CVClient

Yorisue Takefumi

  (頼末 武史)

Profile Information

Affiliation
University of Hyogo, University of Hyogo
Degree
博士(環境学)(東京大学)

Researcher number
50766722
J-GLOBAL ID
201501058625831737
researchmap Member ID
B000247107

Awards

 1

Papers

 27
  • Erik E. Sotka, Ryan B. Carnegie, James T. Carlton, Lucia Couceiro, Jeffrey A. Crooks, Hikaru Endo, Hilary Hayford, Masakazu Hori, Mitsunobu Kamiya, Gen Kanaya, Judith Kochmann, Kun-Seop Lee, Lauren Lees, Hannah Miller, Masahiro Nakaoka, Eric Pante, Jennifer L. Ruesink, Evangelina Schwindt, Åsa Strand, Richard B. Taylor, Ryuta Terada, Martin Thiel, Takefumi Yorisue, Danielle Zacherl, Allan E. Strand
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 122(15) e2418730122, Apr 7, 2025  Peer-reviewed
    The massive geographic expansion of terrestrial plant crops, livestock, and marine aquacultured species during the 19th and 20th centuries provided local economic benefits, stabilized food demands, and altered local ecosystems. The invasion history of these translocations remains uncertain for most species, limiting our understanding of their future adaptive potential and historical roles as vectors for coinvaded species. We provide a framework for filling this gap in invasion biology using the widely transplanted Pacific oyster as a case study. A two-dimensional summary of population-level variation in single nucleotide polymorphisms in native Japan reflected the geographical map of Japan and allowed identification of the source regions for the worldwide expansion. Pacific oysters proliferate in nonnative areas with environmental temperatures similar to those areas where native lineages evolved. Using Approximate Bayesian Computation, we ranked the likelihood of historical oyster or shipping vectors to explain current-day distribution of genotypes in 14 coinvaded algal and animal species. Oyster transplants were a more likely vector than shipping for six species, shipping activity was more likely for five species, and a vector was ambiguous for three species. Applying this approach to other translocated species should reveal similar legacy effects, especially for economically important foundation species that also served as vectors for nonnative species.
  • KM Hill-Spanik, H Rothkopf, A Strand, RB Carnegie, JT Carlton, L Couceiro, JA Crooks, H Endo, M Hori, M Kamiya, G Kanaya, J Kochmann, KS Lee, L Lees, M Nakaoka, E Pante, JL Ruesink, E Schwindt, Å Strand, R Taylor, R Terada, M Thiel, T Yorisue, D Zacherl, EE Sotka
    Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, 161(1) 39-46, Feb, 2025  Peer-reviewed
  • Shiori Kitade, Kiyotaka Matsumura, Takefumi Yorisue
    Journal of Marine Biological Association of the UK, Nov, 2024  Peer-reviewedLast authorCorresponding author
  • Takamura H, Sugitani Y, Morishita R, Yorisue T, Kadota I
    Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry, Jun, 2024  Peer-reviewed
  • Hiroyoshi Takamura, Yuya Kinoshita, Takefumi Yorisue, Isao Kadota
    Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry, 21(3) 632-638, 2023  Peer-reviewed
    Hybridization of monoterpene and furan structural scaffolds increased antifouling activity.

Misc.

 18

Books and Other Publications

 3

Presentations

 32

Teaching Experience

 11

Works

 1

Research Projects

 15

Academic Activities

 35

Social Activities

 23

Media Coverage

 1