Takashi Baba
University of Shiga Prefecture
6 Papers
24 Citations
Takashi Baba is an academic researcher from University of Shiga Prefecture. The author has contributed to research in topics: Limnoperna fortunei & Freshwater mollusc. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Limnoperna Fortunei : The Ecology, Distribution and Control of a Swiftly Spreading Invasive Fouling Mussel
Takashi Baba,Renata Claudi,Nancy Correa,Gustavo Darrigran,Kenji Ito,Keiji Iwasaki,Alexander Y. Karatayev,Hugh McIsaac,Luciana Montalto,Brian Morton,Daisuke Nakano,Kousaku Ohkawa,Márcia Divina de Oliveira,Florencia Rojas Molina,Mengzhen Xu,Daniel Cataldo,Esteban Marcelo Paolucci,Paula Sardiña,Francisco Sylvester,Rodrigo Brindeiro,Lyuba Burlakova,Mônica de Cássia Souza Campos,Cristina Damborenea,Francesco Dondero,Stephen K. Hamilton,Susana José de Paggi,Takuya Kobayashi,Cristina Mansur,Takaomi Nomura,Dianna K. Padilla,Juan Cesar Paggi,Pablo E. Penchaszadeh,Francisco Prosdocimi,Mauro de Freitas Rebelo,Isamu Sakaguchi,Erik V. Thuesen,Marcela Uliano,Misako Urabe,Hugh J. MacIsaac,Juliana Alves Americo,Demetrio Boltovskoy +40 more
- 01 Jan 2015
64
Invasion, dispersion, population persistence and ecological impacts of a freshwater mussel (Limnoperna fortunei) in the Honshu Island of Japan
Daisuke Nakano,Daisuke Nakano,Takashi Baba,Noriyuki Endo,Shigeya Nagayama,Ai Fujinaga,Asako Uchida,Akiko Shiragane,Misako Urabe,Takuya Kobayashi +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors integrated data for the invasion, distribution, genetic composition and ecological impacts of L. fortunei on the Honshu Island of Japan and compared the invasion processes of freshwater mussels in continental and non-continental rivers.
23
Liolope copulans (Trematoda: Digenea: Liolopidae) parasitic in Andrias japonicus (Amphibia: Caudata: Cryptobranchidae) in Japan: Life cycle and systematic position inferred from morphological and molecular evidence.
TL;DR: The result of molecular phylogenetic analysis suggests that L. copulans may be one of the basal taxa of the order Diplostomida Olson, Cribb, Tkach, Bray, and Littlewood, 2003, but its systematic position is still unclear because of the topological inconsistence between the 28S and 18S trees.
8
Parasites of Limnoperna fortunei
Takashi Baba,Misako Urabe +1 more
- 01 Jan 2015
TL;DR: The results of fish sampling in the field, and field and laboratory experiments showed that 27 fish species and 13 fish species are the second intermediate hosts of Pa. parasiluri and Pr.
3