Sunday, March 29, 2026

For the 21st Century Japanese Nature Positive: Meiji University Kurokawa Farm

 


Kurokawa in Aso Ward of Kawasaki is an old community. It was a typical Satoyama village where farmers cultivated rice and veggies. They tended their hills with deciduous broad leaved trees for procuring logs as fuel and fallen leaves as mulches for their farms. They hand-crafted bamboo baskets made of many kinds of bamboos taken from their land and sold it as “Made-in-Kurokawa” brand in the old market of Hachioji where many people gathered for trade in hilly part of Kanto region (; my posts for December 8 and 15, 2024). The place still preserves the atmosphere of such idyllic life of yesteryears. Yet, we encounter the big road when we enter Kurokawa Forest from Haruhino Station side and go north. It is Tokyo Metropolitan Road 158 administered by Tokyo, not Kanagawa. Kurokawa Forest is on the border between Tokyo and Kanagawa. The mass of condos beyond Route 158 is the show of the biggest housing project in Japan, Tama New Town.

The crossing which demarcate
the old Kurokawa community
and suburban housing area.

As this location tells, Kurokawa experienced many transformations from the days of Kurokawa-brand bamboo basket. After 1945, the end of WWII, a part of Kurokawa became a ground for the US troops for their mission, perhaps of security something. When the mass development of Tama New Town went on in the 1960s, American part of the forest was a property of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, not farmers, which bought the land and used it for testing their gears in their product development. By the 1990s, the company concluded using the land for such purposes in the middle of housing development of Tokyo was the unnecessary burden of property tax. They decided to sell it to somebody. That somebody turned out to be Meiji University. The university has the campus for the Faculty of Agriculture in Ikuta, Kawasaki, and looked around nearby larger land for their experimental farm. In 2012, the former ground for mechanical heavy equipment was reopened as an educational space for young people who plan to be a part of food industry in near future. The entire area of Meiji University Kurokawa Farm is currently off limit for public. There is a gate at its entrance where the security people check a proper ID. This winter, I happened to have a chance to attend a course there for Satoyama management by Prof. Noboru Kuramoto. This week, I tell you my impressions from the experimental farm.

Lecture building for Kurokawa Farm

The location of the campus is really at the end of Kawasaki City. We get off the Odakyu Tama Line at Kurokawa Station and walk to the Ceresamos Kawasaki farmers’ market. Walk around the Ceresamos ground and we find a road on our right which is an exit route when we visited art show in Kurokawa Forest (; my post for December 2, 2022). This time, we ignore the direction of art-show and proceed simply straight in rice paddies. Eventually, we meet a crossing of community roads. Take the left route which soon (10m or so ahead) returns straight road with a row of greenhouses on our right and bamboo forest on our left. The road curves gently to the right. We find white buildings over there beyond the hill which is Martial Arts Hall for Tama Campus of Kokushikan University where many athletes reside. And the gate for Kurokawa Farm is in front of us.

Ceresamos

Turning the corner of Ceresamos, please go straight.

In autumn,
the harvested rice was dried in a traditional way
in Kurokawa.

The crossing. Please take directions for green houses.

The road gently curves to the right.

The buildings for Martial Arts

The security gate for the farm.

From the gate, one paved road goes up a hill. When the university redeveloped the former testing ground of heavy industry, young Prof. Kuramoto was a person who was in charge of project management. At the beginning, he wished the slope would eventually invite fireflies dancing in June from a stream running on another side of the hill. According to him, such thing has not happened so far, as the stream on the other side was experienced the public works for flood control with U-shaped ditch, i.e. concreted. Anyway, the name of the slope is Firefly Slope. At the end of the slope are campus buildings such as Lecture Building, labs, and special warehouses for organic farming. These buildings are surrounded by experimental farming fields. Prof. Kuramoto said before these fields were mechanical testing ground for Mitsubishi enclosed by small hills with ups and downs. To teach students the recent mechanization in agriculture, such ups and downs were not desirable. So, the design of the place ordered the hills to be flattened. The excavated soil, by-product of civil engineering, was piled up as a new hill next to the security check point.

Firefly slope

Glass houses for experiments

Lecture rooms and labs

The experimental field after the excavation is surrounded by ridges of small hills that maintain old trees of Satoyama Kurokawa. They are mainly Quercus acutissima and Quercus serrata which before were nurtured for logs, charcoal baking, and fallen leaves for mulches. They are now very large trees as such utilization of them have stopped about 80 years ago when Americans came Kurokawa. A part of such old forest is utilized to search for the 21st century way of maintaining Satoyama forest. The constraint these days for such effort is labor shortage and proper utilization of knowledge for Satoyama ecosystems. In Satoyama restoration area of the university campus staff starting from professors to engineers in charge of the space experiment new gadgets (“mowing machine for USD 7000 a pop, anyone?”) and practical methods of restoration Satoyama forest that is tailor-made for Kurokawa’s climate.

Experimental cabbage patches, organic, of course.

The farmland is surrounded by old forests.

A mowing machine at the price of entry level of Porche.

A demonstration for moving heavy logs by mechanization

Having said that, Prof. Kuramoto and his team are facing budget constraints of the university. The administration requires long-term stability of the farm’s management. It means the faculty has to choose sooner or later to keep the forest of deciduous trees with frequent mowing, thinning, etc., OR to let evergreen Quercus myrsinifolia dominate the farm. Climax forest for the climate of Tama Hills is of Quercus myrsinifolia. As it is evergreen broadleaved tree, the forest of them is dark. Its forest floor starves for sunshine and ground vegetation has hard time to thrive. Money wise, the maintenance of such climax forest is economical due to its relatively poor ecology. Moreover, before humans started to manage the forest probably thousands of years ago, the forest of Kurokawa area must have been dark forest of Quercus myrsinifolia. The choice the faculty faces is an ultimate kind searching for the meaning of “Nature Positive.” The life cycle of a forest is far longer than for humans. This choice is difficult …

The current forest for Satoyama experiment.
With deciduous trees,
during fall and winter lots of sunshine come to the ground.

The newly created hill by the excavated soil next to the security check point encloses a small semi-dried valley. Its old water source is to the west somewhere on the hill surrounding the university farm. The valley is now sandwiched between the artificial mound to its north shore and the original hill of Satoyama time for the south bank. The university is hoping to make this part of their land public “park” where local people can come and enjoy strolling. At the moment, the plan is yet at a “hoping” stage. The end of the valley is a holding basin gathering water of the valley (a bit) and of the experimental field upstairs (the majority of the water). There is a discussion among faculty members how to proceed for the “park.” Prof. Kuramoto is an expert for Satoyama ecosystem. University also has professors for civil engineering and hydrology. As this is the matter of academia, the discussion keeps on going …

The entrance for the would-be park.
The depression on the left of the photo is a holding basin.

The inside of the “park” site has
lots of such trees with divided trunks.
It is evidence this place was once
a ground of procuring logs for fuel.
Normally, people regularly cut trees of
about 20 years old with 20cm or so diameter.
It was a nice size
to make logs and bake charcoals.
Such tradition was stopped
some 80 years ago in Kurokawa.
 Trees were left on their own devices
and have become tall trees like this now.

The forest floor of the planned “park.”
When the place was working Satoyama,
the floor was swept completely by
gathering leaves and twigs by farmers.
They used them for mulches over their farm land
 and for starters of their hearth fire.
 It made the Satoyama forest floor
 relatively nutrition-poor,
and hence with high biodiversity by lots of sunshine
 directly on the soil.

In addition to such technical discussions for Satoyama restoration, the university also thinks how to establish a solid connection with the traditional Kurokawa community. The community itself undergoes generational change now with the transfer of ownership from the landlords of 2012 to their descendants. As Kurokawa is designated as an Urbanization Control Area, and there is happening a renaissance for urban farming in suburbs of Tokyo, new and young landlords are constructive for managing Kurokawa area for the 21st century agriculture. But it is a different matter if they regard the closed area of academia is a part of their community ... Maybe, the forest of Kurokawa Farm stands at a unique position as a 21st century Satoyama Forest. Satoyama is Japanese way of achieving Nature Positive = cooperations of human life and Mother nature. Let us wait for the conclusion the academia of Meiji University will reach.

Could you figure out
a trace of some “campfire” on the ground?
It is at the end of January
on a rice field near the Kurokawa Farm.
This is a sort of “sacred” place
where the Kurokawa community holds a ritual
 called Sagicho
左義長 for the end of New Year’s festival
 for many many years as long as they remember.
 The tradition is living in Kurokawa community.

Kurokawa Farm of Meiji University 明治大学黒川農場
2060-1 Kurokawa, Aso-ku, Kawasaki, 215-0035
〒215-0035 神奈川県川崎市麻生区黒川2060-1
TEL : 044-980-5300 
E-mail : noujou@meiji.ac.jp

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Why are you here? Strange DNA finding for 2025 Yadoriki Stream

 


The eDNA study for Yadoriki Stream 寄沢 completed the 4th year in 2025. The species found in the specimen indicated nice environment for the source of Kanagawa’s tap of water. The aquatic creatures which left their DNA in the stream were the ones that could live mainly in unpolluted water. It’s good news. Several interesting things came up. Mr. Hasebe for Kanagawa Environmental Research Center, who analyzed the specimen, found the amount of nucleobase was larger from the water collected in April, compared with that for November. Though humans love to dive in fresh water in mid-summer, the amount of nitrogenous base during summer is smaller than for April and November.

Yadoriki Stream in autumn

When we remember the life cycle of water insects, it would be a predictable conclusion. Many of them, including EPTs (Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, Plecoptera; their existence can suggest the level of water quality), leave water by the end of spring as adult mayfly, stonefly, caddisfly, dragonfly, … They spend hot summer on land to find partners, to mate and to lay eggs in water for the next generations. When humans enjoy specimen “hunting” in summer, many waterborne bugs have already left their cradle water.

Yadoriki Stream in mid-summer.
Surprising, it contains the smallest nucleobase.

In autumn, tiny nymphs come out of the eggs. As they move around in water, they will leave tiny bits of their DNA in the stream. Since the absolute number of such water bugs is larger during fall than for summer, we can catch their DNA bits more. But they are still babies if not remaining in eggs. In April, many of them are now bigger final-instar larva ready for the launch pad to leave water as adults. The amount of DNA they shed in water would be bigger than for fall or summer. Mr. Hasebe said the next research agenda would be to verify these hypotheses and to think about the meaning of it for the evolving ecosystem under climate change. We citizens keep on draining water in regular way and send it to the lab. Easy. Let us see how it will turn out.

A larva of Nemoura is eating
a larva of Tipulidae.
And we made them fixed
in alcohol …

Having said that, there is a strange finding. This year, Yadoriki Stream contained DNA for Japanese crucian carp. It’s an endangered species, endemic to Japan, nay, to Lake Biwa 琵琶湖 and to Yodo River 淀川. These two large water systems in Kansai 関西 are, I would say, not mountain streams, but have relatively gentle flow. The carp should love such environment and must be perplexed by rapid current of Yadoriki. Why there? We naturally concluded somebody has introduced them from far Kansai Area. The carp is important ingredient for traditional meals in Kyoto 京都 and Osaka 大阪. People farm them for culinary reasons. Endangered ones are the fish in wild environments. Biologically speaking, wild and cultivated ones are the same species. It’s easy for somebody to bring it to mountainous Yadoriki beyond Hakone 箱根. Maybe that person expected fun to fish crucian carp in Yadoriki. (By the way, to fish in Yadoriki Stream, you need an official license. Otherwise, you’ll be defined as “thief” by the police.) Or, s/he may have nobler intention of “restoring the population of endangered species.” Er, well.

Fishing carp here? No way!

From the fish’s point of view they have moved in an environment VERY different from their ideal home. We can simply expect many will die out quickly before leaving the next generation. Let us pray for them … Or there might be stronger individuals that could survive quick water flow. The next question is, does Yadoriki Stream have sufficient ecosystem that could sustain voracious appetite of the carp? The fish can grow 30cm long within 3 years and reach 60cm or more at the adult stage. If they eat up all the algae and the other animal-based feed, what would happen to the local tiny creatures of Yadoriki stream, such as mayfly, et al? It may not happen, but we must be watchful in any case.

Eggs for montane brown frog
recently in Yadoriki Stream.
They would be gorgeous meal
for carnivorous larger animals, such as carps.

If the release turns out to be successful, it will contribute to saving endangered species in wild. But there is a high possibility in such a case the ecosystem of Yadoriki would be different from the place before the arrival of the carp. Is this a desirable outcome for environmental management in water sources? I simply wonder …


If you find environmental issues in Kanagawa Prefecture, please make contact with

Kanagawa Natural Environment Conservation Center
神奈川県自然環境保全センター
657 Nanasawa, Atsugi City, 243-0121
〒243-0121 厚木市七沢657
Phone: 046-248-0323

You can send an enquiry to them by clicking the bottom line of their homepage at http://www.pref.kanagawa.jp/div/1644/

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Coming: Early spring 2026, Niiharu Citizen Forest

 


Last week, Yokohama was cold. The temperature was around 8°C at best. Greens around us on street looked bleak … This weekend, the highest temperature has reached 14 or 15°C in the North Forest of Yokohama. Finally?


Tadpoles started swimming in Niiharu.
Spring ephemeral, Wind flowers now have florets.

This is also Spring ephemeral, Carex conica Boott.

Yellow avalanche lilies show their buds.

This time of the year,
Pertya scandens have pretty popping plumules.

In Niiharu,
there are lot of trees of Early stachyurus,
Japanese native.
But those receiving lots of sunshine open first.
Flowers are honest.
I think this year
Orychophragmus violaceus flower earlier than violets.
They came from China about 300 years ago.
I heard in China they are vegetable.
Here, we normally don’t eat them.

Er …
chestnuts at the tip of a tree remain there as such …

Fritillaria verticillata var. thunbergii open its flowers now.
They are the first comers for flowering
in early spring and become dormant in late May.

Spring is coming honestly, I feel. But like the very short autumn last year it could end quickly. When the cherry blossoms are gone, Yokohama might jump into hot summer … global warming. Let us see.

Sawtooth oaks have new buds now.

If you have any questions about Yokohama’s Green Tax and Green Up Plan, please make a contact with

Strategic Planning Division, Green Environment Bureau, City of Yokohama
横浜市みどり環境局戦略企画課

Phone: 045-671-2712 
FAX: 045-550-4093
Email: mk-kikaku@city.yokohama.lg.jp

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Merlin in Japan, March 2026: the new age of bird watching III

 


Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr TAX! … So sorry skipping last week for telling my forest adventure with AI. Anyway, this week is for my impression from Merlin in the nearby forests. First, you download the App from Apple Store or Google Play Store on your cellphone. To use the apps fully, please create your account in eBird and tell Merlin you’ll use your eBird account for Merlin. (More to it later.) And don’t forget you keep logging in both eBird and Merlin when you bird-watch with these two AI app. The starting page of Merlin would look like this (Sorry, in Japanese again).


The three icons in the middle of the page tell you the options we can choose to identify a bird somewhere near. From the left,


The icon is to identify bird (single or plural) with flow-chart. You report where you find this bird (address, or GPS data your cellphone report), time (calendar and time the cellphone report to the system), and, if you can see the bird, the size, the most prominent color of it, and finally the activity the bird is doing. When you report them, and tap Next, Merlin replies back the possible candidates based on your saying like this


A part of the list from my reporting.
I saw
Brown-eared bulbul and
Merlin reported back this.
An apparent mistake.

When none of the suggestions fit your sighting, Merlin gives you opportunities to adjust your reporting at the end of the suggestion page, like this

They are the items you reported.
Maybe the size I told Merlin was not exact …

You continue this exercise until you’re sure the bird you’re watching is “This,” just like searching in the pages of reference books. If you think none matches of your finding in the end, you click the bar (directed by the red arrow in above photo), and AI will remember the problem which will be utilized by the next identification exercise in its artificial brain.


The right logo (above) is to identify a bird by photo. I think the way of this approach is basically the same as the usage of picture reference books. AI Merlin sees the picture, searches its huge picture data book, and decides the most likely species for the image. In the training by Wild Bird Society, we tried it with ppt slide showing professionally taken phot of birds like this.



i.e. the bird shown was already identified by pros, and the photo was taken by a pro. Merlin replied to us exactly the “right” answer. For the above it was Eastern Buzzard (Buteo japonicus). The problem is, can we take the above level photo with our cellphone in a field when a bird suddenly comes out in front of us? That is the question, oh yeah. Maybe you have iPhone 17 Pro Max, and the machine will give you the best shot … lucky you. I’ve never tried it in the field. In any case, seeing a bird in a forest and taking a nice photo is difficult at best. The best way would be to sit down quietly, hold your cellphone steady (that would be difficult unless you use supporting gears), wait for a long long time until a bird comes in the frame, and press the shutter button of your cellphone at the right moment. Good luck.


So, the most useful approach to ask help from AI in forests should be the middle icon, which is recording the voice of a bird and Merlin identifies it from its audio data. We tap the icon, and Merlin starts recording.


Recording and thinking …

When AI recognizes the voice matching to the data from its database, it will suggest the identification result like


It surely is a useful tool when the condition is right. I mean, when we’re surrounded by noises, not only from transportation traffic, chatting with our friends, etc., but also of winds and the resulting creaking of swaying bamboos of Niiharu, or babbling stream of Tanzawa, Merlin cannot identify the voice. I also tried the audio data recorded by TASCAM, cleaned the noise with Audible to extract birds’ voice, and played the adjusted data in front of my Merlin. Nah. The artificial brain requires the best sound condition to function … There are much room for Merlin to improvement, I guess …

It says, in Japanese,
“No suggestion.”
At least Merlin is honest
telling us it has no idea
for the owner of the voice.

In any case, unless enough data is stored in its database, even if Merlin stays in the best condition to listen to birds’ voices it cannot identify the species correctly. We must help by trying many times and reporting the data. I suppose Merlin’s main database is eBird, and so we need to keep signing-in both. The process goes like this. When we think we’ve done the recording session, we stop the mike. Merlin will ask whether to store the recording in your cell phone. We tap “Store the data” button. Your sound data is stored in your phone as .wav file. Mind you. “.wave” file is large. Merlin certainly has a function to send this data to your email or cloud storage with “share” icon. But your storage will quickly be occupied by the recording, and you may find problems with the other tasks.

“Oh I know.
I think it is a voice from a long tailed tit,”
Merlin said.
Stop button is that red one
 in the middle of the screen.

“Save” button.

So, I just stored the data in my pixel and moved the data to eBird manually. I open my eBird account to report my findings with sound data. The way to upload sound data to eBird offers us two options. On is upload the data as “Soundscape,” and another is to designate a particular data for a specific bird. Even if we have only one recording, we can upload the data for all the cases like this.


But it is cumbersome way for reporting the result. Instead, we can upload the data just once for “Soundscape,” then edit the reporting memo like


We’ve done the recording, and keep crossing our fingers Merlin’s ability to identify birds will be improved using eBird database. I hope reporting process from Merlin to eBird becomes less burdensome someday soon. Let’s keep crossing our fingers. Playing with Merlin is not useless, I wish. But … not all agree with me, it seems.


Last month there was an annual symposium held by Tanzawa-Oyama Nature Restoration Committee. This year, the theme of the talks was to promote Nature Positive by mobilizing people power for data collection. The panellists were upbeat to use cell phones and aggregating reports in GBIF and iNaturalist. (eBird is feeding the data to GBIF.) But many audience (who were regulars for such gatherings, and so, it seems to me, veterans, aka senior citizen males) were VERY sceptical in the usage of AI and collaborate with the movement. One leader of an organization in Ebina City 海老名市 proudly said “We don’t care what’s going on in the other forests, and do not see the point of sharing our data globally by taking our time from learning whateva of AI and reporting our findings. What’s wrong with writing a private memo of our flowering, and keep it private?” The other attendees said “To begin with, we don’t trust such AI or something. We do not find the merit of using such. Our familiar way of using reference books must be the best.” The speakers of the meeting were all professors or senior researchers of Tanzawa who were staying in their laboratory normally and do not come out much from there, I guess. They looked a bit embarrassed by reactions from the congregation.

The occasion held a panel session as well.

Probably, it is just a matter of generation gap, and the incidence at the symposium is common when a new technology enters a scene. I simply hope Merlin will learn more and more, and someday soon we can use it more easily in our forest nearby. Let us see how things turn out.



If you have any questions about Yokohama’s Green Tax and Green Up Plan, please make a contact with

Strategic Planning Division, Green Environment Bureau, City of Yokohama
横浜市みどり環境局戦略企画課

Phone: 045-671-2712
FAX: 045-550-4093