• Title/Summary/Keyword: ginseng-field soil

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Impacts of Different Pentachloronitrobenzene (quintozene) Use Patterns on Severity of Damping-off of Ginseng (Panu quinquefolitrs)

  • Reeleder, R.D;Capell, B
    • Journal of Ginseng Research
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    • v.26 no.1
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    • pp.10-16
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    • 2002
  • In replicated field trials, the efficacy of pentachloronitrobenzene (PCNB; quintozene) for control of damping-off of ginseng seedlings was found to be affected by timing of application and formulation. Application at the time of seeding and prior to placement of straw mulch was found to provide the moat consistent level of disease control. However, decline in plant stand during the four-year production cycle resulted in most treatments providing similar levels of plant populations at harvest. Soil residues of pentachloronitrobenzene were generally highest (1 $\mu\textrm{g}$ PCNB/g soil) in those treatments that exhibited the highest levels of disease control in the seedling year. Straw contained high levels of quintozene after application. Beet seed assays with artificially-infested soils indicated that current use rates provide an amount of product suitable for high levels of disease control.

Effect of Growth Conditions on Saponin Content and Ginsenoside Pattern of Panax ginseng

  • Lee, Mee-Hyoung;Park, Hoon;Lee, Chong-Hwa
    • Proceedings of the Ginseng society Conference
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    • 1987.06a
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    • pp.89-107
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    • 1987
  • For the elucidation of significance of saponin as quality criterion of ginseng ginsenoside content(GC) and ginsenoside pattern similarity(GPS) by simple correlation were investigated in relation to red ginseng quality factors, age, plant part, harvest season, mineral nutrition, soil physical characteristics, growth light and temperature, shading material, growth location, physiological disease and crop stand through survey of ginseng plantstions, field experiments, water culture and phytotron experiments. Effect of tissue culture was also reviewed. GC was negatively correlated with good quality of red ·ginseng and positively with bad quality. Age did not show any consistency with GC but GPS was less with the increase of age difference. GPS was less or not significant between taproot that is lowest in GC and epidermis highest, and significant between leaf and taproot. Harvest season marked with the lowest GC and Pattern was also different. Nutrient imbalance, the increase of hazardous soil nutrient and physical condition to growth increased GC, but GPS was little different. The higher the growth lights intensity and temperature the higher the GC but GPS was little changed. Root rust increased GC, but root scab decreased it. Sponge-like and inside cavity phenomena increased GC. Ginsenoside pattern of cultured tissues and rootlet showed great variation. These results strongly indicate that there are optimum saponin content and ginsenoside pattern and that these are accomplished under the optimum growth condition.

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Effects of Salt in Soil Condition on Chlorophyll Fluorescence and Physiological Disorder in Panax ginseng C. A. Meyer (토양 염류 농도가 인삼 잎의 엽록소 형광반응 및 생리장해 발생에 미치는 영향)

  • Kim, Jang Uk;Hyun, Dong Yun;Kim, Young Chang;Lee, Jung Woo;Jo, Ick Hyun;Kim, Dong Hwi;Kim, Kee Hong;Sohn, Jae Keun
    • Korean Journal of Medicinal Crop Science
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    • v.23 no.6
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    • pp.446-453
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    • 2015
  • Background : Excessively high concentration of sodium ion causednutrient deficiency and significantly decrease growth. This study was carried out to determine the limiting concentration range of sodium ion in the soil of ginseng field. Methods and Results : The growth of the ginseng cultivar Chunpoong reduced with increase in salinity, and the rate of growth reduction was higher in shoots than that of roots. Particularly, ginseng plants cultivated at high level of nitrate nitrogen or sodium may suffer delayed development and stunted growth. Chlorophyll damage occurred on the leaves of ginseng planted in relatively high levels (> $0.2cmol^+/kg$) of sodium ion, as determined by the fluorescence reaction. The incidence of physiological disorder in ginseng cultivated at 249 sites was correlated with the concentration of sodium ion in the soils. About 74% of ginseng fields in which physiological disorders occurred had concentrations of sodium ion in soil greater than $0.2cmol^+/kg$. In contrast, the concentration of sodium ions at 51 of 85 sites where no damage occurred was relatively ($0.05cmol^+/kg-0.15cmol^+/kg$). Conclusions : The concentration of sodium ion in soil of ginseng fields can be classified into three levels optimum (${\leq}0.15$), permissible allowance (0.15 - 0.2) and excessive (> 0.2).

Effect of soil organic matter content on plant uptake factor of ginseng for endosulfan (토양유기물 함량이 인삼근의 endosulfan 흡수이행에 미치는 영향)

  • Oh, Kyeong-Yeol;Choi, Geun-Hyoung;Bae, Ji-Yeon;Lee, Deuk-Yeong;Lee, Sung-Woo;Kim, Jin-Hyo
    • Journal of Applied Biological Chemistry
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    • v.63 no.4
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    • pp.401-406
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    • 2020
  • The plant uptake of endosulfan, a new persistent organic pollutants from soil environment was investigated on ginseng through the field survey in Korea. The endosulfan residues in soil for this survey were ranged on 0.013-0.136 mg kg-1. The plant uptake factor (PUF) for endosulfan in ginseng was 0.243-1.708 and the highest PUF was found on 3-year-old ginseng. The PUF for endosulfan decreased in the longer cultivation period and it might be caused by the dilution effect of ginseng growth. In addition, the soil organic matter (SOM) content affected on the PUF negatively and Pearson correlation coefficient (r) between SOM and PUF was -0.7812 (p <0.05). Thus, higher SOM would positively affect to reduce the endosulfan residue in ginseng root.

Overwintering of tobacco hollow stalk disease pathogen Erwinia carotovora subsp. carotouora in field soils. (담배줄기 속썩음병균 Erwinia carotovora subsp. carotovora의 토양중에서의 월동)

  • Gang, Yeo-Gyu;Park, E.K.;Chu, H.G.
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Tobacco Science
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    • v.11 no.1
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    • pp.41-48
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    • 1989
  • The significance of soil and/or rhisosphere populations of Erwinia carotovora sobsp. carotovora (Ecc) as a source of primary inoculum for tobacco hollow stalk disease has been demonstrated conclusively. The survival of Ecc in field soils fter overwintering was estimated by using the enrichment technique. The population number of pectolytic erwinia (PE) in field soils relatively decreased at the rate of 102-104 colony forming unit(CFU) per g of soil after overwintering. Higher level of PE population overwintered in the rhlzosphere foils of tobacco stubbles and detected more frequently in rhizosphere soils of weed plants than in those of bare fields. All of the tobacco stubbles collected from fields where tobacco had been grown the previous year contained Ecc. The more survived population number of PE at the 30cm depth of artifitiany infested soils than at the upper of those by introducing with diseased tobacco plant tissue after overwintering. Ecc overwintered effectively in rhizosphere soils of tobacco stubbles, overwintered weeds and tobacco debris in field soils.

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Mineralization of organic materials applied to Korean ginseng (고려인삼(高麗人蔘) 유기질비료(有機質肥料)의 무기화(無機化))

  • Hong, Jung-Kook;Park, Hoon;Park-Lee, Quihee
    • Korean Journal of Soil Science and Fertilizer
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.13-19
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    • 1980
  • 1. Ginseng field and virgin soils, to which Yakto, washed Yakto, litters (deciduous and coniferous trees) and bone meal were applied, were incubated at 60% of field capacity of the soils to shed light on the production of $NH_4-N$ and $NO_3-N$ through mineralization of the organic materials being the nitrogen sources for Korean ginseng. 2. Total nitrogen content mineralized in the soils, to which the following organic materials were applied, was:bone meal>Yakto${\gg}$litter (deciduous trees)> washed Yakto, litter (coniferous trees). The content increased with incubation time in all the virgin and ginseng field soils excepting only the virgin soils applied with washed Yakto and litters of which the contents decreased. A large part of nitrogen mineralized in the virgin and ginseng field soils to which Yakto was applied was nitrate form, while a half ginseng field soils and a considerable part in the other virgin soils was ammonium form in the other treatments. 3. $NH_4-N$ content produced in the virgin and ginseng field soils applied with bone meal increased with the time, while it decreased in the other treatments. And the content in the soils applied with bone meal was very high. 4. $NO_3-N$ content showed a continuous increase during the incubation time in all treatments of ginseng field soils and only in the virgin soil to which Yakto was applied, wherease it showed almost no change in the other treatments of virgin soils. And the content in the soils applied with Yakto was very high. 5. Yakto was expected to supply nitrate enough to meet amounts of nitrogen required by ginseng with different ages and also expected to increase in soil fertility, while bone meal was expected only to supply much nitrogen of which a considerable part was ammonium form.

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Effect of soil moisture on growth of P. ginseng (토양수분(土壤水分)이 인삼생육(人蔘生育)에 미치는 영향(影響))

  • Nam, Ki-Yeul;Park, Hoon;Lee, Il-Ho
    • Korean Journal of Soil Science and Fertilizer
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    • v.13 no.2
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    • pp.71-76
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    • 1980
  • Effect of soil moisture on growth of 2 year old Pan ax ginseng was investigated by pot culture using clay loam and sandy loam soils. In clay loam soil emergence rate of new shoot and stem growth were greatly decreased below 40% of field capacity. In sandy loam soil the growth of stem and leaf were greatly affected below 40% moisture. Root yield showed maximum at 60% moisture and significantly coorelated with stem diameter and root length. Rotten root rate and die back rate of top were least at 60% and gradually increased with either increase or decrease of soil moisture.

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Control Effect of Bacillus subtilis B-4228 on Root Rot of Panax ginseng (Bacillus subtilis B-4228의 인삼 근부병 억제효과)

  • Lee, Byung-Dae;Park, Hoon
    • Journal of Ginseng Research
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    • v.28 no.1
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    • pp.67-70
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    • 2004
  • Bacillus subtilis B-4228 selected from ginseng field soil for prevention of rusty root was tested for the control of ginseng root rot. In petri-plate dual culture, mycelial growth of Cylindrocarpon destructans was inhibited by B-4228 and hyphal swelling of C. destructans was occurred. In pot experiment with C. destructans-contaminated soil B-4228 dipping of ginseng seedling showed significant preventive effect of root rot (p=0.01), percent healthy root 82% and 20% for treatment and control, root rot rate 6% and 50.4%, respectively.

Competition among roots of Panax ginseng under field condition (인삼포장(人蔘圃場)에서 개체간 근생육경합(根生育競合))

  • Park, Hoon;Kim, Kap-Sik;Kwon, Suk-Chul;Park-Lee, Quihee
    • Korean Journal of Soil Science and Fertilizer
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.33-38
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    • 1980
  • The competition in root growth between plants was investigated under the field condition of Panax ginseng. Competition pattern was classified in three groups, interline, interrow and diagonal and the principal factor for competition was considered light, nutrients including water and both of them, respectively. Interline competition was always great while interrow and diagonal competition were varied to field. Diagonal competition was always great at the backside line. Competition appeared to be significant from the age of 4 years old at which leaf area index become greater than one. Above facts strongly suggest that main competition at present shading structure appears light and thus light intensity sufficient to decrease or eliminate light competition is the key factor to increase yield.

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