• Title/Summary/Keyword: Plant Taxonomy

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Analysis of the misguided practice of recognizing Gymnosperms as flowering plants (나자식물이 꽃피는 식물로 인식되고 있는 잘못된 관행의 분석)

  • Lee, Kyu Bae
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.44 no.4
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    • pp.288-297
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    • 2014
  • The aim of this study is to analyse misinformation about gymnosperm taxon used for over 57 years, since 1957 when plant biology as a discipline was established in our country. That is, terminologies and descriptions of the reproductive structure (flower) of angiosperms (flowering seed plants) have been incorrectly applied to the reproductive structures (typically cones and pollen grain) of gymnosperms (non-flowering seed plants) by numerous and various media such as text books, dictionaries, and internet websites for plant biology. Thus, these resources have been misleading teachers, students, and other people interested in plant biology in general and taxonomy in particular by describing gymnosperm reproductive structures as if they are the same as angiosperms. Such a practice has an especially adverse effect on plant biology education at all levels of instruction, with teachers and students confused in their understanding of the concept and definition of a flower. In this paper, these incorrect expressions for the reproductive structures of gymnosperms from the various media are analysed and discussed in terms of cladogram, anatomy of reproductive structures, and historical context of classification systems.

Reexamination of plant name, Jingyo (다시 진교(秦?)를 찾아서)

  • Shin, Hyunchur;Nomura, Michiyo;Kim, Il Kwon;Ki, Ho-Chul;Hong, Seung-jic
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.47 no.4
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    • pp.328-335
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    • 2017
  • The Korean medicinal plant name written in Chinese script, Jingyo, is somewhat confusingly used in the Korean modern literature. This name was assigned to at least three species, with examples being Gentiana macrophylla, Aconitum pseudolaeve, and Justicia procumbens. To clarify the taxonomic identity of Jingyo, these names were examined based on the Chinese classics and Korean classics and compared them with the modern flora of both China and Korea. In China, Jingyo was considered as Justicia gendarussa or Gentiana macrophylla. In Korea, Jingyo was considered as A. pseudolaeve or J. procumbens. However, it was concluded that Jingyo is not distributed on the Korean Peninsula. In addition, although the Hangeul name Jinbeom was the result of the misreading of the Chinese script Jinbong, another Chinese term for Jingyo, this name is used in many modern studies related plant taxonomy. Hence, we also propose Jinbeom as the conserved Hangeul name of A. pseudolaeve.

Taxonomic review of the umbelliferous taxa Heracleum moellendorffii complex in Korea based on molecular phylogenies of nuclear ribosomal ITS sequences

  • Lee, Byoung Yoon;Lim, Chae Eun;Yun, Jong-Hak;Kim, Jung-Hyun;Kim, Sun-Yu;Han, Jeong Eun
    • Journal of Species Research
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    • v.1 no.2
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    • pp.232-239
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    • 2012
  • Taxonomy of umbelliferous taxa Heracleum moellendorffii complex has been unclear in their species delimitation in the far-eastern Asian regions. In both Korea and China Heracleum moellendorffii was adopted for their description while H. sphondylium was chosen to describe Japanese Heracleum. From Genbank accessions, taxa collected from Kamtchatka and Promorskiy, Russia were defined as H. maximum, endemic taxon to North America. In this study, we reviewed the taxonomy of Heracleum moellendorffii complex in Korea and neighboring countries on the basis of molecular phylogenies derived from sequences of nuclear ribosomal DNA internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions. From three Korean accessions of Heracleum investigated in this study, two types of ITS sequences were obtained; two accessions were related to Chinese H. moellendorffii var. moellendorffii and North American H. maximum without forming a clade while the other one was identical to accession from H. maximum from Primorskiy, Russia. In the other hand, Japanese H. moellendorffii (=H. sphondylium ssp. sphondylium var. nipponicum in the flora of Japan) was closely related to H. maximum accessions from Korea and Russia, not nested within the clade comprising several subspecies of H. sphondylium. In order to delimit species boundaries among putatively closely related Heracleum species in fareastern Asian countries, more samples and much more rapidly evolved DNA regions must be investigated with interpretation of morphological and anatomical features.

Saussurea nipponica subsp. higomaontana(Compositae): An Unrecorded Plant in Korea (무등취(국화과): 우리나라 미기록식물)

  • Hong, Hang-Hwa;Im, Hyoung-Tak
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.37 no.2
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    • pp.197-202
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    • 2007
  • Saussurea nipponica subsp. higomontana was recorded first from Mt. Mudeung-san, Gwangju-si, Korea. We named the plant Mu-deung-chui. It had been considered as an endemic plant to Japan. S. nipponica sensu lato is the one of the most famous polymorphic species which consists of 7 infraspecific taxa (subspecies) isolating geographically. Among them, S. nipponica subsp. higomontana is distributed on high mountain regions of Kyushu and Shikoku.

New record of an alien plant, Verbena bracteata (Verbenaceae) in Korea

  • KIM, Jung-Hyun;SHIM, Sang Deog;CHO, Kyu Tae;KIM, Hyun Sik;HYUN, Chang Woo;PARK, Jin Hee
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.52 no.3
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    • pp.196-200
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    • 2022
  • Verbena bracteata Cav. ex Lag. & Rodr. (Verbenaceae), native to North America and an alien plant in China and Japan, was newly found in central and southern areas of Korea. This species can be distinguished from other Verbena taxa in Korea by having larger floral bracts and stems that are prostrate or procumbent to decumbent-ascending. Verbena bracteata grows in dry and sunny grasslands or along roadsides. A precise description, illustration, photographs, and a key to related taxa are provided.

Aster danyangensis, a replacement name for Aster altaicus var. uchiyamae (Asteraceae)

  • KIM, Jae Young;JO, Hyeong Jun;CHANG, Kae Sun;SON, Dong Chan;CHUNG, Gyu Young
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.52 no.1
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    • pp.77-79
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    • 2022
  • Aster altaicus var. uchiyamae, a Korean endemic plant, should be treated as a species rank because it is clearly distinguished from A. altaicus var. altaicus by the morphological characteristics of the plant habit, leaf width, and head size. Nevertheless, when A. altaicus var. uchiyamae was treated as a species rank, the epithet uchiyamae was unavailable in Aster owing to the earlier name A. uchiyamae, which was a replacement name for the illegitimate name A. depauperatus. Therefore, we propose A. danyangensis as a new replacement name for A. altaicus var. uchiyamae. The specific epithet danyangensis refers to the geographic location of Danyang-gun, where the species was discovered. We also designate the lectotype and isolectotype of A. danyangensis.

Validation of Prunus choreiana (Rosaceae) (복사앵도나무 학명의 정당공표)

  • Hong, Hang-Hwa;Kim, Won-Gi;Im, Hyoung-Tak
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.36 no.3
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    • pp.257-262
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    • 2006
  • Prunus choreiana, invalidly published without Latin description in the original text, is validated here. The species has been known as a Korean endemic plant species of deciduous shrub, and a typical calciferous plant mainly distributed in Pyeongnam Province and Hamnam Province, North Korea. However, recently new population was reported from Mt. Myon and another new population is reported here from Mt. Jabyeong in Gangwon-do.

A new record of Scutellaria (Lamiaceae) in Korean flora: S. guilielmii A. Gray

  • KIM, Jung-Hyun;YANG, Young-Tae;LIM, Chae Eun;KIM, Jin-Seok
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.51 no.1
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    • pp.103-108
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    • 2021
  • A new distribution of Scutellaria guilielmii A. Gray is discovered in Korea. This species was collected from seashores on Pyoseon-ri, Pyoseon-myeon, Seogwipo-si, Jeju-do. S. guilielmii is distinguished from other related Korean taxa of the genus by having broadly winged nutlets (fruits). Here, we provide a precise description, illustrations, key to the related taxa, and photographs of its habitat. The new Korean name is given as 'Nal-gae-gol-mu-kkot', considering the broadly winged nutlets (fruits). In addition, new habitats are likely to be discovered through plant biodiversity surveys of the southwestern coastal islands.

New record of an alien plant, Ipomoea cristulata (Convolvulaceae) in Korea

  • Jin-Suk YOUN;Jin-Seok KIM;Chang Woo, HYUN;Jae-Hong PAK;Woong LEE
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.53 no.1
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    • pp.60-64
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    • 2023
  • Ipomoea cristulata Hallier f. (Convolvulaceae), native to the desert regions of the central USA to Mexico, was newly found in Gojeong-ri, Deokgwa-myeon, Namwon-si, Jeollabuk-do. This species can be distinguished from I. coccinea by leaves with 3-5 lobes, hirsute distributed adaxially, and corolla entirely red or orange-red. Its Korean name is 'Nabi-ip-yu-hong-cho' based on its butterfly-shaped leaves. We provide a detailed description, photographs, habitat details, and a taxonomic key to related taxa.

A palynological study of Dioscorea (Dioscoreaceae) in Korea

  • JEONG, Dae-Hui;JO, Hyeong-Jun;KIM, Jae-Young;KWON, Min-Ji;JEONG, Seon;PARK, Hong-Woo;CHUNG, Youngjae;CHUNG, Gyu-Young
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.52 no.1
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    • pp.29-34
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    • 2022
  • A palynological study of genus Dioscorea L. in Korea was conducted to evaluate the taxonomic implications. As a result of confirming the palynological characteristics of seven taxa of Dioscorea L., including six that are distributed in Korea and D. tokoro found in Japan, sections or species were classified according to the characteristics, such as the number of apertures, the polar end shape, and exine sculpturing. Specifically, the exine sculptures of D. coreana and D. tokoro, erroneously known to be distributed in Korea, are distinguished. The change in the number of apertures is closely associated with microsporogenesis, and it can be presumed that disulcate pollen might have been derived from monosulcate pollen in Dioscorea.