• Title/Summary/Keyword: New habitat

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A New Record of Proreus simulans (Dermaptera: Chelisochidae) in Korea

  • Kim, Taewoo;Kim, Sangsu
    • Animal Systematics, Evolution and Diversity
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    • v.35 no.1
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    • pp.21-29
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    • 2019
  • The earwig Proreus simulans($St{\aa}l$, 1860) has been recently reported from Jeollanam-do in the far southern section of the Korean Peninsula. Natural photographs of this species were obtained from Gwangyang Province for the first time in 2013, with specimens being physically collected in light traps from Suncheon Province in 2018. The species is widely distributed throughout the Oriental region, where its main habitat is lowland paddy fields. The earwig belongs to family Chelisochidae, subfamily Chelisochinae, and genus Proreus, which are newly recognized in Korea. The diversity of the order Dermaptera is currently estimated to be 6 families, 14 genera, and 24 species in Korea.

New record of Folsomia quadrioculata(Tullberg, 1871) and redescription of Folsomia octoculata(Handschin, 1925) from the forest of South Korea

  • Lee, Yun-Sik;Cho, Kijong;Park, Kyung-Hwa
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
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    • v.37 no.1
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    • pp.1-7
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    • 2019
  • During a recent study to understand an interaction of Collembola community and their environmental factors, two species in the genus Folsomia, F. quadrioculata Tullberg 1871 and F. octoculata Handschin 1925, were found in the forest of South Korea. From 2013 to 2015, these two species were sampled from six mountains and F. quadrioculata or F. octoculata was the dominant species in 5 sampling sites among 6 sampling sites. F. quadriocualta and F. octoculata were found in litter of deciduous and pine forest, respectively. Therefore, the major tree species seems to be one of the important factors determining their habitat. F. quadiroculata is newly recorded from the Korean Peninsula and F. octoculata is redescribed based on new materials from South Korea.

New records and distribution of three taxa in Korea: Leuzea chinensis (Asteraceae), Symplocos nakaharae (Symplocaceae), and Epilobium parviflorum (Onagraceae)

  • Jin-Oh HYUN;Jongduk JUNG;Hye Ryun NA;Byungwoo HAN;Kyoungsuk KANG;Man Kyu LEE;Yeongmin CHOI;Woongrae CHO
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.53 no.1
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    • pp.69-77
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    • 2023
  • Leuzea chinensis (S. Moore) Susanna (Asteraceae), a previously unrecorded species in Korea, was found in Yeongdeok-gun, Gyeongsangbuk-do. Symplocos nakaharae (Hayata) Masam. (Symplocaceae), which had been recorded in the literature but whose native habitat was yet to be identified, was found in Geojedo Island, Gyeongsangnam-do. It was confirmed that Epilobium parviflorum Schreb. (Onagraceae) grew naturally on the islands of Jeollanam-do. Detailed morphological descriptions and geographical distribution of the three taxa are provided.

New record of an alien plant, Ipomoea cristulata (Convolvulaceae) in Korea

  • Jin-Suk YOUN;Jin-Seok KIM;Chang Woo, HYUN;Jae-Hong PAK;Woong LEE
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.53 no.1
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    • pp.60-64
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    • 2023
  • Ipomoea cristulata Hallier f. (Convolvulaceae), native to the desert regions of the central USA to Mexico, was newly found in Gojeong-ri, Deokgwa-myeon, Namwon-si, Jeollabuk-do. This species can be distinguished from I. coccinea by leaves with 3-5 lobes, hirsute distributed adaxially, and corolla entirely red or orange-red. Its Korean name is 'Nabi-ip-yu-hong-cho' based on its butterfly-shaped leaves. We provide a detailed description, photographs, habitat details, and a taxonomic key to related taxa.

New record of three hypotrich soil ciliates(Ciliophora: Hypotricha) from South Korea: Oxytricha multilineata, Mixophrya pantanalensis pantanalensis and Caudiurostyla sinensis

  • Kyu-Seok Chae;Gi-Sik Min
    • Journal of Species Research
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    • v.12 no.4
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    • pp.307-312
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    • 2023
  • Oxytricha multilineata, Mixophrya pantanalensis pantanalensis, and Caudiurostyla sinensis were isolated from soil samples collected from Cheongju-si and Yeoju-si, confirmed as new to South Korea. Oxytricha multilineata was distinguished from other congeners by seven dorsal kineties and dorsal bristles about 15 ㎛ long. Mixophrya pantanalensis pantanalensis was characterized by five to seven lithosomes and six dorsal kineties. Caudiurostyla sinensis was characterized by colorless cortical granules present, 10-14 midventral pairs, 7-9 left and 6-9 right marginal rows and four or five dorsal kineties. We determined the ribosomal DNA sequences (including 18S rDNA, ITS1, 5.8S rDNA, ITS2, and partial 28S rDNA) from above three species. And the genetic distances were compared with their congeners.

New distribution record of genus Rhyssemus Mulsant (Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae, Aphodiinae) from South Korea

  • Changseob Lim;Yeon Jae Bae
    • Journal of Species Research
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    • v.13 no.3
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    • pp.306-309
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    • 2024
  • Rhyssemus Mulsant, 1842, represents one of the largest genera in the tribe Psammodiini, comprising approximately 170 species to date. This group is nearly cosmopolitan, excluding the Neotropical region, with 59 species recorded in the Palearctic region. On the Korean Peninsula, only one species, Rhyssemus koreanus Stebnicka, 1980 was recorded from North Korea. In this study, the genus Rhyssemus is recorded for the first time with a newly recorded species Rhyssemus inscitus (Walker, 1858) from South Korea. Adult specimens were collected from the costal sand dunes in Taean-gun and Jeju island. We herein provide a diagnosis, illustrations of morphological characters, and habitat information. Partial mitochondrial COI sequences of the species are also provided for DNA barcoding.

Reaching New Heights in Timber-Hybrid Design: Designing the Netherlands' Tallest Timber-Hybrid Residential Building

  • Pascal Steenbakkers;Babette Verheggen;Mathew Vola;Do Janne Vermeulen
    • International Journal of High-Rise Buildings
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    • v.13 no.2
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    • pp.195-204
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    • 2024
  • HAUT, a residential tower, is a prototype for building innovative and environmentally-friendly high-rise timber structures. The team - Arup, Team V Architecture, Lingotto and JP van Eesteren - designed and built an ambitious sustainable building: a timber skyscraper, with 21 floors one of the tallest timber hybrid towers in the world. Never before has this highest sustainability rating - BREEAM Outstanding - been awarded to a residential building in the Netherlands. As a result of the new techniques for a timber hybrid tower of 73 meters high, there is interest from all over the world for this combination of sustainability and urban densification.

Karel Doorman, Rotterdam, the Netherlands: Unconventional with a Sense of History

  • Marc Ibelings
    • International Journal of High-Rise Buildings
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    • v.13 no.2
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    • pp.205-212
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    • 2024
  • Unconventional with respect for tradition: The Karel Doorman building stands in the heart of Rotterdam's shopping area and is a remarkable combination of restoration and new development. On top of the Ter Meulen shopping centre - a monument of the post-war reconstruction period - we have built an extremely light-weight construction in steel and wood (See Figure 1 & 2). This unconventional building method - at least in the Netherlands - enabled the construction of a 70 metres high 'glass' residential building with 114 apartments and 156 parking places. In this way a remarkable historic Rotterdam building was preserved for the future while at the same time new housing was created on a sheer impossible location, contributing to the quality of life and social safety in this part of the city.

Performance-based Design of 300 m Vertical City "ABENO HARUKAS"

  • Hirakawa, Kiyoaki;Saburi, Kazuhiro;Kushima, Souichirou;Kojima, Kazutaka
    • International Journal of High-Rise Buildings
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    • v.3 no.1
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    • pp.35-48
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    • 2014
  • In designing a 300 meter high skyscraper expected to be the tallest building in Japan, an earthquake-ridden country, we launched on the full-scale performance based design to ensure redundancy and establish new specifications using below new techniques. The following new techniques are applied because the existing techniques/materials are not enough to meet the established design criteria for the large-scale, irregularly-shaped building, and earth-conscious material saving and construction streamlining for reconstructing a station building are also required: ${\bullet}$ High strength materials: Concrete filled steel tube ("CFT") columns made of high-strength concrete and steels; ${\bullet}$ New joint system: Combination of outer diaphragm and aluminium spray jointing; ${\bullet}$ Various dampers including corrugated steel-plate walls, rotational friction dampers, oil dampers, and inverted-pendulum adaptive tuned mass damper (ATMD): Installed as appropriate; and ${\bullet}$ Foundation system: Piled raft foundation, soil cement earth-retaining wall construction, and beer bottle shaped high-strength CFT piles.

A New Variety of Elsholtzia (Lamiaceae): E. splendens var. fasciflora from Korea (신변종 다발꽃향유(꿀풀과))

  • Lee, Chang Shook;Suh, Hyoung Min;Chung, Mi-Sook;Chung, Yeong-Soon;Lee, Nam-Sook
    • Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy
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    • v.40 no.4
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    • pp.262-266
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    • 2010
  • A new variety of Elsholtzia splendens (Lamiaceae) was found by the roadside of a mountain base at Jungmun-dong, Seogwipo-si, Jeju-do. The new taxon is termed Elsholtzia splendens var. fasciflora N.S. Lee, M.S. Chung & C.S. Lee, var. nov. The Korean name 'Da-bal-kkot-hyang-yu' was given. The morphological characters and illustrations of the species based on the holotype are provided together with a photograph of the habitat. It is distinctly distinguished from Elsholtzia splendens var. splendens by a few characteristics: leaves that area 2-4 cm long, leaves beneath the inflorescence, typically mostly 4; and inflorescence mosyly 2-4, fascicled, involucres oval.