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  1. Tokihiko Okada (岡田 時彦) (February 18, 1903 – January 16, 1934) was a silent film star in Japan during the 1920s and early 1930s. A native of Tokyo, [1] he first started at the Taikatsu studio and later became a leading player for Japanese directors such as Yasujirō Ozu and Kenji Mizoguchi.

    Year
    Film
    Role
    1920
    Shigeru's friend / Hideo Inoue / ...
    1920
    Kitsunosuke
    1921
    Spirit of rabbit
    1921
    Toyoo
  2. Tokihiko Okada (岡田 時彦) (February 18, 1903 – January 16, 1934) was a silent film star in Japan during the 1920s and early 1930s. A native of Tokyo, he first started at the Taikatsu studio and later became a leading player for Japanese directors such as Yasujirō Ozu and Kenji Mizoguchi.

  3. Feb 8, 2010 · Kushimoto, Japan (CNN) -- Tokihiko Okada has hundreds of children. Well, not literally, but you might as well call the giant bluefin tuna he cares for in the ocean tanks his "children."...

  4. Tokihiko Okada was born on 18 February 1903 in Tokyo, Japan. He was an actor, known for Tokyo Chorus (1931), The Water Magician (1933) and The Lady and the Beard (1931). He was married to Sonoko Datsuru. He died on 16 January 1934.

    • Actor
    • February 18, 1903
    • Tokihiko Okada
    • January 16, 1934
    • 110,000 Adult Fish
    • Sushi Lovers Worldwide
    • Thirty-Two Years in The Making
    • One Per Cent Survival
    • Live Feed Important
    • Moving Down The Food Chain
    • Showcasing Farmed Fish

    It’s hard to overestimate the popularity of Bluefin tuna for the Japanese people. Bluefin tuna at auction at the gigantic Tsukiji Fish Market in Tokyo can be sold for hundreds of thousands of US dollars per fish. Indeed, one sushi restaurant chain owner paid a record US$1.8 million for a 222 kg Bluefin tuna during the first of-the-year fish auction...

    While the Japanese themselves account for 80 per cent of all Bluefin tuna consumption worldwide, the rest of the world is eagerly gobbling up increasing amounts of sushi, too. While sushi doesn’t necessarily involve the consumption of Bluefin tuna, it almost always means fish. In Norway alone, the sushi market was worth a whopping NOK 790 million i...

    Long before tuna numbers had dropped so precipitously, the Japanese government recognized the pressures facing tuna populations. In 1970, politicians gave Kindai University a mandate and some money: find a way to farm Bluefin tuna. Thirty-two years later, and long after the government funding ran out, the university was able to report its success. ...

    Professor Okada said that currently, just one per cent of all eggs that are collected from Kindai’s farmed broodstock survive into adulthood. That is an improvement over the early years, but is still extremely low. Improving this survival rate is extremely important and is one of the top goals for the institute, Masuma says. The Kindai researchers ...

    Then there is the issue of feeding the juvenile fish. One reason salmon aquaculture has been so successful is that young salmon have well-developed digestive systems from a very young age. That means they can eat fish meal, says Yngvar Olsen, a professor of marine biology at NTNU. Young tuna, however, need to eat live feed. If they don’t get live f...

    Above and beyond experimenting with feed for juvenile fish, the Kindai researchers are testing different kinds of fish meal that can be fed to three-month old fish, which weigh roughly 300 grams. By this time, the stomach of the tuna babies are developed enough so that they can eat fish meal. The Kindai researchers have just completed testing one k...

    In 2013, Kindai University took what many might consider a surprising step: it opened two restaurants where diners can feast on farmed Bluefin tuna and other fish farmed by Kindai. One of the restaurants is in the posh Ginza district of Tokyo, while the other is in Osaka. The restaurants are a way to showcase the farmed tuna, but they are also way ...

  5. Tokihiko Okada was born on February 18, 1903 in Tokyo, Japan. He was an actor, known for Tokyo Chorus (1931), The Water Magician (1933) and The Lady and the Beard (1931). He was married to Sonoko Datsuru. He died on January 16, 1934.

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  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Tokyo_ChorusTokyo Chorus - Wikipedia

    Tokyo Chorus (東京の合唱, Tōkyō no kōrasu) is a 1931 Japanese silent film directed by Yasujirō Ozu and starring Tokihiko Okada and Emiko Yagumo. It was based on various stories in the Shoshimin-gai (Middle Class Avenue) series and shares influences with King Vidor's The Crowd.