Takashi Amano was a professional track cyclist, photographer, designer, and aquarist. His interest in aquaria led him to create the Japanese company Aqua Design Amano. Amano was the author of Nature Aquarium World, a three-book series on aquascaping and freshwater aquarium plants and fish. He has also published the book Aquarium Plant Paradise. A species of freshwater shrimp is named the “Amano shrimp” or "Yamato shrimp" after him. After discovering this species' ability to eat large quantities of algae, Amano asked a local distributor to special order several thousand of them. They have since become a staple in the freshwaterplanted aquarium hobby. He also developed a line of aquarium components that are known as Aqua Design Amano, and his "Nature Aquarium" article series appeared monthly in both Practical Fishkeeping magazine in the UK, and Tropical Fish Hobbyist magazine in the US. He died of pneumonia in 2015 at the age of 61.
Aquarist
Takashi Amano wrote about freshwater aquascaping. He established a distinctive style of plant layout. He employed Japanese gardening concepts such as wabi-sabi and Zen rock arrangement. His tank compositions sought to mimic nature in their appearance. Amano also made extensive use of Glossostigma elatinoides and Riccia fluitans as plant material. He founded Aqua Design Amano Co., Ltd. in 1982, providing aquatic plant growing equipment. 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.
The Amano shrimp was introduced to the aquatic hobby by Takashi Amano as a means of controlling the growth of algae in the 1980s. The shrimp was therefore named after him.
This exhibit is one of Amano's major works. It features a tropical freshwater aquascape at the Lisbon Oceanarium. The aquarium is in length holding of water with more than 10,000 fish of 40 different species. The exhibit was opened on April 21, 2015.
Two landscape photos of Takashi Amano were displayed at the 34th G8 summitWorking Lunch / Outreach Working Session of Hokkaido Tokyo Summit held July 7–9, 2008. The photos of a cedar forest on Sado Island taken with an 8 × 20 inch large format camera were exhibited on the 4 × 1.5 m panels.