• Title/Summary/Keyword: Japonica variety

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A New Early Maturing Rice Cultivar "Junamjosaeng" with Multiple Disease Resistance and High Grain Quality Traits (고품질 복합내병성 조생종 벼 신품종 "주남조생")

  • Lee, Jong-Hee;Yeo, Un-Sang;Lee, Jeom-Sik;Kang, Jong-Rae;Kwak, Do-Yeon;Park, Dong Soo;Cho, Jun-Hyeon;Song, You-Chun;Park, No-Bong;Kim, Choon-Song;Yi, Gi-Hwan;Lim, Sang-Jong;Oh, Byeong-Geun;Shin, Mun-Sik
    • Korean Journal of Breeding Science
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    • v.41 no.2
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    • pp.149-153
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    • 2009
  • Junamjosaeng is a new japonica rice cultivar developed in 2006 from a cross between Milyang165*3 and Koshihikari at the Department of Functional Crop Science, NICS, RDA. This cultivar is suitable for the double cropping system (i. e., before and after the cash crop). Heading date of Junamjosaeng is 6 days earlier than Keumobyeo under the late transplanting cultivation on July 10. It has a high grain fertility under cold conditions and low premature heading. One of the distinguishing characteristics of this variety is its resistance to major diseases like leaf blast, bacterial blight races ($K_1$, $K_2$, $K_3$) and rice stripe virus disease. However, it showed susceptibility to major insect pests. Milled rice kernels are translucent with non glutinous endosperm and have 6.7% protein and 19.8% amylose contents. Milling recovery of head rice is 75.7%. The palatability of cooked rice is better than Keumobyeo. The milled rice yield of Junamjosaeng in local adaptability tests after harvest of the cash crop was $4.43\;tons\;ha^{-1}$. This cultivar is suitable for planting in the plain paddy fields of Honam and Yeonnam regions in Korea.

A Medium-Maturing, High Non-Dietary Starch, Specialty Rice Cultivar 'Goami 3' (벼 중생 고 식이섬유 특수미 신품종 '고아미3호')

  • Lee, Sang-Bok;Lee, Jeom-Ho;Shin, Young-Seop;Lee, Kyu-Seong;Hwang, Hung-Goo;Jeong, O-Young;Yang, Chang-Ihn;Choi, Yong-Hwan;Yang, Sae-Jun;Jeon, Yong-Hee;Hong, Ha-Cheol;Kim, Hong-Yeol;Cho, Young-Chan;Lee, Jeong-Heui;Yea, Jong-Doo;Oh, Myung-Kyu;Kim, Myeong-Ki;Kim, Yeon-Gyu;Jeong, Kuk-Hyun;Lee, Young-Tae
    • Korean Journal of Breeding Science
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    • v.43 no.6
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    • pp.595-599
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    • 2011
  • 'Goami 3' is a new japonica rice cultivar developed from a cross between Suweon464 and Daeanbyeo by the rice breeding team of National Institute of Crop Science, RDA. 'Goami3' has about 130 days growth duration from transplanting to heading in central plain area of Korea. It has a good semi-erect plant type and resistance to lodging of about 79 cm in culm length. 'Goami 3' had 15 panicles per hill and 104 spikelets per panicle. 'Goami 3' has very high amylose (29.5%) and high non-dietary starch compared with Hwaseongbyeo. This rice variety has slow senescence and 47% tolerance to viviparous germination during the ripening stage. 'Goami 3' is susceptible to leaf blast, bacterial blight, virus disease and insect pest. The yield performance of this cultivar in milled rice was about 3.92MT/ha by ordinary season culture in local adaptability test from 2005 to 2007. 'Goami 3' is adaptable to central and southern plain area of Korea.

An Extremely Early-Maturing, Plain Area Adaptable, Blast Resistant and High Grain Quality Rice Cultivar 'Joun' (평야지적응 극조생 내도열병 고품질 벼 신품종 '조운')

  • Won, Yong-Jae;Ryu, Hae-Young;Shin, Young-Seop;Hong, Ha-Cheol;Kim, Yeon-Gyu;Kim, Myeong-Ki;Jung, Kuk-Hyun;Jeon, Yong-Hee;Cho, Young-Chan;Ahn, Eok-Keun;Yoon, Kwang-Sup;Lee, Jeong-Heui;Kim, Jeong-Ju;Oh, Sea-Kwan;Oh, Myung-Kyu;Jeung, Ji-Ung;Chun, A-Reum;Park, Hyang-Mi;Roh, Jae-Hwan;Yoon, Young-Hwan
    • Korean Journal of Breeding Science
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    • v.42 no.3
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    • pp.313-317
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    • 2010
  • There are the farmer's needs to develop early-maturing cultivar adaptable to mid-northern inland plain and alpine area. Furthermore, it is required to develop a rice variety to produce new rice before concentrated marketing dates, even in the years of early Chuseok. 'Joun' is a new extremely early-maturing japonica rice cultivar developed in 2009 from the cross of SR14880-173-3-3-2-2-2/Unbong20 at Cheolwon Substation, National Institute of Crop Science (NICS), Rural Development Administration (RDA). The heading date of 'Joun' is July 23 in mid-northern alpine area, which is 7 days earlier than that of Odaebyeo. It has about 61 cm in culm length with semi-erect plant type. Panicle has a few awns and its exertion is good. The number of spikelets per panicle is smaller than that of Odaebyeo and 1,000 grain-weight of brown rice is 21.2 g which is less than 26.3 g of Odaebyeo, but the complete grain ratio is higher. Milled kernels are translucent with non-glutinous endosperm and palatability of cooked rice is good. It shows strong resistance to cold treatment, lodging, premature heading, wilting and viviparous germination during ripening stage. This cultivar shows resistance to leaf blast disease but susceptible to bacterial blight, virus disease and insect pests. The milled rice yield performance of 'Joun' is about 5.18 MT/ha by ordinary culture in local adaptability test for three years. This cultivar may be highly adaptable to the mid-northern inland plain and alpine area, north-eastern coastal area and middle plain area.

A New Rice Variety with Low Amylose, 'Manmibyeo' (중만생 저아밀로스 반찹쌀 품종 '만미(萬味)벼')

  • Song, You-Chun;Lee, Jong-Hee;Lee, Jeom-Sig;Ha, Woon-Goo;Park, No-Bong;Kwak, Do-Yeon;Jung, Kuk-Hyun;Oh, Byeong-Geun;Yeo, Un-Sang;Kang, Jong-Rae;Yi, Gi-Hwan;Jang, Jae-Ki;Nam, Min-Hee;Lim, Sang-Jong;Kwon, Oh-Kyung;Hwang, Hung-Goo
    • Korean Journal of Breeding Science
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    • v.42 no.3
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    • pp.257-261
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    • 2010
  • 'Manmibyeo', a new japonica rice cultivar, is a mid-late maturing ecotype cultivar developed by the rice breeding team of Department of Functional Crop, NICS, RDA in 2002. This cultivar was originated from the cross between 'Milyang 95' and $F_1$ of the cross between 'Bukrukbanna' and 'Milyang 95' in 1990/1991 winter season. It was selected by pedigree breeding method until F6 generation, and a promising line, YR14545-9-2-3-4, was advanced and designated as 'Milyang 162' in 1996. The local adaptability test of 'Milyang 162' was carried out at seven locations during 3 years in 1997, 1998 and 2002. It has about 86cm culm length and is lodging tolerant. This cultivar is susceptible to bacterial blight ($K_1$, $K_2$, $K_3$) and stripe virus, and moderately resistant to leaf blast disease. Milled rice kernels of 'Manmibyeo' is translucent with low amylose content in endosperm, clear in chalkiness and good at eating quality in panel test. The yield potential of 'Manmibyeo' in milled rice was about 4.46 MT/ha at ordinary fertilizer level in local adaptability test. This cultivar would be adaptable to the southern plain of Korea.

A New Early Maturing Blackish Purple Pigmented Glutinous Rice Variety, 'Josaengheugchal' (조생 흑자색 찰벼 품종 '조생흑찰')

  • Song, You-Chun;Lee, Jeom-Sig;Ha, Woon-Goo;Hwang, Hung-Goo;Lim, Sang-Jong;Yeo, Un-Sang;Park, No-Bong;Kwak, Do-Yeon;Jang, Jae-Ki;Lee, Jong-Hee;Park, Dong-Soo;Jung, Kuk-Hyun;Jeong, Eung-Ki;Nam, Min-Hee;Kim, Young-Doo;Kim, Myeong-Ki;Kwon, Oh-Kyung;Oh, Byeong-Geun
    • Korean Journal of Breeding Science
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    • v.42 no.3
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    • pp.262-266
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    • 2010
  • 'Josaengheugchal', a new blackish purple pigmented glutinous japonica rice cultivar, was developed by the rice breeding team of Department of Functional Crop, NICS, RDA in 2004. This cultivar was derived from a cross between 'Tohoku 149' as black glutinous source and 'Sx 864' as purple colored rice in 1992 and 1993 winter season, and selected by pedigree breeding method until $F_6$ generation. As a result, a promising line, YR15907-6-8-1-5, was advanced and designated as the name of 'Milyang 194' in 2001. The local adaptability test of 'Milyang 194' was carried out at seven locations from 2002 to 2004 and it was named as 'Josaengheugchal'. 'Josaengheugchal' is an early maturing cultivar and has 71 cm culm height. It has higher anthocyanian content compared with 'Heugnambyeo'. It is moderately resistant to leaf blast but susceptible to other disease and insect pests. The yield potential of 'Josaengheugchal' in brown rice was about 4.21 MT/ha at ordinary fertilizer level in local adaptability test. This cultivar would be adaptable to the plain paddy field of middle, Honam, and Yeomgnam in Korea under ordinary and double cropping system.

A New Rice Cultivar "Jogwang" with RSV Resistance and Short Growth Duration (벼줄무늬잎마름병 저항성 단기성 벼 신품종 "조광")

  • Lee, Jong-Hee;Kang, Jong-Rae;Park, Dong-Soo;Yeo, Un-Sang;Kwak, Do-Yeon;Shin, Mun-Sik;Song, You-Chun;Ha, Woon-Goo;Cho, Jun-Hyeon;Kim, Chun-Song;Jeon, Myeong-Gi;Lee, Gi-Yun;Yi, Gi-Hwan;Nam, Min-Hee;Ku, Yeon-Chung;Oh, Byeong-Geun;Kim, Myeong-Ki;Yang, Sae-Jun;Kim, Jae-Kyu
    • Korean Journal of Breeding Science
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    • v.41 no.2
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    • pp.163-167
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    • 2009
  • Jogwang is a new early maturing japonica rice developed in 2007 from a cross between Milyang187 and YR21113-B-B at the Department of Functional Crop Science, NICS, RDA. This cultivar is very suitable to the rice-cash crop double cropping system. Heading date of Jogwang is 2 days earlier than Keumobyeo under the late transplanting cultivation on July 10 at the Yeongnam plain. The tolerance level of this variety to leaf discoloration at seedling stage is very similar to Keumobyeo. It showed slightly lower viviparous germination and premature heading. This cultivar showed resistant reactions to leaf blast and rice stripe virus disease but susceptible to bacterial blight disease and major insect pests. The ratio of milling and head rice recovery of Jogwang is 76.5% and 64.5%, respectively. The milled kernels are translucent with non glutinous endosperm. This cultivar has 7.3% protein and 18.5% amylose content. In local adaptability test, showed that the milled rice yield of Jogwang is $4.90\;MT\;ha^{-1}$. This cultivar is suitable for planting in the plain paddy fields of Honam and Yeonnam regions in Korea.

A Medium-late Maturing New Rice Cultivar with High Grain Quality, Multi-disease Resistance, Adaptability to Direct Seeding and Transplanting Cultivation, "Hopum" (벼 중만생 최고품질 복합내병성 직파 및 이앙 겸용 "호품")

  • Ko, Jong-Cheol;Kim, Bo-Kyeong;Nam, Jeong-Kwon;Baek, Man-Gee;Ha, Ki-Yong;Kim, Ki-Young;Son, Ji-Young;Lee, Jae-Kil;Choung, Jin-Il;Ko, Jae-Kwon;Shin, Mun-Sik;Kim, Young-Doo;Mo, Young-Jun;Kim, Kyeong-Hoon;Kim, Chung-Kon
    • Korean Journal of Breeding Science
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    • v.40 no.4
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    • pp.533-536
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    • 2008
  • Hopum is a new japonica rice cultivar developed from the cross between Milyang165 and F1 crossing Milyang165 and Iksan438 at Department of Rice and Winter Cereal Crop, NICS, RDA, in 2006. This cultivar has a short grain shape and about 141 days growth duration from direct seeding to harvesting in the southern plain including Chungcheong province. This cultivar has short culm and spikelet number per panicle is similar to that of Nampyeongbyeo, while filled grain rate is lower than standard variety. This cultivar has medium size of brown rice and shows moderate resistance to leaf blast, to bacterial blight pathogens of $K_1$, $K_2$ and $K_3$ and stripe virus disease but susceptible to major virus diseases and insect pests. The milled kernel of Hopum is translucent with non-glutinous endosperm. Protein and amylose content of Hopum is about 6.5% and 18.7%, respectively. This cultivar has better palatability of cooked rice than Chucheongbyeo harvested in Gyeongki province. Its milling recovery (76.8%) and percentage of perfect-shaped milled rice (94.7%) were higher than Nampyeongbyeo. The milled rice yield of Hopum was 5.83 MT/ha (15% higher than Juan) under wet-direct seeding, 5.66 MT/ha (8% higher than Juan) under dry-direct seeding, and 6.00 MT/ha (8% higher than Nampyeong) under ordinary transplanting cultivation. "Hopum" would be adaptable for ordinary transplanting and direct seeding in the southern plain including Chungcheong province.

Floristic features of upland fields in South Korea (우리나라 밭 경작지에 출현하는 식물상 특성)

  • Kim, Myung-Hyun;Eo, Jinu;Kim, Min-Kyeong;Oh, Young-Ju
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
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    • v.38 no.4
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    • pp.528-553
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    • 2020
  • Upland fields are characterized by dry environments, a high degree of disturbance by farming practices such as double-cropping, and a high diversity of crops compared to other field types. This study focused on the floristic composition and characteristics of upland fields in South Korea. Flora surveys were conducted in 36 areas in nine provinces at two times (June and August) in 2015. The results showed that the vascular plants in the upland fields in South Korea included 532 taxa, containing 100 families, 322 genera, 483 species, nine subspecies, 37 varieties, one form, and two hybrids. Among the 100 families, Asteraceae was the most diverse in species (75 taxa), followed by Poaceae (68 taxa), Fabaceae (34 taxa), Polygonaceae (21 taxa), Rosaceae (19 taxa), and Liliaceae (17 taxa). Based on the occurrence frequency of each species, Acalypha australis L. (100%), and Artemisia indica Willd. (100%) were the highest, followed by Humulus scandens (Lour.) Merr., Rorippa palustris (L.) Besser, Conyza canadensis (L.) Cronquist, Erigeron annuus (L.) Pers., Lactuca indica L., Commelina communis L., Digitaria ciliaris (Retz.) Koeler, Echinochloa crus-galli(L.) P.Beauv., Cyperus microiria Steud., and Oxalis corniculata L. The biological type of upland fields in South Korea was determined to be Th-R5-D4-e type. Rare plants were found in 11 taxa: Taxus cuspidata Siebold & Zucc, Magnolia kobus DC, Clematis trichotoma Nakai, Aristolochina contorta Bunge, Buxus sinica (Rehder & E.H.Wilson) M.Cheng var. koreana (Nakai ex Rehder) Q.L.Wang, Melothria japonica (Thunb.) Maxim, Mitrasacme indica Wight, Lithospermum arvense L., Carpesium rosulatum Miq., Allium senescens L., and Pseudoraphis sordida (Thwaites) S.M.Phillips & S.L.Chen. Ninety-seven taxa contained naturalized plants composed of 24 families, 68 genera, 97 species, one variety, and one form. The urbanization and naturalization indices were 30.5% and 18.4%, respectively.

Preference and Sensory Trait Analysis of Korean Rice Varieties among International Consumers (해외소비자의 국내육성 벼 품종에 대한 선호도 및 식미관련 형질 분석)

  • Chang-Min Lee;Song-Hee Park;Su-Kyung Ha;Hyun-Sook Lee;Gileng Lee;Seung Young Lee;Ji-Ung Jeung;Hyun-Su Park;Jae-Ryoung Park;O-Young Jeong
    • KOREAN JOURNAL OF CROP SCIENCE
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    • v.68 no.4
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    • pp.262-275
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    • 2023
  • This study aimed to assess the preferences of African, American, and Asian panels, in comparison to a Korean panel, for various Korean rice varieties, including three japonica, two indica, and one Tongil-type, all developed by the Rural Development Administration in Korea. Regarding rice appearance, most panelists, except for the Koreans, favored long and slender rice varieties like 'Hanyeol', 'Hyangyeol', and 'Amissal'. In contrast, the Koreans preferred wider varieties like 'Sindongjin' and 'Deuraehyang'. Notably, the overseas panelists consistently favored rice varieties with high appearance quality in sensory evaluations of cooked rice. Both overseas and Korean panelists strongly preferred the indica rice variety 'Hanyeol' in terms of appearance quality and sensory evaluations. However, Korean rice varieties like 'Amissal' and 'Sindongjin' scored high in appearance quality with overseas panelists but received low ratings in sensory aspects, including shape, stickiness, and taste, compared to those for 'Hanyeol'. This suggests that considering sensory characteristics is important when exporting Korean rice varieties. Regarding taste characteristics preferred by the panelists derived from the correlation analysis between taste traits, Africans preferred rice with a smooth texture and no stickiness, especially favoring long-grain rice. Americans leaned towards rice with a slightly firm texture, some stickiness, and late aging characteristics. Asians preferred rice with a smooth texture, low stickiness, and long-grain varieties. In contrast, Koreans favored round rice with a glossy appearance, a slightly firm texture, late aging traits, and some stickiness. These research findings can serve as valuable data for the development of rice varieties for overseas markets and are expected to contribute to securing competitiveness in international markets.

A Flora of Vascular Plants in Biryongsan Mt. and Baebawhisan Mt. (Gyeongsangbuk-do) (비룡산과 배바위산 일대(경상북도)의 관속식물상)

  • Ho Yeon Kang;Seon Jeong;Jae Young Kim;Hyeong Jun Jo;Gyu Young Chung
    • Korean Journal of Plant Resources
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    • v.37 no.4
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    • pp.360-385
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    • 2024
  • This study was carried out to clarify the distribution of vascular plants in Biryongsan Mt. (1,129 m) and Baebawhisan Mt. (967 m) (a.s.l., 36° 55'~37° 06' N, 129° 03'~29° 09' E), Gyeongsangbuk-do. The surveys were conducted 13 times from April 2019 to August 2022. The vascular plants of Biryongsan Mt. and Baebawhisan Mt. was consisted a total of 570 taxa based on the voucher specimens; 108 families, 334 genera, 506 species, 17 subspecies, 44 varieties, 3 forms. Among them, the Korean endemic plants were 12 taxa. The of number of threatened and near threatened plants, as National Red List of Vascular Plants in Korea designated by the Korean National Arboretum, were 8 taxa, comprising 1 endangered (EN), 3 vulnerable (VU), and 4 near threatened (LC) species. The number of floristic target plants designated by the Ministry of Environment was 104 taxa, including 10 of level IV and 28 of level III. The naturalized plants in this area were 42 taxa. Among 570 taxa, there were 403 edible plants, 461 medicinal plants, 221 industrial plants, 306 ornamental plants, and 17 taxa with unknown usefulness respectively.