• Title/Summary/Keyword: Rosaceae fruit trees

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Distribution and Characteristics of Plant Resources of Native Pyrus sp.

  • Ahn, Young-Hee
    • Plant Resources
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    • v.4 no.3
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    • pp.157-160
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    • 2001
  • The wild Pyrus plants belong to the deciduous woody plants in Rosaceae family. Most are cultivated for fruit productions, but some for ornamental plants. There are 5 Pyrus species including Pyrus ussuriensis and 8 varieties cultivated in Korea. In Korea, these plants are populated near villages or on the hills, and they are easily propagated since their fruit are very juicy and quite big in size. Plant breeding to get improved cultivars is not difficult because the Pyrus plants are easy to cross breeding among its genus. Because not only this reason but there have been shown lots of variation in wild groups, the Pyrus plants inhabited in Korea are excellent deciduous woody plants and favorable fruit trees to develop ornamental plants. It is necessary to develop many kinds of fruit trees and ornamental trees containing genetically different character, so that it will be satisfied for many different people's taste and demands. Collecting lots of wild plant resource with diverse genes is necessary for plant breeding.

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Distribution and Characteristics of Plant Resources of Native Pyrus sp.

  • Ahn, Young-Hee
    • Proceedings of the Plant Resources Society of Korea Conference
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    • 2001.11a
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    • pp.15-19
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    • 2001
  • The wild Pyrus plants belong to the deciduous woody plants in Rosaceae family. Most are cultivated for fruit productions, but some for ornamental plants. There are 5 Pyrus species including Pyrus ussuriensis and 8 varieties cultivated in Korea. In Korea, these plants are populated near villages or on the hills, and they are easily propagated since their fruit are very Juicy and quite big In size. Plant breeding to get improved cultivars Is not difficult because the Pyrus plants are easy to cross breeding among its genus. Because not only this reason but there have been shown lots of variation in wild groups, the Pyrus plants inhabited In Korea are excellent deciduous woody plants and favorable fruit trees to develop ornamental plants. It is necessary to develop many kinds of fruit trees and ornamental trees containing genetically different character, so that it will be satisfied for many different people's taste and demands Collecting lots of wild plant resource with diverse genes is necessary for plant breeding.

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Distribution Ratios of Grapholita molesta and G. dimorpha Larvae in Pest-damaged Fruits of Five Rosaceae Fruit Trees (장미과 과수 5종의 해충 피해 과실에서 복숭아순나방과 복숭아순나방붙이 유충의 구성비)

  • Yang, Chang Yeol;Kim, Dong Hwan;Kim, Hyeong Hwan;Kang, Taek Jun;Cho, Young Sik
    • Korean journal of applied entomology
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    • v.55 no.4
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    • pp.313-317
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    • 2016
  • The congener and sympatric species, Grapholita molesta (Busck) and G. dimorpha Komai, are economically important pests against various Rosaceae fruit trees in Korea. In this study, we identified the species from the larvae of these two insects collected from damaged fruits of peach, plum, apple, pear, and quince by using a molecular diagnostic method and compared the distribution ratios of the two species within the fruits of each of these trees. Most (99.7%) of the larvae collected from peach fruits were identified as G. molesta, while all of the larvae found in plum fruits were G. dimorpha. Both species were found in the other three fruits, but G. molesta was significantly dominant in pear fruits. G. dimorpha was more abundant in apple and quince fruits, without any significant difference between the distribution ratios of two insects. The results suggest that development of further realistic strategies is necessary for the management of these two pests in Korean orchards.

Estimates of Genotoxic Effect by the Pollen Analysis of Vines and Fruit trees

  • Sirunik, Yervandyan;Anna, Nebish;Rouben, Arutyunyan
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
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    • v.24 no.4
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    • pp.368-371
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    • 2006
  • The complex analysis of male reproductive system of vines and fruit-tyees growing in zone of the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant (ANPP) is realized. The obtained data demonstrate that the homogeneous pollen with high fertility and optimal morphometric parameters in all variants is formed. The obtained results demonstrate that there is no one-sided effect of ANPP on the development and formation of investigated male generative system of vines and fruit trees. Thus, on the base of obtained results we can't confirm its deleterious effect on the environment.

Report of Eight Unrecorded Fungi from the Fire Blight Burial Control Soil in Korea (과수화상병 매몰방재지 토양에서 분리된 8종의 국내 미기록 진균 보고)

  • Hyeongjin Noh;Huiju Seo;Seong Hwan Kim
    • The Korean Journal of Mycology
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    • v.51 no.4
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    • pp.447-460
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    • 2023
  • Fire blight, a plant disease caused by Erwinia amylovora, continues to cause considerable damage to fruit-bearing trees belonging to the Rosaceae family, such as apples and pears. In Korea, to hinder its rapid spread diseased apple and pear trees have been buried since its first occurrence. To determine the safety of this control method, the buried plant materials and adjacent soil have been investigated. In the process of investigating the microbiota of the buried soil, Bisifusarium allantoides, Botryotrichum domesticum, Microascus verrucosus, Paraphoma pye, Phaeosphaeria culmorum, Ramophialophora globispora, Sordaria tomentoalba, and Striaticonidium brachysporum were identified as unrecorded species in Korea. To report the above eight species as Korean unrecorded species, we report their morphological and molecular features in this study.

Discriminant analysis to detect fire blight infection on pear trees using RGB imagery obtained by a rotary wing drone

  • Kim, Hyun-Jung;Noh, Hyun-Kwon;Kang, Tae-Hwan
    • Korean Journal of Agricultural Science
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    • v.47 no.2
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    • pp.349-360
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    • 2020
  • Fire-blight disease is a kind of contagious disease affecting apples, pears, and some other members of the family Rosaceae. Due to its extremely strong infectivity, once an orchard is confirmed to be infected, all of the orchards located within 100 m must be buried under the ground, and the sites are prohibited to cultivate any fruit trees for 5 years. In South Korea, fire-blight was confirmed for the first time in the Ansung area in 2015, and the infection is still being identified every year. Traditional approaches to detect fire-blight are expensive and require much time, additionally, also the inspectors have the potential to transmit the pathogen, Thus, it is necessary to develop a remote, unmanned monitoring system for fire-blight to prevent the spread of the disease. This study was conducted to detect fire-blight on pear trees using discriminant analysis with color information collected from a rotary-wing drone. The images of the infected trees were obtained at a pear orchard in Cheonan using an RGB camera attached to a rotary-wing drone at an altitude of 4 m, and also using a smart phone RGB camera on the ground. RGB and Lab color spaces and discriminant analysis were used to develop the image processing algorithm. As a result, the proposed method had an accuracy of approximately 75% although the system still requires many flaws to be improved.