• Title/Summary/Keyword: chinese holly

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Morphological Characteristics of Chinese Holly (Ilex cornuta) Leaves in Korea (우리나라 호랑가시나무 잎의 형태적 특성)

  • Koh Myong-Hee;Kim Yong-Shik;Oh Hyun-Kyung
    • Korean Journal of Environment and Ecology
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    • v.19 no.4
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    • pp.348-357
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    • 2005
  • The present study was carried out to analyze the leaf variation of hex corn uta which are one of very important native landscape woody materials, but rapidly destroyed by habitat alteration in the past decades. The leaf characters were ranged as 0.9-11.8cm for the leaf length, 0.4-7.7cm for the leaf width, 0.2-13.0mm for the petiole length, $0.7-46.7cm^2$ for the leaf area and 1-13 for the number of leaf serrations. Due to the leaf shape, number of spines, and colours of leaf and fruits, which are the main characters of the cultivars of the Chinese holly, the hollies in the wild and planted as identified as 9 cultivars and one hybrid including 'Cholbuam', 'Inchon' and 'Sun Chun'.

Genetic Monomorphism of the Natural Ilex cornuta Community at the Northern Range Limit in Buan, Jeollanam-do in Korea Revealed by AFLP Markers (AFLP 표지자에서 나타난 전라남도 부안의 북방한계지에 자생하는 호랑가시나무 군락의 유전적 단형성)

  • Hong, Kyung Nak;Park, Yu Jin;Lee, Jei Wan;Kim, Young Mi
    • Journal of Korean Society of Forest Science
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    • v.104 no.2
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    • pp.187-192
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    • 2015
  • Individuals in the population under a particular environmental condition influencing recurrently for a long time could locally adapted and local adaptation is of a fundamental importance in a breeding program, conservation activities of genetic resources or evolutionary biology. Plants at northern range limits have higher probability of expressing an adaptative genetic trait. The natural community at the northern range limit of Ilex cornuta (Chinese holly) in Buan, Jeollanam-do in Korea was composed of adults of 744 and seedlings of 211 (hereafter Community) and is designated as the Korean Natural Monument (No. 122) by the law. At two adjacent areas to Community, 85 (hereafter Plantation I) and 27 hollies (hereafter Plantation II) were planted respectively for preparations of the next generation. Eighty-five trees were sampled for genetic analysis in the three groups. Fifty-two (36%) of the total 143 amplicons were polymorphic from four AFLP primer combinations. A total of thirteen genotypes was identified and just one genotype was for 52 trees of Community. Seven and five genotypes were shown for Plantation I and II, respectively. There was no identical genotype between Community and Plantation (I or II) or between two plantation groups. Number of private loci was 2 for Community, 6 for Plantation I and 4 for Plantation II. We presumed their genetic backgrounds were quite different with one another and the plantation groups were made independently because they were different not only the genetic compositions but also their ages. Considering the genetic monomorphism by AFLP markers, observations of only male trees and asexual propagation as layerage or cuttage, the hollies in Community might be a genet by root suckering from a single male tree, not the results of selective removal of female trees for ornamental use in the past.