• Title/Summary/Keyword: Apis cerana

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Detection of Korean Native Honey and European Honey by Using Duplex Polymerase Chain Reaction and Immunochromatographic Assay

  • Kim, Chang-Kyu;Lee, Deug-Chan;Choi, Suk-Ho
    • Food Science of Animal Resources
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    • v.37 no.4
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    • pp.599-605
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    • 2017
  • Korean native honey (KNH) is much more expensive than European honey (EH) in Korea, because KNH is a favored honey which is produced less than EH. Food fraud of KNH has drawn attention of the government office concerned, which is in need of a method to differentiate between KNH and EH which are produced by the Asiatic honeybee, Apis cerana and the European honeybee, Apis mellifera, respectively. A method to discriminate KNH and EH was established by using duplex polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in this study. Immunochromatographic assay (IC) was examined to analyze the duplex PCR product. The DNA sequences of primers for the duplex PCR were determined by comparing cytochrome C oxidase genes of the two honey bee species. Chelex resin method was more efficient in extracting genomic DNA from honey than the other two procedures of commercial kits. The duplex PCR amplifying DNA of 133 bp were more sensitive than that amplifying DNA of 206 bp in detecting EH in the honey mixture of KNH and EH. Agarose gel electrophoresis and IC detected the DNA of 133 bp at the ratios of down to 1% and 5% EH in the honey mixture, respectively and also revealed that several KNH products distributed by internet shopping sites were actually EH. In conclusion, the duplex PCR with subsequent IC could also discriminate between KNH and EH and save time and labor.

A Proposal on the New Genotyping of Sacbrood viruses for the Definition of korean Sacbrood Virus (kSBV) (한국형 낭충봉아부패병 바이러스(kSBV)의 정의를 위한 새로운 SBV 유전자형의 제안)

  • Lee, Chil-Woo;Yoo, Mi-Sun;Lim, Su-Jin;Kim, Jung-Min;Cho, Yun Sang;Yoon, Byoung-Su
    • Journal of Apiculture
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    • v.32 no.2
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    • pp.89-97
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    • 2017
  • korean Sacbrood Virus (kSBV) was firstly found since 2008 in Korea, and it might be a main reason why 99% of populations belonged to Apis cerana in Korea were disappeared now. In this study, full length, reported DNA sequences of 32 Sacbrood Viruses (SBVs) were analysed based on alignments using nucleotides and/or deduced amino acid sequeces. In this analysis, variable deletions were found that are located around 2,100 bases in each CDS of SBVs. The genotyping depended on these deletions might be related with infection-patterns by these pathogens. In addition, it is not escaped our notice that the genotyping we have proposed immediately suggests a possible origin of kSBV for the quarantine and protection against further invasion.

Selection and Application of Pollinating Insects to Improve Seed Production of Buckwheat in Net House (메밀의 망실재배시 종자생산성 향상을 위한 수분곤충의 선발과 활용법 구명)

  • Kim, Su Jeong;Sohn, Hwang Bae;Nam, Jeong Hwan;Lee, Jong Nam;Suh, Jong Taek;Chang, Dong Chil;Kim, Yul Ho
    • Korean Journal of Plant Resources
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    • v.35 no.1
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    • pp.10-22
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    • 2022
  • This study investigated field data to understand the spatio-temporal distribution of pollinating insects and buckwheat flowers. We set the in-situ observation sites in different locations to get altitude and cropping system distribution data for five years (2016 to 2020) in Korea. Twenty-five different insect species, belonging to 8 orders, were recorded. Over the past five years, species from the orders Diptera and Hymenoptera were the principal visitors. Hymenoptera was mainly represented by honey bees (Apis cerana), while Diptera was represented by bean seed fly (Delia platura) and several other species. Some bees and other Hymenoptera species could, however, act as co-pollinators because of their high relative frequency and activity. Compared with open-field cultivation (conventional), the pollination mediating effect of flies and bees was superior in net house, so the yield was high, and it was also found to be slightly higher in the mixed treatment of flies and bees than in the single treatment. Based on the above results, flies and bees were found to be the most active pollinating insects in buckwheat and it is necessary to actively utilize the selected insects to improve buckwheat productivity. This relationship will be utilized in establishing the system of seed production on pollinating regulation of a primary plant.