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Japanese giant salamander

The Japanese giant salamander (Andrias japonicus) is a species of fully aquatic giant salamander endemic to Japan. With a length of up to 5 feet (1.5 m),[4] it is the third-largest salamander in the world, only being surpassed by the very similar and closely related Chinese giant salamander and the South China giant salamander.

Japanese giant salamander
Japanese giant salamander in Tottori Prefecture, Japan
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Amphibia
Order: Urodela
Family: Cryptobranchidae
Genus: Andrias
Species:
A. japonicus
Binomial name
Andrias japonicus
(Temminck, 1836)
Japanese giant salamander range
Synonyms[2]
List
    • Triton japonicus
      Temminck, 1836
    • Megalobatrachus sieboldi
      Tschudi, 1837
    • Salamandra maxima
      Schlegel, 1837
    • Hydrosalamandra japonica
      — Leuckart, 1840
    • Sieboldia maxima
      Gray, 1850
    • Cryptobranchus japonicus
      — Van der Hoeven, 1838
    • Salamandra gigas
      A.M.C. Duméril, Bibron &
      A.H.A. Duméril, 1854
    • Tritomegas sieboldii
      — A.M.C. Duméril, Bibron &
      A.H.A. Duméril, 1854
    • Megalobatrachus maximus
      Boulenger, 1882
    • Cryptobranchus maximus
      — Chapman, 1893
    • Andrias japonicus
      Lapparent, 1900
Japanese giant salamanders in Tottori Prefecture, Japan, showing notable color variation among individuals within the same population.
Andrias japonicus skull

It is known in Japanese as Ōsanshōuo (オオサンショウウオ/大山椒魚), literally meaning "giant salamander". Other local names include Hanzaki[5], Hanzake[6], and Ankou.[5] This salamander was first catalogued by Europeans when the resident physician of Dejima Island in Nagasaki, Philipp Franz von Siebold, captured an individual and shipped it back to Leiden in the Netherlands, in the 1820s. The species was designated as a special natural monument in 1951, and is federally protected.[7] It is one of the only six species of giant salamanders in the world.

Description edit

The Japanese giant salamander can grow to a length of 5 feet (1.5 m) and a weight of 55 pounds (25 kg). The largest wild specimen on record weighed 58 lb (26.3 kg) and was 4.46 ft (136 cm) long.[8] It is the third-largest amphibian in the world, only smaller than its close relatives, the South China giant salamander[9] and the Chinese giant salamander. The brown and black mottled skin of A. japonicus provides camouflage against the bottoms of streams and rivers. Its body surface is covered with numerous small warts with distinctive warts concentrating on its head. It has very small eyes with no eyelids and poor eye sight. Its mouth extends across the width of its head, and can open to the width of its body.[10]

A. japonicus possesses large skin folds on its neck that effectively increase its overall body surface area. This assists in epidermal gas exchanges, which in turn regulates carbon dioxide and oxygen exchange with the water. Capillaries in the surface of the skin facilitate this gas exchange.[11] The skin folds along each side of the body are more pronounced in the hellbender than in the Japanese giant salamander.

The Japanese giant salamander can be distinguished from the Chinese giant salamander by the arrangement of tubercles on the head and throat. The tubercles are larger and more numerous compared to the mostly single and irregularly scattered tubercles of the Chinese giant salamander. The snout is also more rounded, and the tail is slightly shorter.[12]

Adult males develop enlarged cloacal glands during the breeding season. Compared to an adult female, an adult male typically possesses a larger and wider head in proportion to its body. It is difficult to distinguish sex outside of the breeding season.

Distribution edit

The Japanese giant salamander occurs in southwestern Japan (west of Gifu Prefecture in Honshu and parts of Shikoku and Kyushu). In particular, Okayama, Hyogo, Shimane, Tottori, Yamaguchi, Mie, Ehime, Gifu, and Ōita Prefecture are known to harbor its robust populations.[13] They are typically found in fast-flowing mountain streams of these prefectures. It has been speculated that some of the populations in Wakayama Prefecture were introduced by humans and it is unknown whether naturally-distributed populations exist in Wakayama Prefecture.[14]

The Japanese giant salamander occurs in freshwater habitats ranging from relatively large river (20-50 m) to small headwater streams (0.5 - 4 m).[15][16] Smaller breeding adults tend to use small headwater streams presumably in order to avoid intraspecific competition with larger individuals in larger streams.[16] Mark-recapture records suggest that giant salamanders migrate between a mainstem and tributaries of the same river.[16] Environmental DNA surveys and the following physical field surveys suggest that small headwater streams likely serve as important habitats for juveniles and larvae.[16] While habitat degradation threatens the Japanese giant salamander, it can inhabit disturbed streams surrounded by agriculture fields such as rice paddy fields.[15] Adults appear to do well in a stream surrounded by rice paddy fields because rice paddy fields provide habitats for frogs, which serve as primary diet for adult giant salamanders in such a stream.[15] However, streams surrounded by rice paddy fields are typically characterized by agricultural dams and concrete stream banks, which likely imposes a negative impact on their reproduction and thus result in low recruitment.[15]

Behavior edit

The Japanese giant salamander is restricted to streams with clear, cool water. Due to its large size and lack of gills, it is confined to flowing water where oxygen is abundant.[17] it is entirely aquatic and almost entirely nocturnal. Unlike typical pond-breeding salamanders whose juveniles migrate to land after losing their gills through metamorphosis, it stays in the aquatic habitat even after metamorphosis and breaches its head above the surface to obtain air without venturing out of the water and onto land. The salamander also absorbs oxygen through its skin, which has many folds to increase surface area.[10]

When threatened, the Japanese giant salamander can excrete a strong-smelling, milky substance. It has very poor eyesight, and possesses special sensory cells covering its skin, running from head to toe, the lateral line system. These sensory cells' hair-like shapes detect minute vibrations in the environment, and are quite similar to the hair cells of the human inner ear. This feature is essential for hunting prey due to its poor eyesight.

Adults feed mainly on freshwater crabs, other crustaceans, worms, insects,[18] frogs, and fish. It has a very slow metabolism and can sometimes go for weeks without eating.[10] It lacks natural competitors. It is a long-lived species, with the captive record being an individual that lived in the Natura Artis Magistra, the Netherlands, for 52 years.[4] In the wild, it may live for nearly 80 years.[citation needed]

Lifecycle edit

The Japanese giant salamander remains in bodies of water its entire life. During the mating season, typically in late August and early September, sexually mature males start actively finding suitable nesting sites and often migrate upstream into smaller sections of the river or its tributaries.[19] Because of the limited availability of suitable nesting sites, only large and competitive males are able to occupy nesting sites and become den masters. A den master diligently cleans his den[20] guards his den against intruders including other males who try to steal the den while allowing a sexually active female enter the den. Mating begins as the female starts laying eggs and the den master starts releasing sperm, which often stimulate other subordinate males hiding around the den to enter the den and join the mating. As a result, a single female often mates with multiple males. The den master stays in the den with the fertilized eggs while the other males and the female leave the den. He provides parental care for the embryos by guarding the eggs and fanning water over them with his tail to increase oxygen flow.[21] The den-master continues providing parental care for the hatchlings until the following spring when the larvae start dispersing from the nest.[22] Researchers also observed that den masters consumed eggs and larvae that showed the sign of failed fertilization, death, or water mold infection.[21][22] The researchers termed the behavior of selectively eating his own eggs or larvae "hygienic filial cannibalism" and hypothesize that this behavior importantly increases the survivorship of the remaining offspring by preventing water mold infection on the dead offspring from spreading over the healthy offspring.

Conservation edit

Threats edit

The Japanese giant salamander is threatened by pollution, habitat loss (among other changes, by the silting up of the rivers where it lives), dams and concrete banks, and invasive species.[15][16][23][1] In particular, it is important to note that the construction of concrete streambanks and agricultural dams throughout the distribution range has imposed a significant negative impact on giant salamanders. Concrete banks have deprived of habitats suited for nesting sites, and dams block migration paths and have caused habitat fragmentation. With the ongoing climate change, it is predicted that frequency and intensity of rainstorms in Japan will increase.[24] These rainstorms will likely destroy stream banks more frequently, which could result in the construction of more flood-control dams and concrete banks.

Introgressive hybridization between the native Japanese giant salamander and the introduced Chinese (or South China) giant salamander is one of the major conservation challenges.[23] It has been suggested that although the details are not known, the Chinese giant salamanders imported for food to Japan in 1972 were the sources of the ongoing introgressive hybridization.[25] In Kamo River in Kyoto Prefecture, the study conducted from 2011 to 2013 found that 95% of the captured giant salamanders were hybrids.[23] The introgressive hybridization appears to be spreading across several watersheds.[23]

In some regions, giant salamanders used to be hunted as a source of food, but hunting has ceased because of the protection acts established after World War II.

Status edit

As of 2022 the Japanese giant salamander is considered Vulnerable by IUCN,[1] and is included on CITES Appendix I.[26] It is considered Vulnerable by the Japanese Ministry of the Environment.[27] Additionally, it has been given the highest protection as a "Special Natural Monument" by the Japanese Agency for Cultural Affairs since 1952 due to its cultural and educational significance.[28]

Efforts edit

Despite the national protection and conservation status, there have been no conservation programs or actions initiated by the government agencies. Instead, nonprofit organizations such as the Japanese Giant Salamander Society and the Hanzaki Research Institute of Japan have organized volunteers to conduct population assessments in some areas. The Japanese Giant Salamander Society also organizes annual meetings to promote the conservation education and information sharing about the species. There is no range-wide conservation or recovery program, which is essential to the conservation of the species whose populations have been declining throughout its range.[1]

The Hiroshima City Asa Zoological Park of Japan was the first domestic organization to successfully breed Japanese giant salamanders in captivity.[29] Several of their offspring were given to the National Zoo of the United States to establish a breeding program.[30] Although Asa Zoological Park has not released any offspring to streams, it has a capacity to carry out a headstarting program if needed.

Cultural references edit

 
Ukiyo-e print by Utagawa Kuniyoshi depicting a giant salamander being stabbed by the samurai Hanagami Danjō no jō Arakage

The Japanese giant salamander has been the subject of legend and artwork in Japan, for example, in the ukiyo-e work by Utagawa Kuniyoshi. The well-known Japanese mythological creature known as the kappa may be inspired by the Japanese giant salamander.[31][better source needed]

There is a giant salamander festival every year on August 8 in Yubara, Maniwa City, Okayama prefecture to honour the animal and celebrate its life. The giant salamanders are called "Hanzaki" in Yubara, due to the belief that even if they are ripped in half (han) they continue to survive. There are two giant salamander floats: a dark male and a red female.[32]

As of 2017, a picture book entitled "Zakihan" was also published in both Japanese and English wherein the main character is a "hanzaki" called "Zakihan".

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group (2022). "Japanese Giant Salamander". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2022. Retrieved 9 December 2022.
  2. ^ . Research.amnh.org. Archived from the original on 2009-03-26. Retrieved 2010-02-04.
  3. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  4. ^ a b Andrias japonicus - Amphibiaweb
  5. ^ a b "What is the Hanzaki Research Institute of Japan?". 日本ハンザキ研究所 (in Japanese). Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  6. ^ "ハンザケ資料展示室". よりみちにちなん (in Japanese). 2020-02-29. Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  7. ^ オオサンショウウオ (in Japanese). The Agency for Cultural Affairs. Retrieved 2011-09-24.
  8. ^ Tochimoto, pers. com>
  9. ^ "Newly described Chinese giant salamander may be world's largest amphibian". 17 September 2019.
  10. ^ a b c . Smithsonian National Zoological Park. Archived from the original on 2016-06-24. Retrieved 2016-06-13.
  11. ^ "Andrias japonicus". Animal Diversity Web. Retrieved 2018-03-28.
  12. ^ "AmphibiaWeb - Andrias japonicus".
  13. ^ "Natural Monuments in Japan (Animals and Plants)".
  14. ^ Shimizu, Zenkichi; Tamai, Sumio (2016). "Records of Japanese giant salamander Andrias japonicus from Wakayama Prefecture, Japan". The Nanki Seibutsu. 58: 99–106.
  15. ^ a b c d e Okada, Sumio; Utsunomiya, Taeko; Okada, Tamami; Felix, Zachary; Ito, Fumihiko (2008). "Characteristics of Japanese Giant Salamander (Andronias japonicus) populations in two small tributary streams in Hiroshima Prefecture, Western Honshu, Japan". Herpetological Conservation and Biology. 3: 192–202.
  16. ^ a b c d e Bjordahl, Brianna; Okada, Sumio; Takahashi, Mizuki (2020). "Assessment of small tributaries as possible habitats for larvae and juveniles of Japanese giant salamanders, Andrias japonicus, by coupling environmental DNA with traditional field surveys". Salamandra. 56: 148–158.
  17. ^ The Encyclopedia of Reptiles and Amphibians. Facts on File Inc. 1986. ISBN 0-8160-1359-4.
  18. ^ "Andrias japonicus". Animal Diversity Web.
  19. ^ Kuwabara, K.; Ashikaga, K.; Minamigawa, N.; Nakanishi, M.; Shimada, H.; Kamata, H.; Fukumoto, Y. (2005). "The breeding ecology and conservation of the Japanese giant salamander, Andrias japonicus, at Shijihara and Kamiishi in Tokyohira-cho, Hiroshima Prefecture". Natural History of Nishi-Chugoku Mountains. 10: 101-133 (in Japanese with English abstract).
  20. ^ Terry, J.; Taguchi, Y.; Dixon, J.; Kuwabara, K.; Takahashi, M. K. (2019). "Preoviposition paternal care in a fully aquatic giant salamander: nest cleaning by a den master". Journal of Zoology. 307 (1): 36–42. doi:10.1111/jzo.12615. ISSN 1469-7998. S2CID 92209611.
  21. ^ a b Okada, Sumio; Fukuda, Yukihiro; Takahashi, Mizuki (2015). "Paternal care behaviors of Japanese giant salamander Andrias japonicus in natural populations". Journal of Ethology. 33: 1–7. doi:10.1007/s10164-014-0413-5.
  22. ^ a b Takahashi, M. K.; Okada, S.; Fukuda, Y. (2017). "From embryos to larvae: seven-month-long paternal care by male Japanese giant salamander". Journal of Zoology. 302 (1): 24–31. doi:10.1111/jzo.12433. ISSN 1469-7998.
  23. ^ a b c d Matsui, Masafumi (2014). "Confirmation of genetic pollution of alien Chinese giant salamander on native Japanese species (In Japanese)" (PDF).
  24. ^ Ministry of the Environment, Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, & Japan Meteorological Agency (2018): Climate change in Japan and its impacts. – Synthesis Report on Observations, Projections and Impact Assessments of Climate Change, 2018.
  25. ^ "Chinese Giant Salamander / National Institute for Environmental Studies Invasive Species Database (In Japanese)". www.nies.go.jp. Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  26. ^ "Appendices | CITES". cites.org. Retrieved 2021-11-18.
  27. ^ Ministry of the Environment (2006): Japan Ministry of the Environment Red List.
  28. ^ Agency for Cultural Affairs (1952): Nationally Designated Important Cultural Properties.
  29. ^ Kuwabara, K.; Suzuki, N.; Wakabayashi, F.; Ashikaga, H.; Inoue, T.; Kobara, J. (1989). "Breeding the Japanese Giant Salamander at Asa Zoological Park". International Zoo Yearbook. 1989: 22–31.
  30. ^ . Smithsonian National Zoological Park. Archived from the original on 2016-06-29. Retrieved 2016-06-13.
  31. ^ "River Monsters" programme 6 Series 3 directed by Duncan Chard, screened in UK on ITV1 14.02.2012 at 19.30
  32. ^ "AltJapan: Hanzaki Matsuri Dakara". altjapan.typepad.com. Retrieved 2017-04-25.

Further reading edit

  • Stejneger L (1907). Herpetology of Japan and Adjacent Territory. United States National Museum Bulletin 58. Washington, District of Columbia: Smithsonian Institution. xx + 577 pp. (Megalobatrachus japonicus, pp. 6–11).
  • Temminck CJ (1836). Coup-d'oeil sur la Faune des Iles de la Sonde et de l'Empire du Japon. Discours préliminaire destiné à servir d'introduction à la Faune du Japon. Amsterdam: Müller. 30 pp. (Triton japonicus, new species). (in French).

External links edit

  •   Media related to Andrias japonicus at Wikimedia Commons
  • Andrias japonicus at CalPhotos
  • Discovery Channel Video on the giant salamander
  • BBC report

japanese, giant, salamander, andrias, japonicus, species, fully, aquatic, giant, salamander, endemic, japan, with, length, feet, third, largest, salamander, world, only, being, surpassed, very, similar, closely, related, chinese, giant, salamander, south, chin. The Japanese giant salamander Andrias japonicus is a species of fully aquatic giant salamander endemic to Japan With a length of up to 5 feet 1 5 m 4 it is the third largest salamander in the world only being surpassed by the very similar and closely related Chinese giant salamander and the South China giant salamander Japanese giant salamanderJapanese giant salamander in Tottori Prefecture JapanConservation statusVulnerable IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AmphibiaOrder UrodelaFamily CryptobranchidaeGenus AndriasSpecies A japonicusBinomial nameAndrias japonicus Temminck 1836 Japanese giant salamander rangeSynonyms 2 List Triton japonicus Temminck 1836 Megalobatrachus sieboldi Tschudi 1837 Salamandra maxima Schlegel 1837 Hydrosalamandra japonica Leuckart 1840 Sieboldia maxima Gray 1850 Cryptobranchus japonicus Van der Hoeven 1838 Salamandra gigas A M C Dumeril Bibron amp A H A Dumeril 1854 Tritomegas sieboldii A M C Dumeril Bibron amp A H A Dumeril 1854 Megalobatrachus maximus Boulenger 1882 Cryptobranchus maximus Chapman 1893 Andrias japonicus Lapparent 1900Japanese giant salamanders in Tottori Prefecture Japan showing notable color variation among individuals within the same population Andrias japonicus skullIt is known in Japanese as Ōsanshōuo オオサンショウウオ 大山椒魚 literally meaning giant salamander Other local names include Hanzaki 5 Hanzake 6 and Ankou 5 This salamander was first catalogued by Europeans when the resident physician of Dejima Island in Nagasaki Philipp Franz von Siebold captured an individual and shipped it back to Leiden in the Netherlands in the 1820s The species was designated as a special natural monument in 1951 and is federally protected 7 It is one of the only six species of giant salamanders in the world Contents 1 Description 2 Distribution 3 Behavior 4 Lifecycle 5 Conservation 5 1 Threats 5 2 Status 5 3 Efforts 6 Cultural references 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksDescription editThe Japanese giant salamander can grow to a length of 5 feet 1 5 m and a weight of 55 pounds 25 kg The largest wild specimen on record weighed 58 lb 26 3 kg and was 4 46 ft 136 cm long 8 It is the third largest amphibian in the world only smaller than its close relatives the South China giant salamander 9 and the Chinese giant salamander The brown and black mottled skin of A japonicus provides camouflage against the bottoms of streams and rivers Its body surface is covered with numerous small warts with distinctive warts concentrating on its head It has very small eyes with no eyelids and poor eye sight Its mouth extends across the width of its head and can open to the width of its body 10 A japonicus possesses large skin folds on its neck that effectively increase its overall body surface area This assists in epidermal gas exchanges which in turn regulates carbon dioxide and oxygen exchange with the water Capillaries in the surface of the skin facilitate this gas exchange 11 The skin folds along each side of the body are more pronounced in the hellbender than in the Japanese giant salamander The Japanese giant salamander can be distinguished from the Chinese giant salamander by the arrangement of tubercles on the head and throat The tubercles are larger and more numerous compared to the mostly single and irregularly scattered tubercles of the Chinese giant salamander The snout is also more rounded and the tail is slightly shorter 12 Adult males develop enlarged cloacal glands during the breeding season Compared to an adult female an adult male typically possesses a larger and wider head in proportion to its body It is difficult to distinguish sex outside of the breeding season Distribution editThe Japanese giant salamander occurs in southwestern Japan west of Gifu Prefecture in Honshu and parts of Shikoku and Kyushu In particular Okayama Hyogo Shimane Tottori Yamaguchi Mie Ehime Gifu and Ōita Prefecture are known to harbor its robust populations 13 They are typically found in fast flowing mountain streams of these prefectures It has been speculated that some of the populations in Wakayama Prefecture were introduced by humans and it is unknown whether naturally distributed populations exist in Wakayama Prefecture 14 The Japanese giant salamander occurs in freshwater habitats ranging from relatively large river 20 50 m to small headwater streams 0 5 4 m 15 16 Smaller breeding adults tend to use small headwater streams presumably in order to avoid intraspecific competition with larger individuals in larger streams 16 Mark recapture records suggest that giant salamanders migrate between a mainstem and tributaries of the same river 16 Environmental DNA surveys and the following physical field surveys suggest that small headwater streams likely serve as important habitats for juveniles and larvae 16 While habitat degradation threatens the Japanese giant salamander it can inhabit disturbed streams surrounded by agriculture fields such as rice paddy fields 15 Adults appear to do well in a stream surrounded by rice paddy fields because rice paddy fields provide habitats for frogs which serve as primary diet for adult giant salamanders in such a stream 15 However streams surrounded by rice paddy fields are typically characterized by agricultural dams and concrete stream banks which likely imposes a negative impact on their reproduction and thus result in low recruitment 15 Behavior editThe Japanese giant salamander is restricted to streams with clear cool water Due to its large size and lack of gills it is confined to flowing water where oxygen is abundant 17 it is entirely aquatic and almost entirely nocturnal Unlike typical pond breeding salamanders whose juveniles migrate to land after losing their gills through metamorphosis it stays in the aquatic habitat even after metamorphosis and breaches its head above the surface to obtain air without venturing out of the water and onto land The salamander also absorbs oxygen through its skin which has many folds to increase surface area 10 When threatened the Japanese giant salamander can excrete a strong smelling milky substance It has very poor eyesight and possesses special sensory cells covering its skin running from head to toe the lateral line system These sensory cells hair like shapes detect minute vibrations in the environment and are quite similar to the hair cells of the human inner ear This feature is essential for hunting prey due to its poor eyesight Adults feed mainly on freshwater crabs other crustaceans worms insects 18 frogs and fish It has a very slow metabolism and can sometimes go for weeks without eating 10 It lacks natural competitors It is a long lived species with the captive record being an individual that lived in the Natura Artis Magistra the Netherlands for 52 years 4 In the wild it may live for nearly 80 years citation needed Lifecycle editThe Japanese giant salamander remains in bodies of water its entire life During the mating season typically in late August and early September sexually mature males start actively finding suitable nesting sites and often migrate upstream into smaller sections of the river or its tributaries 19 Because of the limited availability of suitable nesting sites only large and competitive males are able to occupy nesting sites and become den masters A den master diligently cleans his den 20 guards his den against intruders including other males who try to steal the den while allowing a sexually active female enter the den Mating begins as the female starts laying eggs and the den master starts releasing sperm which often stimulate other subordinate males hiding around the den to enter the den and join the mating As a result a single female often mates with multiple males The den master stays in the den with the fertilized eggs while the other males and the female leave the den He provides parental care for the embryos by guarding the eggs and fanning water over them with his tail to increase oxygen flow 21 The den master continues providing parental care for the hatchlings until the following spring when the larvae start dispersing from the nest 22 Researchers also observed that den masters consumed eggs and larvae that showed the sign of failed fertilization death or water mold infection 21 22 The researchers termed the behavior of selectively eating his own eggs or larvae hygienic filial cannibalism and hypothesize that this behavior importantly increases the survivorship of the remaining offspring by preventing water mold infection on the dead offspring from spreading over the healthy offspring Conservation editThreats edit The Japanese giant salamander is threatened by pollution habitat loss among other changes by the silting up of the rivers where it lives dams and concrete banks and invasive species 15 16 23 1 In particular it is important to note that the construction of concrete streambanks and agricultural dams throughout the distribution range has imposed a significant negative impact on giant salamanders Concrete banks have deprived of habitats suited for nesting sites and dams block migration paths and have caused habitat fragmentation With the ongoing climate change it is predicted that frequency and intensity of rainstorms in Japan will increase 24 These rainstorms will likely destroy stream banks more frequently which could result in the construction of more flood control dams and concrete banks Introgressive hybridization between the native Japanese giant salamander and the introduced Chinese or South China giant salamander is one of the major conservation challenges 23 It has been suggested that although the details are not known the Chinese giant salamanders imported for food to Japan in 1972 were the sources of the ongoing introgressive hybridization 25 In Kamo River in Kyoto Prefecture the study conducted from 2011 to 2013 found that 95 of the captured giant salamanders were hybrids 23 The introgressive hybridization appears to be spreading across several watersheds 23 In some regions giant salamanders used to be hunted as a source of food but hunting has ceased because of the protection acts established after World War II Preservered specimen kept at Naturalis Biodiversity Center NL nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Status edit As of 2022 the Japanese giant salamander is considered Vulnerable by IUCN 1 and is included on CITES Appendix I 26 It is considered Vulnerable by the Japanese Ministry of the Environment 27 Additionally it has been given the highest protection as a Special Natural Monument by the Japanese Agency for Cultural Affairs since 1952 due to its cultural and educational significance 28 Efforts edit Despite the national protection and conservation status there have been no conservation programs or actions initiated by the government agencies Instead nonprofit organizations such as the Japanese Giant Salamander Society and the Hanzaki Research Institute of Japan have organized volunteers to conduct population assessments in some areas The Japanese Giant Salamander Society also organizes annual meetings to promote the conservation education and information sharing about the species There is no range wide conservation or recovery program which is essential to the conservation of the species whose populations have been declining throughout its range 1 The Hiroshima City Asa Zoological Park of Japan was the first domestic organization to successfully breed Japanese giant salamanders in captivity 29 Several of their offspring were given to the National Zoo of the United States to establish a breeding program 30 Although Asa Zoological Park has not released any offspring to streams it has a capacity to carry out a headstarting program if needed Cultural references edit nbsp Ukiyo e print by Utagawa Kuniyoshi depicting a giant salamander being stabbed by the samurai Hanagami Danjō no jō ArakageThe Japanese giant salamander has been the subject of legend and artwork in Japan for example in the ukiyo e work by Utagawa Kuniyoshi The well known Japanese mythological creature known as the kappa may be inspired by the Japanese giant salamander 31 better source needed There is a giant salamander festival every year on August 8 in Yubara Maniwa City Okayama prefecture to honour the animal and celebrate its life The giant salamanders are called Hanzaki in Yubara due to the belief that even if they are ripped in half han they continue to survive There are two giant salamander floats a dark male and a red female 32 As of 2017 a picture book entitled Zakihan was also published in both Japanese and English wherein the main character is a hanzaki called Zakihan See also editList of Special Places of Scenic Beauty Special Historic Sites and Special Natural Monuments nbsp Amphibians portalReferences edit a b c d IUCN SSC Amphibian Specialist Group 2022 Japanese Giant Salamander IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2022 Retrieved 9 December 2022 Amphibian Species of the World Andrias japonicus Temminck 1836 Research amnh org Archived from the original on 2009 03 26 Retrieved 2010 02 04 Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved 2022 01 14 a b Andrias japonicus Amphibiaweb a b What is the Hanzaki Research Institute of Japan 日本ハンザキ研究所 in Japanese Retrieved 2021 11 17 ハンザケ資料展示室 よりみちにちなん in Japanese 2020 02 29 Retrieved 2021 11 17 オオサンショウウオ in Japanese The Agency for Cultural Affairs Retrieved 2011 09 24 Tochimoto pers com gt Newly described Chinese giant salamander may be world s largest amphibian 17 September 2019 a b c Japanese Giant Salamander Smithsonian National Zoological Park Archived from the original on 2016 06 24 Retrieved 2016 06 13 Andrias japonicus Animal Diversity Web Retrieved 2018 03 28 AmphibiaWeb Andrias japonicus Natural Monuments in Japan Animals and Plants Shimizu Zenkichi Tamai Sumio 2016 Records of Japanese giant salamander Andrias japonicus from Wakayama Prefecture Japan The Nanki Seibutsu 58 99 106 a b c d e Okada Sumio Utsunomiya Taeko Okada Tamami Felix Zachary Ito Fumihiko 2008 Characteristics of Japanese Giant Salamander Andronias japonicus populations in two small tributary streams in Hiroshima Prefecture Western Honshu Japan Herpetological Conservation and Biology 3 192 202 a b c d e Bjordahl Brianna Okada Sumio Takahashi Mizuki 2020 Assessment of small tributaries as possible habitats for larvae and juveniles of Japanese giant salamanders Andrias japonicus by coupling environmental DNA with traditional field surveys Salamandra 56 148 158 The Encyclopedia of Reptiles and Amphibians Facts on File Inc 1986 ISBN 0 8160 1359 4 Andrias japonicus Animal Diversity Web Kuwabara K Ashikaga K Minamigawa N Nakanishi M Shimada H Kamata H Fukumoto Y 2005 The breeding ecology and conservation of the Japanese giant salamander Andrias japonicus at Shijihara and Kamiishi in Tokyohira cho Hiroshima Prefecture Natural History of Nishi Chugoku Mountains 10 101 133 in Japanese with English abstract Terry J Taguchi Y Dixon J Kuwabara K Takahashi M K 2019 Preoviposition paternal care in a fully aquatic giant salamander nest cleaning by a den master Journal of Zoology 307 1 36 42 doi 10 1111 jzo 12615 ISSN 1469 7998 S2CID 92209611 a b Okada Sumio Fukuda Yukihiro Takahashi Mizuki 2015 Paternal care behaviors of Japanese giant salamander Andrias japonicus in natural populations Journal of Ethology 33 1 7 doi 10 1007 s10164 014 0413 5 a b Takahashi M K Okada S Fukuda Y 2017 From embryos to larvae seven month long paternal care by male Japanese giant salamander Journal of Zoology 302 1 24 31 doi 10 1111 jzo 12433 ISSN 1469 7998 a b c d Matsui Masafumi 2014 Confirmation of genetic pollution of alien Chinese giant salamander on native Japanese species In Japanese PDF Ministry of the Environment Ministry of Education Culture Sports Science and Technology Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Ministry of Land Infrastructure Transport and Tourism amp Japan Meteorological Agency 2018 Climate change in Japan and its impacts Synthesis Report on Observations Projections and Impact Assessments of Climate Change 2018 Chinese Giant Salamander National Institute for Environmental Studies Invasive Species Database In Japanese www nies go jp Retrieved 2021 11 17 Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved 2021 11 18 Ministry of the Environment 2006 Japan Ministry of the Environment Red List Agency for Cultural Affairs 1952 Nationally Designated Important Cultural Properties Kuwabara K Suzuki N Wakabayashi F Ashikaga H Inoue T Kobara J 1989 Breeding the Japanese Giant Salamander at Asa Zoological Park International Zoo Yearbook 1989 22 31 Japanese Giant Salamanders at the Zoo Smithsonian National Zoological Park Archived from the original on 2016 06 29 Retrieved 2016 06 13 River Monsters programme 6 Series 3 directed by Duncan Chard screened in UK on ITV1 14 02 2012 at 19 30 AltJapan Hanzaki Matsuri Dakara altjapan typepad com Retrieved 2017 04 25 Further reading editStejneger L 1907 Herpetology of Japan and Adjacent Territory United States National Museum Bulletin 58 Washington District of Columbia Smithsonian Institution xx 577 pp Megalobatrachus japonicus pp 6 11 Temminck CJ 1836 Coup d oeil sur la Faune des Iles de la Sonde et de l Empire du Japon Discours preliminaire destine a servir d introduction a la Faune du Japon Amsterdam Muller 30 pp Triton japonicus new species in French External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Andrias japonicus nbsp Media related to Andrias japonicus at Wikimedia Commons Andrias japonicus at CalPhotos Discovery Channel Video on the giant salamander BBC report Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japanese giant salamander amp oldid 1187567136, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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