• Title/Summary/Keyword: Cross-field pitting

Search Result 5, Processing Time 0.017 seconds

A Study on the Distribution of Pits on the Tracheid in Pinus koraiensis (잣나무 가도관(假導管)의 벽공(壁孔) 분포(分布)의 변이(變異))

  • Lee, Seung-Hwan;Lee, Sung-Jae;Lee, Won-Yong
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
    • /
    • v.21 no.4
    • /
    • pp.60-63
    • /
    • 1993
  • In the present paper, we discribed distributions patterns of pits on the tracheids of Pinus koraiensis. The number of bordered pits on a tracheid is more numerous than that of cross-field pittings. And they appeared different in the number depending on the shape and size of tracheids. Both pit and cross-field pitting on a tracheid is fewer in number near the pith. The number of bordered pits on the tracheid increased rapidly from pith toward cambial zone but that of cross-field pittings increased gradually. The number of bordered pit and corss-field pitting is more frequent in the first-formed tracheid, and the number of bordered pit decreased rapidly from earlywood to latewood but that of corss-field pittings decreased gradually. Bordered pits on a tracheid are more numerous at the end of tracheids and cross-field pittings occur more frequently in the center part of a tracheid.

  • PDF

Anatomical Comparison of North American Eastern, Southern, and Western Redcedar Wood

  • Eom, Young Geun;Kwon, Ohkyung;Hanna, Robert B.;Meyer, Robert W.
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
    • /
    • v.36 no.2
    • /
    • pp.9-20
    • /
    • 2008
  • Anatomical comparison of 3 North American species with commercial name of redcedar was executed to provide taxonomic information for prevention of confusion and establishment of sound business transaction in the wood market. Eastern redcedar (Juniperus virginiana) and southern redcedar (Juniperus silicicola) could not be separated on the basis of microstructure and ultrastructure of wood. Western redcedar (Thuja plicata), however, appeared to be obviously separated from eastern and southern redcedar in a number of microscopic and ultramicroscopic features. Useful features for separating these two groups were intercellular spaces in transverse surface, latewood width, radial intertracheid pitting, warty layer and pits with torus extensions in tracheids, ray composition, nodular end walls in ray parenchyma cells, and cross-field pitting.

Formation and Preservative Effectiveness of Water-Insoluble Copper Compound in Wood Treated with Copper Sulfate and Sodium Carbonate (황산구리와 탄산나트륨 처리 목재 내의 물불용성 구리화합물의 생성과 방부효력)

  • Kim, Jin-Kyung;Lee, Jong-Shin
    • Journal of the Korea Furniture Society
    • /
    • v.19 no.5
    • /
    • pp.358-364
    • /
    • 2008
  • Wood-inorganic material composite (WIC) was prepared by impregnating wood with copper sulfate ($CuSO_4\;5H_2O$) solution and by immersed wood in sodium carbonate($Na_2CO_3$) solution in order to introduce insoluble copper compounds {copper carbonate hydroxide, $CuCO_3\;Cu(OH)_2$} into the wood to give fungicidal effects in treated-wood. The weight percent gains (WPGs) of treated wood reached maximum value by impregnation of 20% copper sulfate solution and immersion in about 15% sodium carbonate solution for 24 hrs. Inorganic substances were present mainly in the lumina and cross-field pitting of tracheides. These substances were proved to be the insoluble copper carbonate hydroxide against water by the energy dispersive X-ray analyzer in conjunction with a scanning electron microscope (SEM-EDXA). The treated specimens showed high preservative effectiveness because the weight losses were hardly occurred by the fungi degradation test.

  • PDF

Detection of Apple Scar Skin Viroid by Reverse Transcription Recombinase Polymerase Amplification Assay

  • Kim, Na-Kyeong;Lee, Hyo-Jeong;Ryu, Tae-Ho;Cho, In-Sook;Ju, Ho-Jong;Jeong, Rae-Dong
    • Research in Plant Disease
    • /
    • v.27 no.2
    • /
    • pp.79-83
    • /
    • 2021
  • The aim of the present study was to develop a sensitive and specific detection method for the rapid detection of apple scar skin viroid (ASSVd) in apple leaves. The resulting reverse transcription recombinase polymerase amplification (RT-RPA) assay can be completed in 10 min at 42℃, is 10 times more sensitive than conventional reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction, and can specifically amplify ASSVd without any cross-reactivity with other common apple viruses, including apple stem grooving virus, apple stem pitting virus, and apple chlorotic leaf spot virus. The reliability of the RT-RPA assay was assessed, and the findings suggested that it can be successfully utilized to detect ASSVd in field-collected samples. The RT-RPA assay developed in the present study provides a potentially valuable means for improving the detection of ASSVd in viroid-free certification programs, especially in resource-limited conditions.

Anatomical Comparison of Compression, Opposite, and Lateral Woods in a Branch of Pinus parviflora S. et Z. (섬잣나무(Pinus parviflora S. et Z.) 지재의 압축이상재, 측면재, 대응재에 관한 해부학적 특성 비교)

  • Xu, Guang Zhu;Eom, Young Geun
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
    • /
    • v.33 no.1 s.129
    • /
    • pp.38-47
    • /
    • 2005
  • Compression, lateral, and opposite woods in a branch of Pinus parviflora S. et Z. were described and compared in the qualitative anatomical aspects through light and scanning electron microscopy. Tracheid transition from earlywood to latewood in the compression wood appeared to be relatively more gradual than in the opposite or lateral wood. Growth ring width and proportion of latewood were thought to be greater in the compression wood than in the lateral or opposite wood. The latewood tracheids of compression wood in transverse surface were mostly round, differently from those of lateral and opposite woods with square to angular shapes. Also, intercellular spaces, helical cavities and checks, and slit-like pit apertures were observed only in the compression wood tracheids. Cross-field pitting in the compression wood appeared not to be used as diagnostic guide because of their severe alteration from normal fenestriform or window-like type to cupressoid to taxodioid types. In tangential surface, fusiform rays in the compression wood were wider but lower than those in the lateral wood or opposite wood. In conclusion, compression wood was different from lateral and opposite woods but lateral and opposite woods were almost identical in qualitative anatomical features.