@article{oai:kindai.repo.nii.ac.jp:00005280, author = {久光, 彩子 and 曽我部, 陽子 and 寺田, 剛 and 大隅, 有理子 and 寺田, 早百合 and 平野, 綾香 and 杉田, 麻衣 and 松尾, 扶美 and 片山, 涼子 and 荻野, 直人 and 高見, 晋一 and 桜谷, 保之}, issue = {43}, journal = {近畿大学農学部紀要, Memoirs of the Faculty of Agriculture of Kinki University}, month = {Mar}, note = {On 22 July 2009, partial solar eclipse was observed in most regions in Japan and a total solar eclipse was observed in the Southwest Islands. At the Nara Campus of Kinki University, located in Nara Prefecture, central Japan, the sun fell into eclipse at 9:46, the maximum eclipse occurred at 11:05 (82% eclipse) and the eclipse finished at 12:25. The weather was cloudy and occasionally the sun peeped through the clouds.At the maximum eclipse, the following phenomena were observed:1) The ratio of singing individuals of two species of cicada, Platypleura kaempferi, and Graptopsaltria nigrofuscata, singing in daylight was reduced, hereas he higurashi cicada, Tanna japonensis, which sings at early morning and evening, began to sing actively.2) The katydids, Gampsocleis buergeri ,which sing in daylight, were silent.3) Two species of bird, Hypsipetes amaurotis and Cettia diphone were silent.4) The activities of flight butterfly species, Zizeeria maha, declined.5) The leaves of the silk tree, Albizia julibrrissin., which normally close at night, begun to close.6) The amount of solar radiation decreased and the air temperature declined.The response of some animals and plants to the eclipse may be coused by these weather factors which caused by solar eclipse., application/pdf}, pages = {91--104}, title = {2009年7月22日の部分日食に対する生物の反応 - 近畿大学奈良キャンパスにおける例 -}, year = {2010}, yomi = {ヒサミツ, アヤコ and ソカベ, ヨウコ and テラダ, タケシ and オオスミ, ユリコ and テラダ, サユリ and ヒラノ, アヤカ and スギタ, マイ and マツオ, フミ and カタヤマ, リョウコ and オギノ, ナオト and タカミ, シンイチ and サクラタニ, ヤスユキ} }