• Title/Summary/Keyword: n. sp.

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Artotrogus gordoni n. sp. (Copepoda: Siphonostomatoida: Artotrogidae) Assocaited with the Bryozoan Schizosmittina cinctipora (Hincks) from New Zealand

  • Kim, Il-Hoi
    • Animal Systematics, Evolution and Diversity
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    • v.25 no.1
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    • pp.5-9
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    • 2009
  • Artotrogus gordoni n. sp. is described as an associate of the bryzoan Schizosmittina cinctipora (Hincks, 1885) collected from an intertidal shore in New Zealand. The new species is similar to A. sardae McKinnon but distinguishable from it by the different shapes of antennule where the first segment is the longest and urosome where the anal somite is distinctly narrower than the genital double somite and posterolateral processes on the genital double somite which is tapered and much more developed than in A. sardae.

Copepoda (Poecilostomatoida: Anchimolgidae) Associated with the Scleractinian Coral Gardineroseris planulata (Dana) from the Moluccas

  • Kim, Il-Hoi
    • Animal Systematics, Evolution and Diversity
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    • v.22 no.1
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    • pp.63-78
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    • 2006
  • Three new species of poecilostomatoid copepods are described as associates of the scleractinian coral Gardineroseris planulata (Dana) from the Moluccas: Sociellus geminus n. sp., Odontomolgus mucosus n. sp. and O. unioviger n. sp. The genus Sociellus is transferred from the Rhynchomolgidae to the Anchimolgidae. The previously described four species of the genus Paramolgus (P. angustus, P. eparmatoides, P. gibberulus, and P. setellus) of the Rhynchomolgidae, associated with Gardineroseris planulata, are transferred as well to the genus Anchimolgus in the Anchimolgidae.

Soil Microflora and Microfauna in 29 Years of N-P-K Fertilizer Omission Plot (N-P-K 비료 29년 결제구에서의 미생물상 연구)

  • Jo Chae-Hee;Yu Sun-Nam;Kim Dong-Geun
    • Research in Plant Disease
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.108-114
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    • 2006
  • This study was conducted to elucidate the interactions among soil microorganisms in a special field where one, two or three of N, P, K fertilizers were continuously not applied for 29 years. Crop yield (barley, soybean), soil chemical properties and microflora and microfauna including nematodes, nematophagous fungi, actinomycetes, bacteria, and fungi were examined for two years. Tylenchorhynchus sp. was the most important plant-parasitic nematode (range $11{\sim}642/300 cm^3$ soil) followed by Pratylenchus sp. and Helicotylenchus sp. Among nematophagous fungi, Monacrosporium spp. was the most frequently found followed by Harposporium sp. and Cystopage sp. In general, plots treated with phosphate fertilizer yielded more, had more nematodes, bacteria and actinomycetes. In contrast, total fungal population densities including nematophagous fungi, Cystopage sp. and Harposporium sp. were in reverse; they were more abundant in the plots with lower phosphate contents. Phosphate and pH are positively correlated and two most important determining factors for the population density of soil organisms under investigation. According to correlation analysis, Ca, Mg, and $SiO_2$ contents in soil and population densities of Tylenchorhynchus sp., saprophitic nematodes, actinomycetes, and bacteria were positively correlated with pH, but were negatively correlated with fungal population densities. We hope that the study will add an additional knowledges to understand our mysterious underworld.

Growth Inhibition of Diatom, Chaetoceros calcitrans by Marine Bacteria, Shewanella sp. SR-14 - Effects of Marine Bacteria on the Changes of Fatty Acid Composition of Diatoms - (해양세균, Shewanella sp. SR-14에 의한 규조류 Chaetoceros calcitrans의 증식저해 - 해양세균이 규조류의 지방산 조성변화에 미치는 영향 -)

  • KIM Ji Hoe;YOON Ho Dong;PARK Hee Yun;LEE Hee Jung;CHANG Dong Suck
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.36 no.1
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    • pp.24-29
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    • 2003
  • In the previous reports, the authors isolated two strains of marine bacteria, Shewanella sp. SR-14, which has Chaetonros sp. growth inhibition activity, and Vibrio alginolyticus, that did not affect growth of the alga. In the present study, fatty acid compositions of diatoms, Chaetoceros calcitrans and Skeletonema costatum, and marine bacteria, Shewanella sp. SR-14 and V. alginolyticus, were analyzed. Changes of fatty acid composition in the diatoms grown with the marine bacteria were also determined. Major fatty acids of Sbewanella sp. SR-14 were 16:1n-7 $(29.4\%)$ and 16:0 $(19.2\%)$ during incubation in peptone broth at $20^{\circ}C$ for 3 days. The compositions of V. alginolyticus detected were 16:0 $(23.7\%),$ 16:1n-7 $(27.7\%)$ and 18:1n-7 $(21.0\%).$ C. calcitrans consisted of 16:1n-7 $(33.3\%),$ 16:0 $(27.1\%)$ and 14:0 $(12.1\%).$ S. costatum mainly contained 16:1n-7 $(28.9\%),$ 16:0 $(21.6\%)$ and 20:5 $(19.8\%).$ When halves of cell numbers of C. calcitrans were moribund cells by Shewanella sp. SR-14, the C. calcitrans and S. costatum simultaneously cultured with the bacteria were harvested by filtration with GE/D glass microfibre filter. In the fatty acid composition of both diatoms, saturated fatty acid contents in both diatoms grown with Shewanella sp. SR-14 were decreased, but unsaturated fatty acid contents were increased. The differences were greater in C. calcitrans than those in S. costatum. During the growth of diatoms with V. alginolyticus, C. calcitrans showed increase of saturated fatty acid contents and decrease of unsaturated fatty acid contents; however, S. costatum did not show sharp difference in fatty acid content. In this study, Shewanella sp. SR-14, which showed growth inhibition activity against C. calcitrans, influenced on the changes of fatty acid contents in the diatom. It was suggested that increased unsaturated fatty acid was synergistically activated algal growth inhibition activity of Shewanella sp. SR-14.

Two New Marine Tardigrades from Palawan Island, the Philippines

  • Chang, Cheon-Yeong;No, Hyeon-Su
    • Animal cells and systems
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    • v.1 no.3
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    • pp.419-423
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    • 1997
  • Two new marine tardigrades, florarctus kwoni n. sp. and Batillipes philippinensis n. sp. belonging to Halechiniscidae and Batillipedidae, respectively, are described on the basis of the specimens sieved from sublittoral coral sands and shell gravels of Palawan Island, the Philippines. florarctus kwoni n. sp. is characterized by the rocket-shaped aliform expansion, with the distal margin of posterior ala flattened. Batillipes philippinensis n. sp. closely resembles B. similis Schulz, 1955 and B. annulatus De Zio, 1962. However, it is clearly discernible from the former by the shape of lateral body projection between leg III and leg IV, and the relative length of cirrus E and the spine on leg IV, and from the latter by the shape of the lateral body projection and the clavar shape. This is the first report of the marine tardigrades from the Philippines.

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Two New Marine Psammocinian Sponges (Demospongiae: Dictyoceratida: Irciniidae) from Korea

  • Lee, Kyung-Jin;Sim, Chung-Ja
    • Animal cells and systems
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    • v.8 no.3
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    • pp.139-143
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    • 2004
  • Two new species of the genus Psammocinia (Dictyoceratida, Irciniidae), P. conulosa n. sp. and P. ulleungensis n. sp., are described from Namhaedo Island and Ulleungdo Island, Korea. Psammocinia conulosa n. sp. seems to be close to both P. amodes Cook and Bergquist, 1998 and P. hawere Cook and Bergquist, 1996 on the basis of the skeletal structure. However, these three species are clearly separated by the following differences: Shape of P. amodes is spatulate and thin, with a broad blade narrowing to a semi-cylindrical stalk; P. hawere forms cups with a shallow excavated bowl, and attached to the substratum by a narrow base. The whole surface of the new species is very finely conulose. Psammocinia ulleungensis n. sp. is similar to P. gageoensis Sim and Lee, 2001 in shape, but this species is easily distinguished from P. gageoensis by the simple skeletal structure.

Moce of Action of the Purified Cell Wall Lytic Enzyme from Bacillus sp. (Bacillus sp.로부터 분리 정제한 Cell Wall 분해효소의 반응특성)

  • Kim, Tae-Ho;Shin, Woo-Chang;Lee, Dong-Sun;Hong, Soon-Duck
    • Microbiology and Biotechnology Letters
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    • v.23 no.6
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    • pp.671-677
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    • 1995
  • An extracellular enzyme showing lytic activity on E. coli peptidoglycan had been isolated from Bacillus sp. BL-29. The lytic enzyme was purified to homogeneity by ion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration, with a recovery of 5%. The enzyme was monomeric and had an estimated molecular weight of 31,000 Da. The mode of action of the purified enzyme was also investigated. When the purified lytic enzyme was incubated with cell wall peptidoglycan, N-terminal amino groups were released without the release of reducing groups. The N-terminal amino acid released was identified as dinitrophenylalanine (DNP-alanine) by analysis of terminal amino acid by dinitrophenylation method. This result suggests that the lytic enzyme should be a kind of N-acetylmura-myl-L-alanine amidase.

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Two new species of genus Luffariella (Dictyoceratida: Thorectidae) from Korea

  • Sim, Chung Ja;Lee, Kyung Jin;Kim, Young A
    • Journal of Species Research
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    • v.6 no.2
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    • pp.190-194
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    • 2017
  • Two new species of the genus Luffariella (Dictyoceratida: Thorectidae), L. tubula n. sp. and L. koreana n. sp. were collected from Jeju-do, Korea. These species differ significantly from the previously reported five species in terms of shape and skeletal structure. L. tubula n. sp. has two categories in thickness of secondary fibres which were different from other species. L. koreana n. sp. is very similar to L. variabilis from Tahiti in skeletal structure, but differs in sponge shape with irregular branching and indistinct surface conules. Primary fibres of the two new species are separated from secondary and tertiary fibres.