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Dive into the research topics where Yoshito Suzuki is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoshito Suzuki.


Theoretical Population Biology | 1984

Theory of oviposition strategy of parasitoids. I. Effect of mortality and limited egg number

Yoh Iwasa; Yoshito Suzuki; Hiroyuki Matsuda

The optimal oviposition strategies of parasitoids, the host range, and the number of eggs laid per host which result in the maximum lifetime performance of reproduction, are investigated. To study the effects of parasitoid mortality and of limiting total number of eggs laid by a parasitoid, a standard criterion used in previous theories of optimal diet and optimal patch use, the maximization of the foraging rate, is no longer suitable. The model is solved analytically by using dynamic programming. The results are as follows: The host preference of solitary parasitoids depends on the mortality during handling times; i.e., the forager tends to avoid hosts with high risk of foraging mortality. If the total number of eggs produced by a parasitoid is limited, and if the mortality during handling is negligible, the host range is wider when a larger number of eggs remains in the parasitoids body. In general, however, the mortality-cost of forager and the egg-cost interplay, because the loss of future reproduction by mortality increases with the number of available eggs. In an example with two host types, host range is widest with an intermediate number of eggs available in the body. The optimal number of eggs per host laid by a gregarious parasitoid is also affected by the differential mortality of the forager, and by the number of available eggs.


Animal Behaviour | 1984

Sex allocation and effects of superparasitism on secondary sex ratios in the gregarious parasitoid, Trichogramma chilonis (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae)

Yoshito Suzuki; H. Tsuji; M. Sasakawa

Abstract The role of sex-controlling behaviour at oviposition in generating primary sex ratios, and the effect of larval competition on secondary sex ratios, were studied in the gregarious endoparasitoid, Trichogramma chilonis . The production of a fertilized (female) egg is indicated by the incorporation of a pause in abdominal movements during oviposition, while the absence of it indicates the production of an unfertilized (male) egg. During each ovipositional bout, the first male egg is deposited at the second oviposition, and thereafter at intervals of about eight eggs. This simple pattern enables the wasps to adjust their progeny sex ratios under local male competition to a wide range of host size. Inexperienced wasps do not distinguish between parasitized and healthy hosts. Immature mortality is not significantly different between the sexes when a host is attacked by a single wasp, while females suffer higher immature mortality than males when superparasitism occurs.


Population Ecology | 1980

A sex ratio theory of gregarious parasitoids.

Yoshito Suzuki; Yoh Iwasa

A mathematical model is constructed to explain a density-dependent increase in the progeny sex ratios of gregarious parasitoids. In the model we considered non-cooperative game between females concerned with their own inclusive fitness. Equilibrium progeny sex ratios of the first and second females ovipositing on the same host are expressed in terms of the probability of double parasitism (p), the ratio of a male to a female in contribution to resource competition (α), the clutch size ratio between the two females (β), the crowding effect on female reproductive success (γ), and the inbreeding coefficient (f). Major predictions from the model are: 1) the progeny sex ratios of both the first and second females increase withp, 2) as β becomes smaller, the progeny sex ratios of the first females decrease, while those of the second females dramatically increases, 3) when a host is attacked by at most two wasps, the sex ratio of the total number of eggs laid on the host does not exceed 0.25. The effects of α and preferential death by female progeny in doubly parasitized hosts are considered as factors responsible for an excess number of males at emergence. Some possible modes of density-dependent increase in the sex ratios of the overall progeny populations is also discussed on the basis of the present model.


Population Ecology | 1999

Density-dependent growth and reproduction of the apple snail, Pomacea canaliculata: a density manipulation experiment in a paddy field

Koichi Tanaka; Tomonoari Watanabe; Hiroya Higuchi; Kenji Miyamoto; Yoichi Yusa; Toru Kiyonaga; Hirotsugu Kiyota; Yoshito Suzuki; Takashi Wada

To examine density dependence in the survival, growth, and reproduction of Pomacea canaliculata, we conducted an experiment in which snail densities were manipulated in a paddy field. We released paint-marked snails of 15–20 mm shell height into 12 enclosures (pens) of 16 m2 at one of five densities – 8, 16, 32, 64, or 128 snails per pen. The survival rate of released snails was 95% and was independent of snail density. The snail density had a significant effect on the growth and egg production of individual snails. This density dependence may have been caused by reduced food availability. The females at high density deposited fewer and smaller egg masses than those at low density, and consequently produced fewer eggs. The females at densities 8 and 16 deposited more than 3000 eggs per female, while the females at density 128 oviposited only 414 eggs. The total egg production per pen was, however, higher at higher snail density. The survival rates of juvenile snails were 21%–37% and were independent of adult density. The juvenile density was positively correlated with the total egg production per pen and hence was higher at higher adult density. However, the density of juveniles larger than 5 mm in shell height, i.e., juveniles that can survive an overwintering period, was not significantly different among density treatments. These results suggest that snail density after the overwintering period is independent of the density in the previous year. Thus, density dependence in growth and reproduction might regulate the population of P. canaliculata in paddies.


Animal Behaviour | 1985

Mating systems and sex ratios in the egg parasitoids, Trichogramma dendrolimi and T. papilionis (Hymenoptera: Trichogrammatidae)

Yoshito Suzuki; Katsumi Hiehata

Abstract Arrhenotokous parthenogenesis was confirmed in Trichogramma dendrolimi and T. papilionis . Subsequently the possible links between mating systems and biological traits of males, and sex ratios, were investigated in these two species, using Papilio xuthus eggs for their hosts. T. dendrolimi males attained 100% insemination of females in the parasitized host before egress from it. The high insemination rate was guaranteed by male precedence in emergence, lack of courtship in mating behaviour and short copulation time, combined with a long stay of emerging wasps within the host. The males were often the last to leave a host and made no mating attempts outside the host. Most but not all T. papilionis females were also inseminated in the host. The lower insemination rate of this species resulted from almost simultaneous emergence of both sexes, which prevented males from mating with inactive females. Another mating site of T. papilionis was just outside the host, which males left prior to most females. A reduced possibility of outbreeding was inferred in T. dendrolimi on the grounds that males were short-lived, frequently failed to expand their wings and died in the host. The reduced outbreeding was reflected in considerably lower sex ratios in T. dendrolimi .


Population Ecology | 1980

Population dynamics of the citrus swallowtail,Papilio xuthus Linné (Lepidoptera: Papilionidae): Mechanisms stabilizing its numbers

Yoshimi Hirose; Yoshito Suzuki; Masami Takagi; K. Hiehata; M. Yamasaki; H. Kimoto; M. Yamanaka; M. Iga; K. Yamaguchi

The citrus swallowtail, Pa#ilio xuthus LINN~, is widely distributed in Japan and the commonest among swallowtail butterflies in its suburban areas, As the larvae feed on Rutaceae, the present species is a pest of citrus in the suburban areas. However, it never outbreaks and its population is maintained at a low level. Population dynamics of various insect species have been studied, but most of them are pests characterized by high levels or violent fluctuations in abundance. In spite of the fact that the majority of insect species remain at relatively low levels in abundance for a long period, we do not fully understand mechanisms of natural regulation in numbers of such low-density species. Studies on the population dynamics of the citrus swallowtail may well contribute to the understanding of the mechanisms. Life tables of the butterfly have recently been reported by TSUBAKI (1973, 1977) and WATANABE (1976), but the mechanisms stabilizing its numbers have remained unknown. Independent of the life table studies made by these two workers, population studies of the butterfly were begun in a suburban area of Fukuoka in 1970. During the course of tho population studies, these have developed into ecological studies of its important natural enemies. The results of the studies of adult dispersal (SUZUKI et al., 1974), spatial distribution of the eggs in a citrus grove (SuzuKI et al., 1976) and adult fecundity (YAMANAKA et al., 1978) have been published as parts of the former studies. The results of the studies of parasitoids (TAKAGI, 1976; HIROSE et al., 1976; HIEHATA et al., 1976) and predators (YAMASAKI et al., 1978) have also been published as parts of the latter studies. This paper presents the life table data of the butterfly in the suburban area and discusses mechanisms stabilizing its numbers on the basis of a life table analysis and the above-mentioned studies on both the butterfly and its natural enemies.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences | 2003

A snail with unbiased population sex ratios but highly biased brood sex ratios

Yoichi Yusa; Yoshito Suzuki

Extraordinary sex ratio patterns and the underlying sex–determining mechanisms in various organisms are worth investigating, particularly because they shed light on adaptive sex–ratio adjustment. Here, we report an extremely large variation in the brood sex ratio in the freshwater snail, Pomacea canaliculata. In eight rearing series originating from three wild populations, sex ratios were highly variable among broods, ranging continuously from almost exclusively males to almost exclusively females. However, sex ratios were similar between broods from the same mating pair, indicating that sex ratio is a family trait. Irrespective of the large variations, the average sex ratios in all rearing series were not significantly different from 0.5. We argue that Fishers adaptive sex–ratio theory can explain the equal average sex ratios, and the results, in turn, directly support Fishers theory. Polyfactorial sex determination (in which sex is determined by three or more genetic factors) is suggested as the most likely mechanism producing the variable brood sex ratio.


Ecological Entomology | 2003

Direct and feeding‐induced interactions between two rice planthoppers, Sogatella furcifera and Nilaparvata lugens: effects on dispersal capability and performance

Masaya Matsumura; Yoshito Suzuki

Abstract. 1. A series of laboratory experiments was conducted to explore the effects of inter‐specific interactions, both direct interactive effects and those induced through previous feeding, on the dispersal capability (proportion of macropterous adults) and performance (development time and survival) of two wing‐dimorphic planthoppers, the whitebacked planthopper Sogatella furcifera and the brown planthopper Nilaparvata lugens, two pests of rice throughout Asia.


Population Ecology | 2005

A migration analysis of the rice planthopper Nilaparvata lugens from the Philippines to East Asia with three-dimensional computer simulations

Tomonari Watanabe; Yoshito Suzuki; Masaya Matsumura; Akiko Furuno; Masamichi Chino

Migrations of the rice planthopper Nilaparvata lugens (Stål) (Delphacidae) from the Philippines to Taiwan, southern China, and southern Japan were analyzed using three-dimensional migration simulations. The results strongly suggested that the Southeast Asian population of N. lugens mixes with the East Asian population. This highlighted the possibility that planthoppers from the Southeast Asian population, which have properties different from those in the East Asian population such as feeding of resistant rice varieties and wing polymorphism, could migrate to Japan via southern China and Taiwan. This study, therefore, emphasizes the special care that should be taken to monitor the properties of immigrants to Japan.


Population Ecology | 1990

Population dynamics of the green leafhopper, Nephotettix virescens Distant (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) in synchronized and staggered transplanting areas of paddy fields in Indonesia.

I Nyoman Widiarta; Yoshito Suzuki; Hiroichi Sawada; Fusao Nakasuji

The population dynamics ofNephotettix virescens, a vector of rice tungro virus disease was investigated in a synchronized transplanting area at Jatisari (1984–1986), West Java and in a staggered transplanting area at Sidan (1986–1988), Bali, Indonesia. The FARMCOP suction sampler was employed for population censuses ofN. virescens and its natural enemies. The population growth pattern was affected by transplanting pattern: In the staggered transplanting area, the population density increased from the immigrant generation to the first generation, and sharply decrease thereafter, while in the synchronized transplanting area the population density often reached the highest peak in the second generation. The degree of contageousness in the spatial distribution ofN. virescens was negatively correlated with population density of the immigrant generation.

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Tomonari Watanabe

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Masaya Matsumura

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Hiroaki Takeuchi

National Agricultural Research Centre

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Mami Ishizaki

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Akiko Furuno

Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute

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Masamichi Chino

Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute

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Shigeyuki Mukawa

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

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Takashi Wada

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Yoichi Yusa

Nara Women's University

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