• Title/Summary/Keyword: Cold hardiness

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Freezing Resistance of Apple (사과나무의 내한성(耐寒性))

  • Cho, Tae Hwan;Hong, Sung Gak;Kim, Jong Chun
    • Journal of Korean Society of Forest Science
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    • v.27 no.1
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    • pp.1-4
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    • 1975
  • Freezing resistance of apple (Malus pumila) cultivars was measured to find out the most cold hardy apple variety among the five cultivars which are promissing in Korea. The measurement of freezing resistance for two varieties of dwarf interstock, was also included to compare the cold hardiness among scions and interstocks. The freezing resistance was in order from lowest to highest; winter bud, cambium, xylem ray parenchyma and bark cortex in all cultivars except EM26. The difference in cold hardiness among cultivars and interstocks was not consistent among tissue parts of twig except in cultivar Nugget-spur of which all tissue parts showed least cold hardiness. The difference among tissue parts with in a cultivar was discussed in terms of choosing the most cold hardy, and the most resistant cultivars to late frost damage.

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Cold Hardiness Change in Solenopsis japonica (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) by Rapid Cold Hardening (급속내한성 유기에 의한 일본열마디개미(Solenopsis japonica)의 내한성 변화)

  • Park, Youngjin;Vatanparast, Mohammad;Lee, Jieun
    • Korean journal of applied entomology
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    • v.60 no.2
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    • pp.193-199
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    • 2021
  • Solenopsis japonica, which is belonging to Formicidae in Hymenoptera, is a native ant species in Korea. However, it had not been studied for cold hardiness of S. japonica to understand on its overwintering mechanisms in field so far. Cold tolerance on developmental stages was measured at different cold temperature with various exposure times. Workers showed more survival at 5℃ and 10℃ compared with other stages and elevated cold tolerance when workers were exposed at 15℃ for more than 12h incubation as a rapid cold hardening (RCH) condition. RCH treatment not only increased survival of workers at cold temperatures, but also decreased supercooling point (SCP) and freezing point (FP). RCH group increased the survival rate by 44% at 10℃ compared with Non-RCH group. SCP and FP were depressed from -10.0 to -14.2℃ and from -11.3 to -15.3℃, respectively, after RCH treatment. Cold temperature increased expression level of cold- and stress-related genes such as glycerol kinase and heat shock protein. These results indicate unacclimated cold tolerance of S. japonica and its acclimation to low temperature by RCH.

Freezing Resistance of Chestnut (I) - The Difference among Cultivars and Tissue Parts - (밤나무의 내한성(耐寒性)(제1보(第一報)) - 품종별(品種別) 부위별(部位別) 차이(差異)에 관(關)하여 -)

  • Cho, Tae Hwan;Hong, Sung Gak
    • Journal of Korean Society of Forest Science
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    • v.26 no.1
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    • pp.19-22
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    • 1975
  • Freezing resistance of ten cultivars of Chestnut (Castanea crenata S. et Z.) collected from four different sites of Kyunggi Province, Korea on March 2, 1975, was measured to find out the differences among tissue parts, and those among cultivars. The freezing and thawing rates were controlled lower than $6^{\circ}C/hr$. which occurs in nature. The resistance to low temperature was in order from lowest to highest; winter bud, cambium, xylum ray parenchyma and bark cortex. The difference in cold hardiness among cultivars was not consistent among tissue parts of twig stem except in cultivar Dan-Taeck of which all tissue parts showed highest cold-hardiness. The importance of the study on the seasonal variation in cold hardiness of different tissue parts was discussed in terms of choosing the most cold resistant Chestnut culitivar in Korea.

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Trait Association with Earliness and Winter Hardiness Within a Collection Korean Land Race Barleys (한국의 보리 수집종에서 숙기와 내냉성과의 관련성)

  • Mcproud, W.L.;Bae, Seong-Ho;Lee, Eun-Sup;Chung, Tae-Young;Min, Kyung-Soo
    • KOREAN JOURNAL OF CROP SCIENCE
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    • v.24 no.2
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    • pp.9-16
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    • 1979
  • 528 Korean land races of barley were examined for IS agronomic traits to determine if any preferential trait associations with early heading and winter hardiness existed in this collection. Eight traits were non-randomly associated with the 1977~'78 cold damage levels, and seven traits were non-randomly associated with heading date. No early heading, least-cold-damaged land race lines were found. However the least-cold-damaged class preferentially associated with mid-early heading land race lines. Ten traits were preferentially associated with the mid-early heading, least-cold-damaged class. The utilization of these associations should increase the probability that genes for winter hardiness will be preserved in the mid-early heading selections from this collection.

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Improvement of Field Screening for Winter Hardiness of Barley

  • Park Dong-Soo;Ko Jong-Min;Kim Hyun-Tae;Yang Sae-Jun;Kim Soon-Chul;Sohn Jae-Keun
    • KOREAN JOURNAL OF CROP SCIENCE
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    • v.50 no.4
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    • pp.276-280
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    • 2005
  • Low temperature is one of the most severe abiotic stress factors limiting growth, productivity and distribution of winter cereals. Reliable field screening method, which can detect small differences in winter survival, is important for the effective selection and development of plants to identity superior cold tolerant winter cereal genotypes. This study was undertaken to provide improved screening method of winter hardiness in the field by increasing the accuracy in evaluating winter hardiness of barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). We introduced furrow in field screening of winter survival. By sowing the plants at the ridge and base, we could minimize the effect of topographic variation in a field by giving higher and lower level of stress at the same time. This method could be used by breeders to conduct accurate evaluation of winter hardiness by selecting the better treatment, which shows close to normal distribution, among the winter survival rate from the ridge, base and mean survival rate of the two in a screening field.

Comparison of Cold Hardiness in Canes and Buds of Kiwifruit Cultivars (품종에 따른 키위나무 눈과 가지의 내한성 비교)

  • Kim, H.L.;Chae, W.B.;Kim, J.G.;Lee, M.H.;Rhee, H.C.;Kim, S.H.;Kwack, Y.B.
    • Journal of Practical Agriculture & Fisheries Research
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    • v.21 no.1
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    • pp.29-40
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    • 2019
  • In Korea kiwifruit growing area is limited to southern coastal region and Jeju island, partly due to the lack of information on their cold hardiness in winter. This study was carried out to investigate cold hardiness of Korean kiwifruit cultivars in a period of dormancy for using it as preliminary data to expand the cultivation area of kiwifruit in Korea. A total of five kiwifruit cultivars in two species and hybrid, Actinidia deliciosa ('Hayward' and 'Garmrok'), A. chinensis ('Goldone') and A. arguta hybrid ('Bangwoori' and 'Skinny Green') were subjected to five freezing treatments of -12℃, -15℃, -18℃, -21℃ and -24℃. Cell membrane damage in all cultivars initiated in -18℃/32h and cell membrane stability was lost in -24℃ in most cultivars, except for 'Skinny Green'. Cold hardiness was estimated by 50% lethal temperature (LT50) which was determined by triphenyl tetrazolium chloride (TTC) reduction. In branches, LT50 was -15℃ in 'Hayward' and 'Garmrok', -18℃ in 'Bangwoori' and -21℃ in 'Goldone.' The LT50 of buds on 'Hayward' and 'Garmrok' was 56 and 42 hours in -15℃ and 4 and 11 hours in -18℃, respectively; however, LT50 of buds on 'Goldone' was 51 hours in -18℃ and that on 'Bangwoori' was 3 hours in -24℃. Cold hardiness results imply that it may be difficult for cultivars in A. deliciosa such as 'Hayward' and 'Garmrok' to be grown in the north of southern coastal region in Korea; however, it can be possible for several cultivars in A. chinensis and A. arguta hybrid to be grown in the northern part of Korean kiwifruit belt if cold tolerance in the thaw is confirmed.

Plant Hardiness Zone Mapping Based on a Combined Risk Analysis Using Dormancy Depth Index and Low Temperature Extremes - A Case Study with "Campbell Early" Grapevine - (최저기온과 휴면심도 기반의 동해위험도를 활용한 'Campbell Early' 포도의 내동성 지도 제작)

  • Chung, U-Ran;Kim, Soo-Ock;Yun, Jin-I.
    • Korean Journal of Agricultural and Forest Meteorology
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    • v.10 no.4
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    • pp.121-131
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    • 2008
  • This study was conducted to delineate temporal and spatial patterns of potential risk of cold injury by combining the short-term cold hardiness of Campbell Early grapevine and the IPCC projected climate winter season minimum temperature at a landscape scale. Gridded data sets of daily maximum and minimum temperature with a 270m cell spacing ("High Definition Digital Temperature Map", HD-DTM) were prepared for the current climatological normal year (1971-2000) based on observations at the 56 Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA) stations using a geospatial interpolation scheme for correcting land surface effects (e.g., land use, topography, and elevation). The same procedure was applied to the official temperature projection dataset covering South Korea (under the auspices of the IPCC-SRES A2 and A1B scenarios) for 2071-2100. The dormancy depth model was run with the gridded datasets to estimate the geographical pattern of any changes in the short-term cold hardiness of Campbell Early across South Korea for the current and future normal years (1971-2000 and 2071-2100). We combined this result with the projected mean annual minimum temperature for each period to obtain the potential risk of cold injury. Results showed that both the land areas with the normal cold-hardiness (-150 and below for dormancy depth) and those with the sub-threshold temperature for freezing damage ($-15^{\circ}C$ and below) will decrease in 2071-2100, reducing the freezing risk. Although more land area will encounter less risk in the future, the land area with higher risk (>70%) will expand from 14% at the current normal year to 23 (A1B) ${\sim}5%$ (A2) in the future. Our method can be applied to other deciduous fruit trees for delineating geographical shift of cold-hardiness zone under the projected climate change in the future, thereby providing valuable information for adaptation strategy in fruit industry.

Studies on the Mulberry Graftages IV. Cold Hardiness in December (뽕나무 접목묘에 관한 연구 IV. 12월 중의 내동성)

  • Lee, Won-Ju;Lee, Ju-Won;Park, Gwang-Jun
    • Journal of Sericultural and Entomological Science
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    • v.31 no.2
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    • pp.65-68
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    • 1989
  • Cold hardiness of mulberry graftages was examined with two varieties, Kaeryangppong and Keomseolppong in early December. Exposure temperatures were three levels (-5, -10 and -15$^{\circ}C$) at the 4 exposure times (6, 12, 24 and 48 hrs). No damage showed at -5$^{\circ}C$ for 48 hrs. Survival rate decreased sharply from -10$^{\circ}C$, regardless exposure times. There was no survivals from -10$^{\circ}C$ for 12 hrs in Kaeryangppmong and from -15$^{\circ}C$ for 6 hrs in Keomseolppong. This suggested Keomseolppong was stronger in cold than kaeryangppong. Regrowth decreased drastically from -10$^{\circ}C$.

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Cold hardiness of Spodoptera litura Fabricius (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) (담배거세미나방(Spodoptera litura Fabricius)의 내한성)

  • 김용균;박형근;송원례
    • Korean journal of applied entomology
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    • v.36 no.3
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    • pp.256-263
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    • 1997
  • Supercooling points (SCP) and cold tolerance of the tobacco cutworm, Spodol~rera litura Fabricius. were measured in response to subzero temperatures. SCPs were varied among developmental stages. Eggs showed the lowest SCP (-27$^{\circ}$C). Pupae and adults had the intermediate SCP(- 18$^{\circ}$C). The SCPs (- I0 to - 16$^{\circ}$C) of larvae increased with their ages. Lethal low temperature of each stage was higher than its SCP. Preexposure of eggs and larvae to a sublethal low temperature increased their survival capacities under lethal low temperatures. The sublethal temperature also induced the fifth instar larvae to increase hemolymph osmolality and to produce cold-induced proteins of apparent molecular weights of 20 and 27 kD. These results indicate that this species is classified into a freeze-susceptible insect.

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