Records on some mantis shrimps (Malacostraca: Stomatopoda) collected from the Sea of Japan, Yamaguchi Prefecture, including a new record from Japan
Records on some mantis shrimps (Malacostraca: Stomatopoda) collected from the Sea of Japan, Yamaguchi Prefecture, including a new record from Japan
- Research Article
33
- 10.1007/s10228-006-0356-0
- Nov 25, 2006
- Ichthyological Research
We analyzed patterns of genetic diversity in the sailfin sandfish (Arctoscopus japonicus), focusing on population subdivisions within the Sea of Japan. We observed 270 specimens from nine sampling sites in 1999–2000, i.e., seven sites in the Sea of Japan and two sites from the Pacific coast of Hokkaido. An additional site (30 specimens) was sampled from eastern Korea in the spawning season of 2004 for comparison. Forty haplotypes, compiled into three haplogroups (A–C), were detected based on the comparison of a 400-bp sequence of the anterior part of the mitochondrial control region. In accordance with previous hypotheses from morphological and molecular analyses, genetic discontinuity between the Sea of Japan and the Pacific coast of Hokkaido was conspicuous. Within the Sea of Japan, eight sampling sites were not genetically uniform, and most of the variations among sites were detected between eastern Korea [the “eastern Korea” (EK) population: distributed from the Korean Peninsula to Mishima, Yamaguchi Prefecture] and the other sites along the coast of Japan [the “western Japan” (WJ) population: from Oki Islands to western Hokkaido] (Φ CT = 0.096, P = 0.0183). The WJ population, having lower genetic variability, showed significant departure from neutrality, indicating influences through a recent population expansion. The period of the expansion can be estimated to have begun on the order of 104 years ago. We consider that the present Japan Sea populations have been formed through the invasion of a small ancestral stock to the Sea of Japan and its population expansion during the last glacial period or later. On the other hand, we failed to detect distinct evidence of a population expansion in the EK population. Haplogroup C, detected in a high frequency in this population, was estimated to have mixed with haplogroup A after rapid differentiations of the latter. Therefore, the EK population, strongly influenced by such a mixture, might possess haplogroup C in a higher frequency and a different haplotype composition from the WJ population.
- Research Article
289
- 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.144655
- Jan 6, 2021
- Science of The Total Environment
Assessing small-scale freshwater microplastics pollution, land-use, source-to-sink conduits, and pollution risks: Perspectives from Japanese rivers polluted with microplastics
- Research Article
6
- 10.5575/geosoc.109.459
- Jan 1, 2003
- The Journal of the Geological Society of Japan
The past work regarding the distribution of three representative fossil cold-water ostracod genera in surface sediment of the continental shelf along the southwestern to eastern margin of the Japan Sea is reviewed and summarized. The highest number of cold-water specimens is from the lower continental shelf off Yamaguchi Prefecture, northeast of the Tsushima Strait in the southwestern part of the Japan Sea. These fossils are considered to be the evidence of the southward expansion of their distributional limit during the postmiddle Pleistocene glacial interval, to a latitudinal limit of approximately 10° farther south than the Recent distributional limit of these genera. The presence of these fossil ostracods indicates the prevalence of water similar to the Japan Sea Central Water as far south as the northeast of the Tsushima Strait during the glacial period. This suggests that the summertime water temperature on the upper continental shelf during the glacial period was approximately 10°C lower and salinity 0.5‰ lower than Recent temperatures and salinities. The ostracod data suggest that a cold-water mass different from the Oyashio water was present in the southwestern Japan Sea during the post-middle Pleistocene glacial period.
- Research Article
38
- 10.1007/s00436-012-2904-z
- Apr 5, 2012
- Parasitology Research
Myxosporean genera Henneguya and Myxobolus (Bivalvulida: Myxobolidae) are closely related in morphology and molecular phylogeny, speciose with approximately 1,000 nominal species. The majority of them are recorded from freshwater fish worldwide, and few are known from marine fish. In this study, three myxobolid spp. are described from marine fish around Japan. Two novel Henneguya spp., Henneguya ogawai sp. n. and Henneguya yokoyamai sp. n., are described from two black sea breams (Acanthopagrus schlegelii) fished in the Inland Sea (Setonaikai), Japan. Plasmodia of the former species were localized in the esophageal or intestinal wall, and those of the latter species were in the wall of the gall bladder and peritoneum. Spore development in plasmodia of these two species was synchronous. The spore body of H. ogawai sp. n. was 11.0 (8.9-12.2) μm in length, 6.9 (6.3-7.5) μm in width, 5.9 (5.2-6.6) μm in thickness, with a bifurcated caudal process of equal length, 10.0 (8.4-12.7) μm long; total spore length, 21.1 (19.2-23.4) μm. It contained two polar capsule, 4.3 (3.8-5.2) × 1.9 (1.4-2.3) μm. The spore body of H. yokoyamai sp. n. was 11.0 (10.1-13.7) μm in length, 7.1 (6.6-7.5) μm in width, and 5.6 (4.5-6.4) μm in thickness, with a bifurcated caudal process of equal length, 14.1 (10.8-17.0) μm long; total spore length, 25.0 (21.9-29.2) μm. It contained two polar capsules, 3.7 (3.1-4.2) × 2.0 (1.8-2.4) μm. A novel Myxobolus sp., Myxobolus machidai sp. n., is described from a spotted knifejaw (Oplegnathus punctatus) fished in the Sea of Japan, off Shimonoseki, Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan. Plasmodia were embedded in the esophageal wall. Its round spore was small in size, 9.0 (8.1-9.4) μm in length, 7.8 (7.5-8.3) μm in width, and 5.5 (5.1-6.0) μm in thickness. It contained two polar capsules, 3.5 (3.2-3.8) × 2.3 (2.2-2.5) μm. Spore development in a plasmodium was asynchronous. Nucleotide sequencing of the small subunit ribosomal RNA gene (SSU rDNA) of these two novel Henneguya spp. revealed a close phylogenetic relationship with the marine clade of Henneguya spp.; however, they were distinct in morphology and SSU rDNA sequence from any known species. M. machidai sp. n. was grouped with freshwater Henneguya spp. in a phylogenetic tree based on the SSU rDNA, distant from a known marine clade of Myxobolus spp. reported mainly from the Mediterranean Sea. This is the first record of Henneguya-Myxobolus spp. from natural marine water in Japan.
- Research Article
18
- 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.162787
- Mar 11, 2023
- Science of The Total Environment
Plasticrust generation and degeneration in rocky intertidal habitats contribute to microplastic pollution
- Research Article
- 10.3312/jyio1952.17.135
- Jan 1, 1985
- Journal of the Yamashina Institute for Ornithology
On 22 September 1982, a Pallas's Warbler Phylloscopus proregulus was obtained in the Sea of Japan off the coast of Iwanai in Hokkaido. In our country this species has only been observed on 21 April 1964 on Tsunoshima Island in Yamaguchi Prefecture. The speciman in this short comunication is classified to Phylloscopus proregulus. We consider that the main migration route of this subspecies is formed in the inside of the eastern Asia including the coastal area. The Pallas's Warbler obtained seemed to be strayed from the main migration route to sea by a strong wind from the low pressure.
- Research Article
5
- 10.11646/zootaxa.4097.3.1
- Mar 31, 2016
- Zootaxa
Five species of the family Cyproideidae (Crustacea: Amphipoda) are described from shallow sea in Japan. Cyproidea liodactyla Hirayama, 1978 was collected from Kanagawa and Shizuoka Prefectures and Ariake Sea. Morphological character of the antenna 1 in these specimens is different from the original description. Examining the paratypes of C. liodactyla, the shape of the antenna 1 in the holotype is revealed to be abnormal. Cyproidea okinawensis sp. nov. was collected from Okinawa Island. Its morphological characters resemble C. liodactyla and C. robusta Ren, 2006; however, this new species is different from the former in the smaller eyes, the narrower coxa 5 and the coloration, and from the latter in the ovoid telson. Metacyproidea gen. nov. is established with M. makie sp. nov. from Hachijo Island in Tokyo Prefecture as its type species. This new genus resembles Cyproidea, especially in the peduncular article 2 of antenna 1 with a distinct distal tooth and the posterodorsal end of urosomites with a strong projection. However, Metacyproidea can be distinguished from Cyproidea by the coalesced urosomites 2-3 and the antenna 1 with a 10-16-articulated flagellum. Moolapheonoides acutifalcatus Kobayashi & Ishimaru, 2005 and Terepeltopes dolichorhunia Hirayama, 1983 were also collected from Wakayama and Fukui Prefectures and Kanagawa, Shizuoka and Yamaguchi Prefectures, respectively. A key to species of the family Cyproideidae in Japan is provided.
- Research Article
8
- 10.2330/joralbiosci1965.23.750
- Jan 1, 1981
- Japanese Journal of Oral Biology
The author studied variations in the tooth size and morphology of Japanese shrewmoles, Urotrichus talpoides. Specimens were collected in Kawakami-Mura, Abu-Gun, Yamaguchi Prefecture, Honshu and on Mishima Island which lies in the Japan Sea about 46.3km off the northerncoast of the southwestern Honshu Island.The results obtained are summarized as follows:The mean values of tooth sizes (mesiodistal crown diameter, buccolingual crown diameter andrectangle) were larger in the Mishima specimens than those from Kawakami for most of the teeth. Regional size differences were larger in the anterior teeth and premolars that had simple occlusalrelation ships than molars that had complex occlusal relationships.The tooth morphology of the Mishima specimens was characterized by a considerable developmentof the cingulum and ridge. In degrees of development of the cinglum and ridge, continuous individualvariations were observed. From these facts, the author supports the cingulum theory that new cuspsdifferentiate from the original cingulum or ridge.It is surmisable that the specifications of tooth size and morphology in the Mishima specimenswere influenced by the peculiar habitat in Mishima Island, where neither natural enemies nor rivalspecies of mammals are present.
- Research Article
1
- 10.1007/bf02070156
- Jan 1, 1981
- Journal of the Oceanographical Society of Japan
This paper analyzes daily variations in the occurrences of pelagic fishes and zooplankters on a small regional scale. The data used are based on daily observations repeated at 24h intervals during 6 days from 16 to 21, September, 1971, in coastal waters close to Esaki, a fishing port in the southwestern part of the Japan Sea (Yamaguchi Prefecture). The observations comprised acoustic surveys of the fish population, zooplankton sampling with a net, and Secchi disc readings, for evaluating relationships between the abundances of pelagic fishes and their food, as well as alternations in water masses. No clear correlation between pelagic fishes and their food, copepods, within a short time period was observed; fish population continued to decrease with eastward movements of fish schools although the abundances of copepods remained at almost the same level during the observations. Patterns of changes in both settled volumes of plankton and transparencies evidently suggested the occurrence of alternations in water masses. Pelagic fish schools proved to move in company with the transition of water masses.
- Research Article
7
- 10.3147/jsfp.44.81
- Jan 1, 2009
- Fish Pathology
This study was carried out to determine pathogenicity of anamorphic fungi Plectosporium oratosquillae NJM 0662 and Acremonium sp. NJM 0672, which were isolated from gills of mantis shrimp Oratosquilla oratoria caught in Yamaguchi and Aichi Prefectures in Japan. Cumulative mortality of the mantis shrimp injected with a high dose (5.0 × 106 conidia/mL) and a low dose (5.0 × 104 conidia/mL) of the isolate NJM 0662 reached 100% and 60% at day 25, respectively. Cumulative mortality of the shrimp injected with the high dose and the low dose of the isolate NJM 0672 reached 100% and 80% at day 25, respectively. The gill lesions in the shrimp experimentally infected with the fungi were similar to those of naturally infected shrimp. Histopathologically, the hyphae and conidia were found in the gill filaments and heart, and the hyphae were encapsulated by hemocytes in the gill filaments and the base of gills. The result confirmed that these two anamorphic fungi were pathogenic to mantis shrimp.
- Research Article
37
- 10.1007/s11046-008-9174-4
- Jan 24, 2009
- Mycopathologia
Two fungal pathogens of the mantis shrimp (Oratosquilla oratoria) in Yamaguchi and Aichi Prefectures, Japan are described as the new species Plectosporium oratosquillae and Acremonium sp. (a member of the Emericellopsis marine clade). Both fungi infect the gills of the mantis shrimp, which become brown or black due to melanization. The former species is characterized by its slow growth on artificial seawater yeast extract peptone glucose (PYGS) agar, pale yellow to pale orange or grayish yellow colonies, short cylindrical solitary phialides with a wavy tip, and one-celled ellipsoidal conidia. Although lacking the two-celled conidia demonstrated by the type species Plectosporium tabacinum, the taxonomic placement of the new species was confirmed by DNA sequence analysis of the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region of ribosomal DNA (ITS1, 5.8S rDNA and ITS2). Acremonium sp., the other causal pathogen, differs from P. oratosquillae by its fast growth on PYGS agar, pale orange to salmon-colored colonies, long, slender conidiophores consisting of solitary phialides with tips lacking an undulate outline, and typically cylindrical conidia. Analysis of ITS and beta-tubulin gene sequences placed this fungus within the phylogenetically distinct Emericellopsis (anam. Acremonium) marine clade. Various physiological characteristics of both pathogens were also investigated. This is the first report of a fungal infection found on the mantis shrimp in Japan.
- Abstract
- 10.1093/ofid/ofaf695.1940
- Jan 11, 2026
- Open Forum Infectious Diseases
BackgroundKudoa septempunctata, a parasite found in olive flounder, poses a growing food safety risk in East Asia, particularly Japan and South Korea. Linked to raw fish consumption, K. septempunctata poisoning causes brief gastrointestinal symptoms. This study aimed to characterize recent epidemiological trends and characteristics of K. septempunctata food poisoning by using national data from Japan.MethodsThis retrospective study examined Kudoa food poisoning cases reported in Japan between January 2013 and December 2023. Data from the Ministry of Health’s “Foodborne Illness Statistical Data” report were assessed for case counts, outbreaks, and implicated foods.ResultsA total of 2,009 cases were reported, peaking in 2014 (429 cases) and declining to < 100 cases since 2020. October had the highest number of monthly reports. The age distribution showed that the majority of cases occurred among older adults, with individuals aged 60–69 years (23.5%) and those 70 years and older (26.0%) together accounting for nearly half of all cases. Cases among individuals younger than 20 years comprised less than 2.5% of all cases. Flounder, particularly sashimi and sushi, were implicated in 99% of cases. The highest case counts occurred in Yamaguchi, Osaka, and Fukuoka prefectures (160, 155, and 154, respectively). Tottori, Shimane, Yamaguchi and Oita prefectures had the highest incidence rates (14.3, 10.9, 10.7, and 10.7 per 1,000,000 population, respectively). Prefectures along the Sea of Japan tended to report higher incidence rates.Conclusionhis is the first study to describe Kudoa food poisoning in Japan. Clinicians should consider Kudoa infections in cases of food poisoning involving raw fish.DisclosuresAll Authors: No reported disclosures
- Research Article
- 10.1038/s41598-026-38632-2
- Feb 9, 2026
- Scientific reports
Kudoa septempunctata, a parasite found in olive flounder, poses a growing food safety risk in East Asia, particularly in Japan and South Korea. K. septempunctata poisoning caused by raw fish consumption causes brief gastrointestinal symptoms. However, long-term, national-scale aggregated epidemiological data for K. septempunctata food poisoning are limited. In this retrospective study, we examined the recent epidemiological trends and characteristics of K. septempunctata food poisoning cases reported in Japan between January 2013 and December 2023. Ministry of Health "Foodborne Illness Statistical Data" were assessed for case counts, outbreaks, and implicated foods. Reported cases totaled 2009, reaching a peak in 2014 (429 cases) then declining to < 100 cases during the COVID-19 pandemic. October had the highest number of monthly reports. Flounder, particularly sashimi and sushi, were implicated in 99% of cases. The highest case counts occurred in Yamaguchi, Osaka, and Fukuoka prefectures (160, 155, and 154, respectively). Tottori, Shimane, Yamaguchi and Oita prefectures had the highest incidence rates (14.3, 10.9, 10.7, and 10.7 per 1,000,000 population, respectively). Prefectures along the Sea of Japan typically reported higher incidence rates. This study highlights the importance of continued surveillance and reporting of K. septempunctata poisoning, and the need to consider Kudoa infections in the differential diagnosis of food poisoning cases involving raw fish consumption.
- Research Article
43
- 10.1046/j.1444-2906.2000.00044.x
- Apr 1, 2000
- Fisheries Science
SUMMARY: The productive structure and productivity of a Sargassum macrocarpum C. Agardh population were studied from June 1993 to July 1994 in Fukawa Bay facing the Sea of Japan, Yamaguchi Prefecture. S. macrocarpum formed a dense population at a depth of 8 m in the study area. Using the stratified clip technique, monthly changes in the productive structure from 1993 to 1994 were clarified. The dry weight of leaves and main branches increased with the elongation of branches. Thalli in the middle to high stratum began to bear receptacles from March 1994 and the dry weight of receptacles was approximately one-third of the standing crop in June. The loss of leaves increased from April to June 1994, and the loss of main branches and receptacles from June to July 1994. Productivity of branches and receptacles reached maxima of 4.67 g dry wt/m2 per day from February to March and 5.33 g dry wt/m2 per day from April to May, respectively. Productivity of the leaves, however, was almost constant at approximately 2 g dry wt/m2 per day from July 1993 to March 1994. Therefore, maximum productivity of the S. macrocarpum population of 7.17 g dry wt/m2 per day occurred from February to March. Annual net production of newly sprouting branches in June 1993 was 1600.1 g dry wt/m2 per year based on the summation method, which was calculated from the monthly changes in the productive structure.
- Research Article
21
- 10.1007/s00436-014-4048-9
- Aug 5, 2014
- Parasitology Research
The myxosporean genus Unicapsula (Multivalvulida: Trilosporidae) is defined as having a spore with three unequal shell valves and polar capsules, of which one is prominent and the two other polar capsules are rudimentary. Genetic characterization of members of the genus, currently 11 nominal species, is, at present, unsatisfactory yet when comparing to the closely related genus Kudoa (Multivalvulida: Kudoidae). In the present study, we characterized long ribosomal RNA gene (rDNA) sequences of three Unicapsula spp., namely Unicapsula pyramidata, Unicapsula seriolae, and a novel myxosporean species, Unicapsula setoensis n. sp., from Asian fishes. Elongated plasmodia of U. pyramidata were found in the trunk muscle of Japanese threadfin breams, Nemipterus japonicus, fished off northern Vietnam in the South China Sea. Semitriangular spores, 5.5-6.4 μm in length and 5.6-9.6 μm in width, consisted of three shell valves with two caudal appendages, 7.2-7.4 μm in length. One prominent polar capsule, 2.0-2.4 μm in diameter, was located in the apical shell valve and two rudimentary polar capsules, 0.4-0.5 μm in diameter, in each caudal shell valve. Elongated plasmodia of U. seriolae were found in the trunk muscle of a greater yellowtail, Seriola dumerili, aquacultured in Japan. Semispherical spores, 5.9-7.4 μm in length and 6.3-7.4 μm in width, also consisted of three shell valves and one prominent polar capsule, 3.4-3.8 μm in diameter, with two rudimentary polar capsules, 0.7-1.0 μm in diameter. Plasmodia of U. setoensis n. sp. were found in the trunk muscle of yellowfin gobies, Acanthogobius flavimanus, fished off Hofu, Yamaguchi Prefecture, in the Inland Sea of Japan. Semispherical spores, 5.6-6.9 μm in diameter, displayed three shell valves and one prominent and two rudimentary polar capsules. The former functional polar capsule was 1.9-2.5 μm in diameter and extruded a 9.4-13.8-μm-long polar filament. Nearly the whole length of the 18S rDNA and more than 2,200 bp of the 28S rDNA of the three Unicapsula spp. were sequenced along with nucleotide sequences of the 5.8S rDNA and internal transcribed spacer-1 and spacer-2 of U. pyramidata and U. setoensis n. sp. Molecular genetic analyses supported the morphological species differentiation of U. pyramidata and U. seriolae, and the distinctness of U. setoensis n. sp. from hitherto known species.