• Title/Summary/Keyword: Pine extract media

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Studies on the Cultural Characteristics of Poria cocos (복령(Poria cocos)의 배양학적(培養學的) 특성(特性)에 관한 연구(硏究))

  • Hong, In-Pyo;Lee, Min-Wong
    • The Korean Journal of Mycology
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    • v.18 no.1
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    • pp.42-49
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    • 1990
  • The cultural characteristics and some factors such as nutrient sources and supplements effecting on mycelial growth and density were investigated to study the possibility of an artificial cultivation of P. cocos. The optimum pH for P. cocos was 4.0-4.5. The optimal growth temperature ranged from $25^{\circ}C$ to $29^{\circ}C$. Myceial growth of P. cocos was better in SPD than PD media. Adding the nurient sources such as dextrose, yeast and potato infusion to pine extract media practically stimulated the mycelial growth and density of P. cocos comparing to pine extract media alone. When P. cocos was cultured on sawdust media added 3 different supplements composed of corn meal, rice bran and wheat bran, corn meal was the best and its percentage was 30 (w/w) for mycelial growth. On culturing in sawdust media added by varying the mixture ratio of them, the media mixed corn meal and wheat bran (3:1, w/w) supported more vigours for mycelial growth. In inoculation test to pine stem, the fungal growth was good in under or inside pine bark and xylem, but the sclerotium was not observed in the stem. Mycelial growth was also observed in central part of pine stem by cross section.

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A Study on Multiplication Response of "Tricholoma matsutake" (Pine Mushroom) Conidio to Cultural Media Environment (송이균(松茸菌) (Tricholoma matsutake)의 배양환경(培養環境)에 대한 증식반응(增殖反應)에 관한 연구(硏究))

  • Kim, Chang Ho
    • Journal of Korean Society of Forest Science
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    • v.64 no.1
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    • pp.33-41
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    • 1984
  • This study was conducted to examine the physiology of pine mushroom mycelia cultured with various media for artificial culture of pine mushroom. The results obtained were as follows: 1) Among the various media, the medium composed of honey, boiled pine mushroom and soil extract fluid, fibrous root extract fluid, dry yeast, $KH_2PO_4$ inositol, folic acid, and biotin was the best for the growth of pine mushroom mycelium. 2) The optimum temperature for germinating pine mushroom spore and for culturing pine mushroom mycelium, was $24^{\circ}C$ and the optimum pH was 4.5. 3) There was no significant difference in growth between the mycelium separated from the tissue of pine mushroom sporophore and that separated from the spore. 4) No noticeable effect was found on the growth if such salts as $ZnSO_4$, $MnSO_4$, $MgSO_4$, $CaCl_2$ and ferric citrate were added to the Hamada's medium. 5) The addition of fibrous root extract promoted the growth of pine mushroom mycelium. 6) As a carbon source of artificial media, honey was more effective than glucose. 7) The culture infiltration of Mortierlla growing often in Fairy Ring was good for the growth of mycelium compared with the control. 8) The addition of fibrous root extract, inositol, biotin, and folic acid to artificial culture media was greatly effective in growth. When the temperature was lowered $19^{\circ}C$ after mycelium has appeared, the formation of primordium was observed.

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Searching the Damaged Pine Trees from Wilt Disease Based on Deep Learning (딥러닝 기반 소나무 재선충 피해목 탐색)

  • ZHANGRUIRUI, ZHANGRUIRUI;YOUJIE, YOUJIE;Kim, Byoungjun;Sun, Joonam;Lee, Joonwhoan
    • Smart Media Journal
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    • v.9 no.3
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    • pp.46-51
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    • 2020
  • Pine wilt disease is one of the reasons that results in huge damage on pine trees in east Asia including Korea, Japan, and China, and early finding and removing the diseased trees is an efficient way to prevent the forest from wide spreading. This paper proposes a searching method of the damaged pine trees from wilt disease in ortho-images corrected from RGB images, which are captured by unmanned aviation vehicles. The proposed method constructs patch-based classifier using ResNet18 backbone network, classifies the RGB ortho-image patches, and make the results as a heat map. The heat map can be used to find the distribution of diseased pine trees, to show the trend of spreading disease, and to extract the RGB distribution of the diseased areas in the image. The classifier in the work shows 94.7% of accuracy.

Quantitative Variation of Alkali-soluble Extracts from Coniferous Barks for Tannin-based Adhesives (타닌접착제를 위한 침엽수 수피의 알칼리성 추출물의 양적 변이)

  • Cho, Nam-Seok;Kim, Young-Sin;Han, Gyu-Seong
    • Journal of the Korean Wood Science and Technology
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    • v.25 no.1
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    • pp.23-27
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    • 1997
  • Alkali-soluble extracts were prepared from barks of Japanese larch(Larix leptolepis). Siberian larch(Larix gmelineii) and Radiata pine(Pinus radiata) The effect of various factors, such as particle size, liquor ratio, extraction temperature, and reaction time, on the extracts yield was investigated. Particle sizes affected the alkali-soluble extracts; the finer the particle size, the higher extracts and extract efficiency. High temperature and high liquor ratio were more effective. In the range of 0.25% to 1% NaOH concentration, alkali extracts were increased with the increasing alkali concentration. However, extract yields were leveled off above 0.5% alkali concentration. Extractions with NaHCO3 were almost equivalent to those of NaOH extraction. 1% NaOH and 1% NaHCO3 resulted in the highest yields of alkaline extracts. Extracts from Japanese larch were lower than those from Siberian larch and Radiata pine barks. Siberian larch bark was the best raw material for tannin adhesives, because its extractive yield was higher than those of the other barks. Concerning pH of alkaline media during extraction, small increases of the extract yields were resulted at range of pH 7 to pH 9, while a large increases from pH 9.0 to pH 12. This phenomenon is attributed to higher alkalinity.

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Biocontrol of Blue Stain in Pine Wood with Lyophilized Mycelium of Ophiostoma quercus Albino Strain

  • Cho, Byung-Ju;Kim, Nam-Kyu;Cho, Nam-Seok;Lee, Jong-Kyu
    • The Plant Pathology Journal
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    • v.24 no.3
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    • pp.309-316
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    • 2008
  • Mycelium of Ophiostoma quercus albino strain cultured in liquid culture media was harvested, lyophilized, and stored for examining biocontrol efficacy against wood discoloration by staining fungi in the laboratory and field conditions. Dry weight of mycelium grown in brown sugar yeast extract broth(BYB) showed 3.8 times higher than that grown in potato dextrose broth(PDB). The optimum culture period in BYB was 4 weeks. In vitality test of the albino strain, the lyophilized mycelium stored in liquid nitrogen($-196^{\circ}C$) or in a refrigerator($4^{\circ}C$) kept the vitality until 13 months after storage; however, the mycelium stored at room temperature lost the vitality completely after 13 months. The mycelium stored in liquid nitrogen or in a refrigerator protected wood chips from the discoloration by pretreating mycelial suspension on pine wood chips. The mycelium stored at room temperature for 7 months also showed complete protection. These results suggest that the lyophilized mycelium have a biocontrol efficacy only if it keeps the least vitality. In the field conditions, both albino strain and $Woodguard^{(R)}$(commercial chemical protectant) showed significant differences(p=0.05) in discoloration rate as compared to the non-treated control when these were treated on the wood logs of Pinus rigida. The albino strain showed better protection than $Woodguard^{(R)}$. Isolation frequency of blue stain fungi from the chips of wood logs treated with the albino strain was 0% at three months after treatment, while that treated with $Woodguard^{(R)}$ was 76.7%. In another experiment, pre-treatment of mycelial suspension on the cut surface of wood logs also showed significant protection from wood discoloration. Spraying of both albino strain on the cut surface and insecticides on the bark also showed relatively good control effects as compared to insecticide alone on the bark or nontreated control.

Condition of mycelial culture and inoculum volume of spawn on cultivation of Agrocybe cylindracea (버들송이의 균사배양조건 및 최적 접종량 설정)

  • Lee, Kee-Kwon;Yu, Young-Jin;Choi, Kyu-Hwan;Jeong, Jong-Seong
    • Journal of Mushroom
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    • v.10 no.1
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    • pp.21-28
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    • 2012
  • Studies were made to optimize the media composition and cultural condition for mycelial growth of Agrocybe cylindracea. Sawdust spawn of media composition for optimal growth was found to be pine sawdust combination of 30% wheat bran and poplar sawdust combination of 20% corn bran were the best of the optimal combination. The optimal concentration of white sugar was 1.0~1.5%. The nitrogen sources was found to be yeast extract and soybean powder. Also, optimal concentration were $0.7g/{\ell}$ and $0.1g/{\ell}$, respectively. The mineral sources of optimal medium compositions were $MgSO_4{\cdot}7H_2O\;0.3g/{\ell}$, $KH_2PO_4\;0.5g/{\ell}$ and $K_2HPO\;1.2g/{\ell}$. Optimal amount of inoculum for cultivation of A. cylindracea were $20{\sim}25g/850m{\ell}$ and $25m{\ell}/850m{\ell}$ in the sawdust spawn and liquid spawn, respectively.

Phytotoxicity of Endophytic Fungi and Characterization of a Phytotoxin Isolated from Gliocladium catenulatum from Pinus densiflora (식물내생곰팡이의 제초활성 검정 및 소나무에서 분리한 Gliocladium catenulatum이 생산하는 제초활성 물질의 특성 규명)

  • Choi, Gyung-Ja;Park, Joong-Hyeop;Kim, Heung-Tae;Lee, Seon-Woo;Choi, Jung-Sup;Hong, Kyung-Sik;Cho, Kwang-Yun;Kim, Jin-Cheol
    • The Korean Journal of Mycology
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    • v.32 no.1
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    • pp.8-15
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    • 2004
  • This study was conducted to discover new phytotoxins which may be used as lead molecules for the development of new herbicides. A total of 187 endophytic fungi were isolated from 11 plant species, which were collected from 8 locations in Korea. Their herbicidal activities were screened in vivo by herbicidal and duckweed bioassays after they were cultured in potato dextrose broth and rice solid media. Both fermentation broth and solid culture extract of Gliocladium catenulatum F0006 isolated from red pine (Pinus densiflora) showed 70% herbicidal activity only against cocklebur (Xanthium strumarium) out of the 10 weeds tested. Solid culture extract of F0034 isolated from arrowroot (Pueraria thunbergiana) exhibited 20 to 100% herbicidal activities against all of the weeds. Especially, shattercane (Sorghum bicolor), barnyardgrass (Echinochloa crus-galli), large crabgrass (Digitaria sanguinalis), and fall pauicum (Panicum dichtomiflorum) were sensitive to the solid culture extract of F0034. In addition, solid culture extract of F0043 isolated from red pine displayed 20% to 70% herbicidal activities only against 5 grass species, but not against 5 broad-leaf plant species. On the other hand, as the results of duckweed assay, 8 fermentation broths showed 100% growth inhibitory activity at concentrations less than 5.0% of culture supernatants and 12 solid cultures had a potent inhibitory activity against duckweed growth. A toxic metabolite was purified from the solid cultures of G. catenulatum F0006 by repeated column chromatography and bioassay. It caused a phytotoxic syndrome only on cocklebur out of the 10 weeds tested; it completely killed cocklebur seedlings at $500\;{\mu}g/ml$ and showed 85% herbicidal activity against cocklebur at $100\;{\mu}g/ml$. The molecular weight of the toxic metabolite is 238 daltons and its structure determination is underway.