• Title/Summary/Keyword: pale brown

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Investigation on the Rock Resembling Materials for a Marble PAGODA (대리석 석탑 및 석탑과 유사재질에 대한 암석조사)

  • Kim, Sa-Dug;Lee, Sang-Hun
    • 보존과학연구
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    • s.16
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    • pp.123-128
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    • 1995
  • For establishing the plan of scientific conservation on the Kyongch′onsa and site of Won-gaksa 10 floors pagodas, the investigation on the rocks consisting these pagodas has been made on the rock phase and weathering characteristics. The Kyongch′onsa pagoda consists of fine grained pale graylimestone containing abundant fossils of shell and fragments of organisms. The site of Won-gaksa pagoda is composed of marble of pale gray, white and/or light brown color, which is intercalated with thin mica schist. The marble, the recrystallized limestone, consists mainly of recrystallized calcite accompanied with minor amount of muscovite. Especially carbonate rocks are somewhat different in chemical weathering from such granitic rocks. The field survey and laboratory experiment using polarizing microscope had been done during 30 days from Feb, 13 to March, 31, 1995. The rocks equivalent to that of the site of Kyongch′onsa were identified from the Myobong limestone formation and taken samples around the road from P′yongch′ang to Mitan, P′yongch′ang-gun. The rocks similar to that of the site of Won-gaksa pagoda were distributed around Pan-un-ri, Chunch′on-myon, Yong-wol-gun. The rocks of the Silluksa pagoda consisting of white recrystallized limestone with banded structure are similar to the marble of the Hyangsan-riformation distributed around Suanbo, Ch′ungch′ongbuk-do.

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Occurrence of Blossom Blight of Petunia Caused by Choanephora cucurbitarum in korea (Choanephora cucurbitarum에 의한 페튜니아 꽃썩음병)

  • 권진혁;강수웅;김정수;박창석
    • Research in Plant Disease
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.112-115
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    • 2001
  • Blossom blight of petunia caused by Choanephora cucurbitarum was found in greenhouses around Jinju area, Gyeongnam province, Korea in April 2001. The disease started with water-soaked lesions on the flower which rapidly withered and was rotten. Calyces developed water-soaked, dark-green lesions, and then were rotten. Whitish mycelia and monosporous sporangiola were produced on the lesions. The fungus isolated from the lesions produced white to pale yellowish brown mycelia with scattered monosporous sporangiola on potato-dextrose agar (PDA) plates. Size of sporangium was 37.2~135.8 um. Monosporous sporangiola were elliptic, fusiform or ovoid, and brown in color and their size was 10.4~22.4$\times$7.4~12.9 um. Sporangiospores were elliptic, fusiform or ovoid in shape, dark brown or brown in color and were 13.7~23.5$\times$8.7~13.8 um in size, and had appendaged appressorium of 3 or more. Zygospores were black, and 40.8~61.5 um in size. The fungus grew on PDA at 15-4$0^{\circ}C$, and optimum temperature was 3$0^{\circ}C$. This is the first report on the blossom blight of petunia caused by C. cucurbitarum in Korea.

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The Comparison of the Appearances Between the Korean Ginseng the Chinese Ginseng (한국인삼과 중국인삼의 외관 비교)

  • 손현주;백남인
    • Journal of Ginseng Research
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    • v.21 no.3
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    • pp.187-195
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    • 1997
  • The Chinese ginseng roots were collected at twelve places of Jilin Province and two places of Liaoning Province in China and their appearances were compared with those of the Korean ginseng roots. The color of the most of the Chinese red ginseng was brown or dark brown and the color of many of the Chinese dried ginseng was pale yellow and the root-age of the most of the Chinese red ginseng as well as the Chinese dried ginseng was evaluated five or six year regardless of the collection places, so it cannot be easily concluded that the color and the root-age of the Chinese ginseng roots are different from those of the Korean ginseng roots. However the rhizomes and the lateral roots of the Chinese ginseng roots were poorly developed and many of them did not have either rhizome or lateral roots. Moreover the rhizomes of the Chinese red ginseng as well as the Chinese dried ginseng were much more easily removed than those of the Korean red ginseng and the Korean white ginseng. Therefore it is thought that the development status of the rhizome and the lateral roots of the Chinese ginseng roots are quite different from those of the Korean ginseng roots.

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Morphological Characteristics of Seeds in Medicinal Plants of Umbelliferae (산형과 약용작물 종자의 형태적 특성)

  • Eun Il, Lee;Young Ok, Ko;Chu Ho, Choi;Jong Ki, Lee;Seok Hyeon, Kim
    • KOREAN JOURNAL OF CROP SCIENCE
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    • v.42 no.4
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    • pp.429-434
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    • 1997
  • The most typical morphological characteristics of seeds of eight species in Umbelliferae are summarized as follows: 1. The common characteristics of seeds in Umbelliferae were bi-partite fruits, compound of 2-seeds, (fruitlet) oil canals and funiculus or carpaphore. 2. Seed shape of Umbelliferae were oblong or elliptic and ovate; seed colors were yellow, pale yellow or brown, dark brown or black. 3. Seed size ranged from 2 to 7mm in length and 2∼5mm in width. Angelica dahurica bore the largest seed while Ligusticum acutilobum showed the smallest. The 1000-seed weight ranged from 1. 7g in Bupleurum falcatum to 3.9g in Angelica gigas.

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Gray mold of Kalopanax pictus caused by Botrytis cinerea (Botrytis cinerea에 의한 음나무(Kalopanax pictus) 잿빛곰팡이병)

  • 김병섭;용영록;이문호
    • Research in Plant Disease
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    • v.6 no.1
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    • pp.36-38
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    • 2000
  • A disease of Kalopanax pictus was found in Taebaec of Kang-won province. Korea, 1998. Typical symptoms were dark green to brown lesions appeared on the leaf and the stem canker. Many spores appeared on the lesions under humid conditions. A Botrytis species was consistently isolated from the infected plants. Conidia were obvoid to ellipsoid, 1-celled, hyaline or pale brown. The conidia were about 6-12${\times}$4-8$\mu\textrm{m}$ under scanning electron microscope, many micro-projections appeared on the surface of conidia. the isolated fungus infected heathy Kalopanax pictus. symptoms in inoculated plants were similar to those of originally diseased plants. The causal agent was identified as Botrytis cinerea. Gray mold of Kalopanax pictus was proposed to name this disease.

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Gray mold of Cyclamen persicum caused by Botrytis cinerea (Botrytis cinerea에 의한 시클라멘(Cyclamen persicum) 잿빛곰팡이병)

  • 김병섭;김학기
    • Research in Plant Disease
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    • v.6 no.1
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    • pp.33-35
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    • 2000
  • A disease of Cyclamen persicum was found in Kangnung of Kang-won prefecture, Korea, 1999. Typical symptoms were dark green to brown lesions appeared on petals and leaves. Many spores appeared on the lesions under humid conditions. A Botrytis species was consistently isolated from the infected plant. Conidia were obvoid to ellipsoid, 1-celled, hyaline or pale brown. The conidia were about 0.9-16.0$\times$6.0-10.4㎛(mean, 1.27$\times$7.8㎛) under scanning electron microscope, many micro-projections appeared on the surface of conidia. The isolated fungus infected heathy Cyclamen persicu. The causal agent was identified as Botrytis cinerea. Gray mold of Cyclamen persicum was proposed to name this disease.

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Saussurea grandicapitula W. Lee et H. T. Im (Compositae), a New Species from the Taebaek Mountains, Korea (택배취, 취나물속의 일신종)

  • Lee, Woo-Tchul;Im, Hyoung-Tak
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.37 no.4
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    • pp.387-393
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    • 2007
  • Saussurea grandicapitulata, a new species of Saussurea, was repodrted in the Taebaek Mountains. It has peculiar morphological characters, easily distinguisable from other Saussurea in Korea and Japan; robust plant size, pale green leaf beneath, purplish brown-cobwebby hairs on petioles of radical and lower cauline leaves, few heads with not so long pedicel, big globose involucres with brown-cobwebby hairs, and often recurved long phyllaries. S. grandicapitula is an endemic species to Korea which was differentiated in consequence of adaptation to heavy snowy environment of the Taebaek Mountains.

Pharmacognostical Evaluation of an Antioxidant Plant - Acorus calamus Linn

  • Govindarajan, Raghavan;Agnihotri, Adarsh Kumar;Khatoon, Sayyada;Rawat, Ajay Kumar Singh;Mehrotra, Shanta
    • Natural Product Sciences
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    • v.9 no.4
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    • pp.264-269
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    • 2003
  • The rhizome of Acorus calamus Linn. is commonly known as "Vacha" in indigenous systems of medicine. It is distributed in marshy tracts of Kashmir, Sirmaur (Himachal Pradesh), Manipur and the Naga hills. It is regularly cultivated in Koratagere Taluk in Karnataka and other parts of India. This study deals with the detailed pharmacognostical evaluation of the dried rhizomes of Acorus calamus collected from DehraDun (Uttaranchal), Lucknow (Uttar Pradesh). The commercial sample procured from Delhi market was also evaluated to observe the difference between collected and market samples. Dried rhizome is vertically compressed, pale yellow to dark brown and occasionally orangish brown in colour. Transverse section showed two distinct region with scattered, concentric vascular bundles surrounded by fibrous bundle sheath. Some vascular bundles just beneath the endodermis devoid of bundle sheath. Though the botanical and physico-chemical characters of all the samples were quite similar but some variations were observed in High Performance Thin Layer Chromatography (HPTLC) fingerprint profile, the essential oil content and total percentage of asarone which was found to be highest in Lucknow and lowest in Delhi market sample. These variations may be explained due to some edaphic factors or storage conditions. An attempt was also made to test antioxidant activity (in vitro) and it was found to be 88% at 0.2 g/ml concentration.

Scab of Balsam Pear (Momordica charantia) Caused by Cladosporium cucumerinum in Korea

  • Kwon, Jin-Hyeuk;Park, Chang-Seuk
    • The Plant Pathology Journal
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    • v.22 no.2
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    • pp.161-163
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    • 2006
  • During winter season of 2004 to 2006, a scab disease on balsam pear (Momordica charantia) caused by Cladosporium cucumerinum was observed in Daesan-myon, Changwon-city, Gyeongnam province, Koyea. The disease symptom started with small dark brown speck on the fruits and leaves then the lesions expanded and spreaded irregularly. The aggregated mycelial mass and conidia of the fungus formed sooty scab. The colony of purely isolated fungus grew in greenish black to velvety on potato dextrose agar (PDA). Conidia were ellipsoidal, fusiform or subspherical, mostly one-celled but occasionally septated and $3{\sim}32{\times}2{\sim}6{\mu}m$ in size. The conidiophores were erected and had long branch, chains pale olivaceous brown in color and $6{\times}280{\mu}m$ in size. Ramoconidia were $10{\sim}34{\times}3{\sim}8{\mu}m$ in size. The fungus was identified as Cladosporium cucumerinum based on the morphological characteristics. The pathogenicity of the fungus was confirmed according to Koch's postulate. The optimum temperature of the isolate was about $20^{\circ}C$. This is the first report on scab of balsam pear caused by C. cucumerinum in Korea.

Colletotrichum Disease of Mungbean Sprout by Colletotrichum acutatum

  • Kim, Dong-Kil;Lee, Sun-Chul;Kang, Jin-Ho;Kim, Hee-Kyu
    • The Plant Pathology Journal
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    • v.19 no.4
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    • pp.203-204
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    • 2003
  • Decayed samples of marketed mungbean sprout were collected from Sacheon, Suncheon, and Dangjin cities in Korea. Initial symptom on hypocotyls was dark-brown diamond speck, which developed into enlarged sunken brownish-black spot with irregular margin, followed by softening yellowish decay. Brown speck on cotyledon further developed into irregular lesions. This study isolated the fungus Colletotrichum sp. The fungal colony was pale orange, which turned greenish gray after 1 week at $25^{\circ}C$. Colony of reverse side in a petri dish was pink. Neither conidiomata nor setae were present in the culture. Typical fusiform conidia sized 7.5-15.0$\times$2.5-2.9 $\mu\textrm$were hyaline, aseptate, smooth, and had salmon color in mass. Conidiogenous cells were phialidic, hyaline, smooth, and cylindrical with terminal distinct collarette. Basedon these mycological characteristics, the casual organism was identified as Colletotrichum acutatum. This is first report of Colletotrichum acutatum in Korea.