Publications by authors named "Michio Fukushima"

Describing and explaining patterns of individual animal behaviors in situ, and their repeatability over the annual cycle, is an emerging field in ecology owing largely to advances in tagging technology. We describe individual movements of adult Sakhalin taimen , an endangered salmonid fish, in the headwaters of a river in northern Japan during the spring spawning season over 2 years. Migration timing, separated into stages prior to, during, and following the spawning period, was found to be more consistent and repeatable for females than males.

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Understanding the proximate factors and mechanisms driving primary production in manmade reservoirs is crucial because such production can translate into added fish yields that provide people with food and livelihoods. Furthermore, reservoir fish production could potentially compensate for the loss of fish yields due to habitat fragmentation and alterations caused by damming and impoundment. We monitored primary production, identified environmental factors responsible for its variability, and examined the relationship between primary production and fish production in nine large water bodies of the Lower Mekong Basin for 2 years.

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In the face of plans for increased construction of dams and reservoirs in the Mekong River Basin, it is critically important to better understand the primary-producer community of phytoplankton, especially the warm-water cyanobacteria. This is because these algae can serve as the primary source of carbon for higher trophic levels, including fishes, but can also form harmful blooms, threatening local fisheries and environmental and human health. We monitored the dynamics of three cyanobacteria-Synechococcus spp.

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The migration of Siamese mud carp (Henicorhynchus siamensis and H. lobatus), two of the most economically important fish species in the Mekong River, was studied using an otolith microchemistry technique. Fish and river water samples were collected in seven regions throughout the whole basin in Thailand, Laos and Cambodia over a 4 year study period.

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