• Title/Summary/Keyword: TAXONOMIC STATUS

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Redescription of Parabrachiella bera (Copepoda: Siphonostomatoida: Lernaeopodidae) Parasitic on Parajulis poecilepterus (Actinopterygii: Perciformes: Labridae) from Korea

  • Moon, Seong Yong
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.17 no.1
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    • pp.123-127
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    • 2014
  • Parabrachiella bera (Yamaguti, 1939) is redescribed based on newly collected material from multicolorfin rainbowfish, Parajulis poecilopterus, landed at Wando fishery port on the southern coast of Korea. Although some differences were observed between the original description and the specimens examined in this study, these differences do not warrant a change in the taxonomic status of this species. Parabrachiella bera bears some resemblance to Parabrachiella incurva Shiino, 1956, but differs from it in details of the trunk and genital processes.

Glycosmis kanburiensis: A new species of Rutaceae from Thailand

  • Wichai AIYAKOOL;Srunya VAJRODAYA
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.53 no.1
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    • pp.25-31
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    • 2023
  • Glycosmis kanburiensis (Rutaceae) from Kanchanaburi Province, southwestern Thailand is described as a new species. It is similar to G. esquirolii (H. Lév.) Tanaka in its dendriform habit, terminal inflorescences, and large leaflets, but several easily recognizable differences in floral features, including triangular sepals with rust-colored indumentum (vs. broadly ovate villose sepals), globose, glabrous (vs. subglobose, villosus) ovary, cylindrical and attenuate (vs. stout) style, and ellipsoid (vs. globose) fruit. A taxonomic description, illustration, photographs, geographical distribution, ecological data, and conservation status are provided.

Opuntia humifusa (Raf.) Raf. f. jeollaensis E. J. Kim & S. S. Whang, a new forma based on three DNA markers (DNA 염기서열에 근거한 선인장과 신품종 왕가시천년초[Opuntia humifusa (Raf.) Raf. f. jeollaensis E. J. Kim & S. S. Whang])

  • Kim, Eun Jeong;Srikanth, Krishnamoorthy;Lee, Eunae;Whang, Sung Soo
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.44 no.3
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    • pp.181-187
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    • 2014
  • The taxonomic status of a new forma, Opuntia humifusa (Raf.) Raf. f. jeollaensis E. J. Kim & S. S. Whang, and the taxonomic relationships of three Korean cladodes were studied based on DNA sequences of three genes. The new forma O. humifusa f. jeollaensis (Wanggasi-Chunnyuncho) is simlilar to O. humifusa (Chunnyuncho), but differ in having both flower with the reddish inner center, and strong and many 3 cm long spines. Molecular studies showed that the new forma grouped into Macrocentra series instead of Humifusa series which included Korean O. humifusa. We designated the new taxa firstly studied here as a new forma, because the taxa have been mainly cultivated in farmlands in Jeolla-do area rather than distributed in nature. The taxonomic relationships of three Korean cladodes are discussed in detail.

Inferring the Molecular Phylogeny of Chroococcalian Strains (Blue-green algae/Cyanophyta) from the Geumgang River, Based on Partial Sequences of 16S rRNA Gene

  • Lee, Wook-Jae;Bae, Kyung-Sook
    • Journal of Microbiology
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    • v.40 no.4
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    • pp.335-339
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    • 2002
  • Partial sequences of 16S rRNA gene of five chroococcalian blue-green algal strains, Aphanothece nidulans KCTC AG10041, Aphanothece naegelii KCTC AG10042, Microcystis aeruginosa KCTC AG10159, Microcystis ichthyoblabe KCTC AG10160, and Microcystis viridis KCTC AG10198, which were isolated from water from the Geumgang River, were determined and were inferred their phylogenetic and taxonomic positions among taxa of order Chroococcales. Most taxa of Chroococcales whose partial 16S rRNA gene sequences were aligned in this study, are clustered with other related taxa. Aphanothece nidulans KCTC AG10041 and Aphanothece naegelii KCTC AG10042 made a cluster with other European species of these genera, which supported 100% of the bootstrap trees with a very high sequence similarity (97.4-99.4%) in this study. Three strains, Microcystis aeruginosa KCTC AG10159, M. ichthyoblabe KCTC AG10160, and M. viridis KCTC AG10198, formed a cluster with other Microcystis spp. supported 100 % of the bootstrap trees with a similarity of 97.0-99.9% except for two strains. However, this phylogentic tree made no resolution among the species of Microcystis spp. The topology of the tree reconfirmed the taxonomic status of three species of Microcystis, identified in this study based on the morphology, as three colonial types of Microcystis aeruginosa com. nov. Otsuka et al. (1999c). The genera of chroococcalian cyanophytes are heterogeneously clustered in these sequence analyses. We suggest that more molecular studies on the genera of Chroococcales with reference strains, widely collected from restricted geographic or environmental ranges, get accurate taxonomic or phylogenetic determinations.

Taxonomic Revision of Genus Takydromus (Squamata: Lacertidae) in Korea (한국산 장지뱀속(유린목:장지뱀과)의 분류학적 재고찰)

  • Chang, Min-Ho;Song, Jae-Young;Oh, Hong-Shik;Chung, Kyu-Hoi
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
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    • v.24 no.2 s.62
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    • pp.95-101
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    • 2006
  • The present paper attempts to elucidate the taxonomic status of five species of Takydromus (T. amurensis, T. wolteri, T. tachydromoides oldi, T. kwagakunesis and T. auroralis) reported in Korean Peninsula to date. For this purpose 114 Takydromus specimens were collected from April 2003 to october 2004 in Southern Korean peninsula and morphological characters inclusive of the presence of contact between front-nasal and fostral and the number of femoral pores have been analyzed. The analysis reveals that T. kwagakunesis and T. auroralis should be synonymized to T. amurensis. In addition, the Korean Takydromus consists of two species of T. amurensis and T. wolteri.

Macrolepiota in Korea: New Records and a New Species

  • Cho, Hae Jin;Lee, Hyun;Park, Myung Soo;Kim, Changmu;Wisitrassameewong, Komsit;Lupala, Abel;Park, Ki Hyeong;Kim, Min Ji;Fong, Jonathan J.;Lim, Young Woon
    • Mycobiology
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    • v.47 no.4
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    • pp.368-377
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    • 2019
  • The genus Macrolepiota (Agaricales, Basidiomycota) is easy to recognize at the genus level because of big, fleshy basidiocarps with squamules covering the pileus; a single or double annulus; and big, thick-walled basidiospores with a germ pore. However, morphological identification is often unreliable in Macrolepiota due to similar morphological features among species. Due to the uncertainty of previous morphological identification in the genus Macrolepiota, it is necessary to re-examine Korean Macrolepiota using molecular data. We reexamined 34 Macrolepiota specimens collected from 2012 to 2018 in Korea using a reverse taxonomic approach, whereby species identification was first done based on the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region analysis, followed by morphological confirmation. We identified the presence of four species: M. detersa, M. mastoidea, M. procera, and M. umbonata sp. nov. Two species (M. detersa and M. mastoidea) were previously unrecorded from Korea and M. umbonata is a new species. Detailed descriptions of all four species and taxonomic key are provided in this study. Macrolepiota procera and M. umbonata are distributed through the country, but M. detersa and M. mastoidea are distributed only in limited areas. According to our results, the combination of ITS locus and morphology proved to be a robust approach to evaluate the taxonomic status of Macrolepiota species in Korea. Additional surveys are needed to verify the species diversity and clarify their geographic distribution.

Taxonomic Review of a Rare Butterfly Ray Gymnura japonica (Gymnuridae, Chondrichthyes), in Korea (한국의 희귀 나비가오리[Gymnura japonica (나비가오리과, 연골어강)]의 분류학적 재검토)

  • Kim, Jin-Koo;Ryu, Jung-Hwa;Jang, Seo-Ha;Han, Kyeong-Ho;Kim, Byeong-Yeob
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.55 no.1
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    • pp.30-36
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    • 2022
  • We collected a total of four butterfly ray specimens (Gymnura japonica, 213.4-695.0 mm in total length) in Korea from 2016 to 2021 and investigated their morphological and molecular characteristics in order to clarify their taxonomic status. These features are summarized as follows. Disc lozenge-shaped, 1.8-2.0 times broader than long. Tail very short, post-cloaca length 23.9-28.2% in disc width. Snout short, no rostral cartilage. Clasper short, no hook. Dorsal surface uniform yellow or brownish grey, with or without rounded light yellow spots. An analysis of 434 base-pair sequences of mitochondrial DNA cytochrome c oxidase subunit I showed that all four specimens corresponded to G. japonica from Japan (Kimura-2-parameter distance = 0-0.2%), suggesting that the color patterns found may be due to intraspecific color variation. G. japonica resembles Gymnura poecilura but differs in that it has a shorter tail length to disc width (23.9-28.2% in G. japonica vs. 40.1-48.3% in G. poecilura). This study revealed that G. japonica occurred in areas affected by the Tsushima Warm Current, tentatively suggesting that G. japonica may be an indicator species for monitoring marine ecosystem changes due to climate change.

Reassessment of the Taxonomic Status of the Bemisia tabaci Complex (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) Based on Mitochondrial COI Gene Sequences (미토콘드리아 COI 유전자 분석을 통한 담배가루이 종복합군의 분류학적 재평가)

  • Lee, Wonhoon;Lee, Gwan-Seok
    • Korean journal of applied entomology
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    • v.56 no.2
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    • pp.107-120
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    • 2017
  • Bemisia tabaci (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) is one of the most important insect pests in the world. In the present study, the taxonomic status of B. tabaci and the number of species composing the B. tabaci complex were determined based on 550 COI gene sequences of B. tabaci. Genetic divergence within B. tabaci ranged from 0% to 27.8% (average 11.1%). This result indicates that the B. tabaci complex is composed of multiple species that may belong to different genera or subfamilies. A phylogenetic tree constructed based on 217 COI gene sequences without duplications revealed that the B. tabaci complex is composed of a total of 43 putative species, including a new species, Java. In addition, genetic divergence within nine species (Australia, Asia II 1, Asia II 6, Asia II 7, Asia II 10, Mediterranean, New world, New world 2, Sub Saharan Africa 1) indicates that 4.0% is reasonable to be used as a threshold of species boundaries within the B. tabaci complex, and species with high intraspecific genetic divergences can be related with cryptic species.

Morphometric Anlayses with Eight Subspecies of Striped Field Mice, Apodemus agrarius Pallas (Rodentia , Mammalia) , in Asia : The Taxonomic Status of Subspecies chejuensis at Cheju island in Korea (아시아에서 서식하는 등줄쥐, Apodemus agrarius Pallas(설치목, 포유강) 8개 아종의 형태적 형질들을 사용한 다변량 분석 : 한국의 제주도의 아종 chejuenesis 의 분류학적 위치)

  • 고흥선
    • Animal Systematics, Evolution and Diversity
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.179-188
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    • 1991
  • In order to determine the taxonomic status of Apodemus agrarius chejuensis from Cheju island in Korea, three hundred and eleven samples of eight subspecies of striped field mice (subspecies, agrarius, ningpoensis , pallidior, chevrieri, insulaemus, manchuricus, coreae, and chejuensis of A. agrarius Pallas) in Asia, collected from Turkey , China, Taiwan, , Manchuria, and Koarea, were used. Four external and 27 cranial characters were measured and their measurements were utilized for multivariate analyses such as cluster, principal component, and discriminant analyses. Four forms were revealed . A largest-size from was chejuensis, whereas a large-size form was cheverieri. A medium -size from and a small-size from were coreae and other five subspecies (agrarius , ningpoensis, pallidior, insulaemus, and manchuricus) , respecitvley, but their differences were clinal. A discontinuous gap was revealed between chejuensis (a largest-size from) and six subspecies ( a medium-size from and a small-size form) Although chejuensis appeared to be a distinct species, it is concluded that molecular analyses are necessary in order to describe it as a new species.

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Taxonomic Status of Acheilognathus sp. (Cyprinidae) found in the Geum River, Korea (금강에서 발견된 Acheilognathus sp. (Cyprinidae)의 분류학적 위치)

  • Chae, Byung Soo;Kim, Sang Ki;Lee, Jin Hee;Hwang, Ui Wook
    • Korean Journal of Ichthyology
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    • v.26 no.4
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    • pp.249-258
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    • 2014
  • To examine the taxonomic status of Acheilognathus sp. specimens from the Geum River, morphological and genetical characteristics of A. sp., A. yamatsutae and A. majusculus were investigated and compared in detail. Specimens of A. sp. could be distinguished from the other two species by the combination of some morphological characters such as nuptial color, vertebrae, gillrakers and etc. Males of A. sp. had red bands on the outer margin of dorsal and anal fins and a white band on the outer margin of ventral fin in breeding season. A. sp. had larger maximum body length and somewhat more vertebrae than A. yamatsutae, and had fewer gillrakers than A. majusculus. A. sp. appeared as a monophyletic group with A. majusculus and A. cyanostigma based on genetic analysis. In addition, it had even more close relationship with other congeners than A. yamatsutae. Therefore it is presumed that A. sp. from the Geum River may be a distinct species in genus Acheilognathus.