems were significantly related with somefloral characters (flowering time of day, reward, and floral shape), butnot with floral color. Based on the relationships between pollinatorsand floral characters, we described pollination syndromes found in alowland dipterocarp forest. The dominance of social bees and beetlesamong pollinators is discussed in relation to the general floweringobserved in dipterocarp forests of West Malesia. In spite of high plantspecies diversity and consequent low population densities of lowlanddipterocarp forests, long-distance-specific pollinators were uncommoncompared with theNeotropics.


Population Ecology | 1995

Seasonality and vertical structure of light-attracted insect communities in a dipterocarp forest in Sarawak

Makoto Kato; Tamiji Inoue; Abang Abdul Hamid; Teruyoshi Nagamitsu; Mahamud Ben Merdek; Abdul Rahman Nona; Takao Itino; Seiki Yamane; Takakazu Yumoto

Nocturnal flying insects were collected monthly for 13 months using ultra violet light-traps set at various vertical levels in a weakly-seasonal, tropical lowland dipterocarp forest in Sarawak, Malaysia. Abundance, faunal composition, size distribution and guild structure of these samples were analyzed with respect to temperal and vertical distributions. The nocturnal flying insect community in the canopy level was highly dominated by fig wasps (84%) in individual number, and by scarabaeid beetles (28%) in weight. A principal component analysis on monthly catches detected non-random, seasonal trends of insect abundance. The first two principal trends were an alternation of wetter (September to January) and less wet seasons (February to August) and an alternation between the least wet (January to March) and the other seasons. Many insect groups were less abundant in the least wet season than the other seasons, whilst inverse patterns were found in Scarabaeidae and Tenebrionidae. Significantly positive and negative correlations between monthly catch and rainfall were detected only in ovule-feeders and in phloem-feeders, respectively. Delayed, significant negative correlations between monthly catch and 1–3 month preceding rainfall were more frequently detected in phytophages, phloem-feeders, seed-feeders, wood-borers and scavengers. The peak in abundance along vertical levels were found at the canopy level (35 m) for phloem-, ovule-, seed-, root-, fungal-feeders and nectar collectors, at an upper subcanopy level (25 m) for scavengers and aquatic predators, and at a middle subcanopy level (17 m) for ants. Catches at the emergent level (45 m) did not exceed those at the canopy level.


Ecological Research | 1997

Fruiting phenology of animal-dispersed plants in response to winter migration of frugivores in a warm temperate forest on Yakushima Island, Japan

Naohiko Noma; Takakazu Yumoto

The fruiting phenology of animal-dispersed plants was observed in a warm temperate, evergreen forest on Yakushima Island. The number of ripe fruits was counted for 22 trees, four lianas and one parasitic epiphyte species with sapfruit. These fruits were consumed by birds and Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata yakui). Birds with small gapes (e.g. Japanese white-eye [Zosterops japonica]) consumed only small fruit less than 6 mm in diameter, while birds with large gapes (e.g. red-capped green pigeon [Sphenurus formosae]) and Japanese macaques consumed a wide range of fruits from 4 to 16 mm in diameter. The larger animals did not ignore the smaller fruits. Brown-eared bulbul (Hypsipetes amaurotis) and Japanese white-eye were the main consumers of sapfruit in terms of frequency in winter. Some of the observed consumers were year-round residents, but most of the consumers migrated to Yakushima Island from the main islands of Japan to overwinter (from November to March), and their abundance in winter was four times as high as during the rest of the year (from May to October). In 23 of the 27 plant species investigated, sapfruit production coincided with their immigration season, whereas tree species bear capsules and nuts during autumn from September to November. We suggest that sapfruit species set their ripe period to the season when frugivorous birds are most abundant.


American Journal of Botany | 1999

Beetle pollination of Shorea parvifolia (section Mutica, Dipterocarpaceae) in a general flowering period in Sarawak, Malaysia

Shoko Sakai; Kuniyasu Momose; Takakazu Yumoto; Makoto Kato; Tamiji Inoue

Pollination ecology of an emergent tree species, Shorea (section Mutica) parvifolia (Dipterocarpaceae), was studied using the canopy observation system in a lowland dipterocarp forest in Sarawak, Malaysia, during a general flowering period in 1996. Although the species has been reported to be pollinated by thrips in Peninsular Malaysia, our observations of flower visitors and pollination experiments indicated that beetles (Chrysomelidae and Curculionidae, Coleoptera) contributed to pollination of S. parvifolia in Sarawak. Beetles accounted for 74% of the flower visitors collected by net-sweeping, and 30% of the beetles carried pollen, while thrips accounted for 16% of the visitors, and 12% of the thrips carried pollen. The apical parts of the petals and pollen served as a reward for the beetles. Thrips stayed inside the flower almost continuously after arrival, and movements among flowers were rare. Fruit set was significantly increased by introduction of beetles to bagged flowers, but not by introduction of thrips. Hand-pollination experiments and comparison of fruit set in untreated, bagged, and open flowers suggested that S. parvifolia was mainly outbreeding.


Primates | 1994

Seasonal change in the composition of the diet of eastern lowland gorillas

Juichi Yamagiwa; Ndunda Mwanza; Takakazu Yumoto; Tamaki Maruhashi

Details are presented of the composition of the diet of eastern lowland gorillas, derived mainly from a study of their fresh trails and fecal analysis, during the course of an entire year in the tropical lowland forests of the Itebero region, Zaire. Gorillas ate 194 plant foods from 121 species and 45 families. They consumed 48 species of fruits; and 89% of fecal samples contained fruit seeds, but fruits were a relatively small part (25%) of the total number of food items. The composition of their diet changed seasonally. When consumption of fruit decreased in the long rainy and the long dry seasons, the gorillas ate, in addition to Zingiberaceae and Marantaceae, many kinds of leaf and bark, which may be an important buffer against the shortage of fruits. Gorillas also fed regularly on ants (Ponerinae), and the frequency of consumption showed small seasonal variations. From a comparison of diet composition, eastern lowland gorillas appeared to be intermediate between the other two subspecies. The choice of food showed differences in preference of fruits and insects between subspecies and may reflect high similarities within subspecies in lowland and montane forests.


Journal of Tropical Ecology | 2004

Dispersal of Aglaia spectabilis , a large-seeded tree species in a moist evergreen forest in Thailand

Shumpei Kitamura; Shunsuke Suzuki; Takakazu Yumoto; Pilai Poonswad; Phitaya Chuailua; Kamol Plongmai; Naohiko Noma; Tamaki Maruhashi; Chumphon Suckasam

We investigated the seed dispersal of Aglaia spectabilis , a large-seeded tree species in a moist evergreen forest of Khao Yai National Park in Thailand. Although one-to-one relationships between frugivores and plants are very unlikely, large-seeded plants having to rely on few large frugivores and therefore on limited disperser assemblages, might be vulnerable to extinction. We assessed both the frugivore assemblages foraging on arillate seeds of Aglaia spectabilis and dispersing them and the seed predator assemblages, thereby covering dispersal as well as the post-dispersal aspects such as seed predation. Our results showed that frugivores dispersing seeds were a rather limited set of four hornbill and one pigeon species, whereas two squirrel species were not dispersers, but dropped the seeds on the ground. Three mammal species were identified as seed predators on the forest floor. Heavy seed predation by mammals together with high seed removal rates, short visiting times and regurgitation of intact seeds by mainly hornbills lead us to the conclusion that hornbills show high effectiveness in dispersal of this tree species.


Annals of The Entomological Society of America | 2001

Six-Year Population Fluctuation of the Giant Honey Bee Apis dorsata (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in a Tropical Lowland Dipterocarp Forest in Sarawak

Takao Itioka; Tamiji Inoue; Het Kaliang; Makoto Kato; Teruyoshi Nagamitsu; Kuniyasu Momose; Shoko Sakai; Takakazu Yumoto; Sarkawi Umah Mohamad; Abang Abdul Hamid; Seiki Yamane

Abstract The giant honey bee Apis dorsata F. inhabits lowland tropical rainforests in Southeast Asia, where a general, community-wide flowering occurs at intervals of 4 yr on average. The numerical response by the honey bee population to the drastic increase of flower resources during general flowering was investigated for 6 yr by monthly light-trapping and by nest counts in a lowland dipterocarp forest in Borneo. The numbers of A. dorsata workers obtained by light-trapping were highest during general flowering periods, whereas very few workers were trapped in other periods. The abundance of A. dorsata nests showed temporal correspondence with the abundance of trapped workers, and the nests disappeared in the nonflowering periods. These data suggest that the A. dorsata population increases rapidly in response to general flowering and that this is initiated by nonseasonal, long-distance migration. Drones of A. dorsata were present during the general flowering period, but there is no evidence that reproduction by A. dorsata occurs only in general flowering periods. Fluctuation in abundance by the honey bee A. koschevnikovi Enderlein was also observed by monthly light-trapping. The temporal trend of this species was similar to that of A. dorsata, but sightings persisted even in the nonflowering periods. Both honey bees responded numerically to floral resources, but long-distance migration in A. koschevnikovi was unlikely.


Primates | 1998

Cheek-pouch Dispersal of Seeds by Japanese Monkeys (Macaca fuscata yakui) on Yakushima Island, Japan

Takakazu Yumoto; Naohiko Noma; Tamaki Maruhashi

Seed dispersal by Japanese monkeys (Macaca fuscata yakui) via cheek-pouch was studied in a warm temperate evergreen forest on Yakushima Island. Plant list was compiled based on a study during 1986–1995, of which troops of monkeys have been habituated without artificial feeding. We followed the well-habituated monkeys in 1993 and 1994 to observe the feeding behavior and their treatments of fruits and seeds, and collected seeds dispersed by monkeys to record the distance carried from the mother trees. We checked the difference of germination ratio between seeds dispersed via cheek-pouch and seeds taken from mother trees by sowing experiments. Seeds and acorns of 22 species were observed to be dispersed via cheek-pouch of monkeys. Among them, three species with acorns were never dispersed via feces, and 15 species with drupes were seldom dispersed via feces. Plant species of which seeds are dispersed only via cheek-pouch had larger seeds than those of dispersed both via cheek-pouch and via feces, and typically had only one or two seeds in a fruit. As for one of cheek-pouch dispersal species,Persea thunbergii, the mean distance when seeds were carried from the mother trees via cheek-pouch was 19.7 m, and the maximum distance was as long as 105 m although more than 80% of seeds were dispersed within 30 m from mother trees. And 82% of seeds dispersed via cheek-pouch germinated. The easy separation of seeds from other parts of the fruit seems to facilitate cheek-pouch dispersal more than dispersal via feces. Cheek-pouch dispersal by monkeys has possibly enhanced the natural selection for larger seeds which bring forth larger seedlings with high shade-tolerance. In conclusion, cheek-pouch dispersal by monkeys is quite an important mode for trees in the mature stand in a warm temperate evergreen forest on Yakushima Island.


Biological Conservation | 1993

A census of the eastern lowland gorillas Gorilla gorilla graueri in Kahuzi-Biega National Park with reference to mountain gorillas G. g. beringei in the Virunga Region, Zaire

Juichi Yamagiwa; Ndunda Mwanza; Andrea Spangenberg; Tamaki Maruhashi; Takakazu Yumoto; Antje Fischer; Bernd Steinhauer-Burkart

Abstract A population census of eastern lowland gorillas Gorilla gorilla graueri was conducted in the original part of Kahuzi-Biega National Park, Zaire. At least 258 gorillas (25 groups and nine solitary males) were estimated by bed counts to have survived within the Park in the 1990 bamboo season. In comparison with results of the previous censuses, conducted between 1978 and 1979, the population showed a slight increase. The percentage of immature individuals in the population indicates that gorillas still maintain a healthy population, but mean group size has decreased markedly. Although gorillas expanded their range in the 11 years between the surveys, they have still tended to concentrate in the central well-protected area of the Park, possibly stimulating frequent transfer of females between groups or from groups to solitary males, resulting in the decrease in group size. Recent social changes recorded from observations of habituated groups tend to support this interpretation. Human disturbance in the bridge zone between highland and lowland forests prevents gorillas from making contact with their neighbours and reduces the possibility of outbreeding within the Park. Reference is made to the more detailed censuses of the mountain gorilla G. g. beringei . More international attention will be needed to increase conservation activity to protect gorillas from the hazards of human disturbances in this area.


Ecological Research | 2004

Effects of sika deer on tree seedlings in a warm temperate forest on Yakushima Island, Japan

Riyou Tsujino; Takakazu Yumoto

High-density herbivore species often play an important role in forest regeneration. Native sika deer (Cervus nippon yakushimae) inhabit a high density (51.5–63.8 head/km2, estimated by a pellet count method) area in the western part of a lowland natural forest on Yakushima Island, Japan. To test experimentally the impact of sika deer on the mortality and the survivability of current-year seedlings, which are at a more vulnerable stage than the later stages, we constructed fenced exclosures, planted seeds of nine sapfruit tree species and compared the mortality and the survivability of current-year seedlings between fenced and unfenced quadrats. Large seeded species had significantly greater survivability in fenced quadrats than in unfenced quadrats. However, the survivability disagreed with feeding preferences. Sika deer activity increased seedling mortality of large-seeded species more than that of small-seeded species, and did not decrease much seedling survivability of not-preferred species. We found that the physical disturbance by the high density of sika deer resulted in mortality for both preferred and not-preferred species, and that deer herbivory was important for preferred species.

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Riyou Tsujino

Nara University of Education

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Shumpei Kitamura

Ishikawa Prefectural University

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Naohiko Noma

University of Shiga Prefecture

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