5 research outputs found

    Postscript of Asian Writers Exchange Project \u27Soaked in Asia\u27 : Reflection on its Narrative

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    Since fall 2005, a project titled \u27Soaked in Asia\u27 (SIA) has been initiated by Nobuko Takagi, an award winning writer and Special Guest Professor of Kyushu University. SIA aims to undertake a dialogue and exchange between Takagi and the Asian writers. This paper examines the first dialogue between Takagi and the Filipino writer situating SIA within the context of previous exchange projects between Japanese writers and writers from other Asian countries and analyze the \u27distance\u27 between the two writers from the historical perspective.2005年末から九州大学特任教授の髙樹のぶ子によるアジアの文学者交流プロジェクト Soaked inAsia のが開始された。本稿ではその第一回目のフィリピン編において行われた髙樹とフィリピンの作家との対談を取り上げ、これまでのアジアの文学者交流の中に位置づけると共に、対談において語られたこととその後に日本に伝えられたこととの乖離を歴史的な文脈から考察する

    A Study on \u22Poetry (詩刊)\u22 Around the Struggle against the Rightists

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    Satellite telemetry has become a common technique to investigate avian life-histories, but whether such tagging will affect fitness is a critical unknown. In this study, we evaluate multi-year effects of implanted transmitters on migratory timing and reproductive performance in shorebirds. Shorebirds increasingly are recognized as good models in ecology and evolution. That many of them are of conservation concern adds to the research responsibilities. In May 2009, we captured 56 female Black-tailed Godwits Limosa limosa limosa during late incubation in The Netherlands. Of these, 15 birds were equipped with 26-g satellite transmitters with a percutaneous antenna (7.8 % ± 0.2 SD of body mass), surgically implanted in the coelom. We compared immediate nest survival, timing of migration, subsequent nest site fidelity and reproductive behaviour including egg laying with those of the remaining birds, a comparison group of 41 females. We found no effects on immediate nest survival. Fledging success and subsequent southward and northward migration patterns of the implanted birds conformed to the expectations, and arrival time on the breeding grounds in 2010–2012 did not differ from the comparison group. Compared with the comparison group, in the year after implantation, implanted birds were equally faithful to the nest site and showed equal territorial behaviour, but a paucity of behaviours indicating nests or clutches. In the 3 years after implantation, the yearly apparent survival of implanted birds was 16 % points lower. Despite intense searching, we found only three eggs of two implanted birds; all were deformed. A similarly deformed egg was reported in a similarly implanted Whimbrel Numenius phaeopus returning to breed in central Alaska. The presence in the body cavity of an object slightly smaller than a normal egg may thus lead to egg malformation and, likely, reduced egg viability. That the use of implanted satellite transmitters in these large shorebirds reduced nesting propensity and might also lead to fertility losses argues against the use of implanted transmitters for studies on breeding biology, and for a careful evaluation of the methodology in studies of migration

    Testing evolutionary hypotheses about species borders: patterns of genetic variation towards the southern borders of two rainforest Drosophila and a related habitat generalist

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    Several evolutionary hypotheses help explain why only some species adapt readily to new conditions and expand distributions beyond borders, but there is limited evidence testing these hypotheses. In this study, we consider patterns of neutral (microsatellite) and quantitative genetic variation in traits in three species of Drosophila from the montium species group in eastern Australia. We found little support for restricted or asymmetrical gene flow in any species. In rainforest-restricted Drosophila birchii, there was evidence of selection for increased desiccation and starvation resistance towards the southern border, and a reduction in genetic diversity in desiccation resistance at this border. No such patterns existed for Drosophila bunnanda, which has an even more restricted distribution. In the habitat generalist Drosophila serrata, there was evidence for geographic selection for wing size and development time, although clinal patterns for increased cold and starvation resistance towards the southern border could not be differentiated from neutral expectations. These findings suggest that borders in these species are not limited by low overall genetic variation but instead in two of the species reflect patterns of selection and genetic variability in key traits limiting borders

    Contrasting extreme long-distance migration patterns in bar-tailed godwits <i>Limosa lapponica</i>

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    Migrating birds make the longest non-stop endurance flights in the animal kingdom. Satellite technology is now providingdirect evidence on the lengths and durations of these flights and associated staging episodes for individual birds. Using thistechnology, we compared the migration performance of two subspecies of bar-tailed godwit Limosa lapponica travellingbetween non-breeding grounds in New Zealand (subspecies baueri) and northwest Australia (subspecies menzbieri) andbreeding grounds in Alaska and eastern Russia, respectively. Individuals of both subspecies made long, usually non-stop,flights from non-breeding grounds to coastal staging grounds in the Yellow Sea region of East Asia (average 10 060 ? SD290 km for baueri and 5860 ? 240 km for menzbieri). After an average stay of 41.2 ? 4.8 d, baueri flew over the North PacificOcean before heading northeast to the Alaskan breeding grounds (6770 ? 800 km). Menzbieri staged for 38.4 ? 2.5 d,and flew over land and sea northeast to high arctic Russia (4170 ? 370 km). The post-breeding journey for baueri involvedseveral weeks of staging in southwest Alaska followed by non-stop flights across the Pacific Ocean to New Zealand (11 690 kmin a complete track) or stopovers on islands in the southwestern Pacific en route to New Zealand and eastern Australia. Bycontrast, menzbieri returned to Australia via stopovers in the New Siberian Islands, Russia, and back at the Yellow Sea; birdstravelled on average 4510 ? 360 km from Russia to the Yellow Sea, staged there for 40.8 ? 5.6 d, and then flew another5680–7180 km to Australia (10 820 ? 300 km in total). Overall, the entire migration of the single baueri godwit with afully completed return track totalled 29 280 km and involved 20 d of major migratory flight over a round-trip journey of174 d. The entire migrations of menzbieri averaged 21 940 ? 570 km, including 14 d of major migratory flights out of 154 dtotal. Godwits of both populations exhibit extreme flight performance, and baueri makes the longest (southbound) andsecond-longest (northbound) non-stop migratory flights documented for any bird. Both subspecies essentially make singlestops when moving between non-breeding and breeding sites in opposite hemispheres. This reinforces the critical importanceof the intertidal habitats used by fuelling godwits in Australasia, the Yellow Sea, and Alaska

    Fuelling conditions at staging sites can mitigate Arctic warming effects in a migratory bird

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    Under climate warming, migratory birds should align reproduction dates with advancing plant and arthropod phenology. To arrive on the breeding grounds earlier, migrants may speed up spring migration by curtailing the time spent en route, possibly at the cost of decreased survival rates. Based on a decades-long series of observations along an entire flyway, we show that when refuelling time is limited, variation in food abundance in the spring staging area affects fitness. Bar-tailed godwits migrating from West Africa to the Siberian Arctic reduce refuelling time at their European staging site and thus maintain a close match between breeding and tundra phenology. Annual survival probability decreases with shorter refuelling times, but correlates positively with refuelling rate, which in turn is correlated with food abundance in the staging area. This chain of effects implies that conditions in the temperate zone determine the ability of godwits to cope with climate-related changes in the Arctic
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