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Takashi Amano
Photographer and aquarist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Takashi Amano (天野尚, Amano Takashi; 18 July 1954 – 4 August 2015) was a professional Japanese track cyclist, photographer, designer, and aquarist.[1] He founded Aqua Design Amano (ADA), a Japanese company that specializes in the design of aquariums and their production.[2]
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Amano was the author of Nature Aquarium World (TFH Publications, 1994),[3] a three-book series on aquascaping, freshwater aquarium plants, and fish. He also published the book Aquarium Plant Paradise (TFH Publications, 1997).[4]
A species of freshwater shrimp, the "Amano shrimp" or "Yamato shrimp" (Caridina multidentata; previously Caridina japonica), was named after him.[5] Amano discovered the species' ability to eat large quantities of algae. Amano ordered several thousand of them from a local distributor.[6] They have since become widely used in freshwater planted aquariums.
Amano also developed a line of aquarium products under the Aqua Design Amano (ADA) brand. His aquarium column, "Nature Aquarium," appeared in the monthly magazines Practical Fishkeeping and Tropical Fish Hobbyist. He died of pneumonia[6] in 2015 at the age of 61.[7]
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Aquarist
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His plant layouts incorporated Japanese gardening concepts such as Wabi-sabi and Zen rock arrangements.[8] Amano frequently used Glossostigma elatinoides and Riccia fluitans as plant material.[6]
He founded Aqua Design Amano Co., Ltd. in 1982, which provided aquatic plant-growing equipment.[9] His photo books of what he called the "Nature Aquarium", Glass no Naka no Daishizen, published in 1992, followed by Mizu-Shizen eno kaiki, were translated into seven languages.
Amano shrimp

The Amano shrimp (Caridina multidentata) was introduced to the aquatic hobby by Takashi Amano as a method of controlling algae growth in the 1980s. The species was subsequently named after him.[10]
"Forests Underwater" at Lisbon Oceanarium

"Forests Underwater" by Takashi Amano is a tropical freshwater aquarium at the Lisbon Oceanarium that features a diverse underwater landscape. The aquarium is 40 metres (130 ft) in length and holds 160,000 litres (35,000 imp gal; 42,000 US gal) of water, and houses more than 10,000 individual fish of 40 different species. The exhibit opened on April 21, 2015,[11][12] although it was initially intended to be a temporary exhibition lasting two years, "Forests Underwater" remains open.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Florestas Submersas by Takashi Amano.
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Photography career
Starting in 1975, Takashi Amano travelled across tropical rainforests in the Amazon, Borneo, and West Africa. He also visited forests in Japan, creating a series of photos focusing on "untouched nature" using large-format cameras.[13] He used extra-large-films with sizes (up to 8 × 20 inches). His works have been featured internationally at several exhibitions and publications.[14][6]
Amano gave lectures on his photographic expeditions and his experiences in nature around the world, and he advocated for the environmental importance of tree planting programs to support environmental conservation.[15] He was a member of the Japan Professional Photographers Society, the Japan Advertising Photographers' Association,[15] the International Environment Photographers Association,[15] and the Society of Scientific Photography.[15]
G8 Hokkaido Tōyako Summit
Two of Takashi Amano's landscape photos, featuring a cedar forest on Sado Island, were displayed at the 34th G8 Summit Working Lunch/Outreach Working Session.[6][16] The photos, taken with an 8 × 20-inch large format camera, were exhibited on 4 × 1.5 meter panels.[16]
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