• Title/Summary/Keyword: Vitis thunbergii var. sinuata

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Phytochemical Study on the Vitis thunbergii var. sinuata

  • Jon
    • Korean Journal of Plant Resources
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    • v.9 no.1
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    • pp.55-62
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    • 1996
  • The caffeic acid, 4-O-$\beta$-D-glucopyranosyl caffeic acid, 4-O-$\beta$-D-glucopyranosyl-$\rho$-coumaric acid and 7-O-$\beta$-D-glucuronide of ($\pm$)-eriodictyol have been isolated from the root of Vitis thunbergii var. sinuata. The structures of compounds were determined by chemical and spectroscopic methods.

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Genetic Relationship of the Ampelopsis brevipedunculata var. heterophylla and Vitis thunbergii var. sinuata with the Other Vitis Plants (개머루와 까마귀머루의 유전적 유연관계 분석)

  • Bae, Young-Min
    • Journal of Life Science
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    • v.27 no.1
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    • pp.89-94
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    • 2017
  • DNA sequences of the intergenic spacer 1 and intergenic spacer 2 of the nineteen plants belonging Vitis genus were collected from the Genbank. DNA sequences of the same regions of Vitis thunbergii var. sinuata and Ampelopsis brevipedunculata var. heterophylla, both common plants in Korea, were not available in Genbank. Those two plants were collected, their genomic DNA encoding 18S rRNA, intergenic spacer 1, 5.8S rRNA, intergenic spacer 2 and part of 28S rRNA amplified and DNA sequence determined. DNA sequences of twenty-one plants including two Korean plants were aligned by the Multiple sequence comparison by log-expectation(MUSCLE) algorithm and the alignment was used to calculate neighbor-joining tree and pairwise distance. The results indicate DNA sequences of the two Korean plants are highly homologous with each other, but they are quite distantly related to the other Vitis plants. Distant relationship of the two Korean plants with the other Vitis plants might be due to independent evolution of those two plants in geographically isolated environment. Those two Korean plants are classified in different genera based on the morphology, one in Vitis genus and the other in Ampelopsis genus, providing another example of discrepancy between morphological and genetic classification.

Pharmacognostical Studies on the Folk 'Medicine MeoRuIp' (민간약 머루잎의 생약학적 연구)

  • Park, Jong-Hee;Bae, Ji-Yung;Kim, Seong-Ryong
    • Korean Journal of Pharmacognosy
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    • v.40 no.3
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    • pp.165-172
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    • 2009
  • Korean folk medicine 'MeoRuIp' has been used to cure cough, rheumatism and abdominal pain after child birth. There has been no pharmacognostical confirmation on the botanical origin of the crude drug. To clarify the botanical origin of 'MeoRuIp', the morphological and anatomical characteristics of the leaves of Vitis and Ampelopsis species growing in Korea, i.e. Vitis amurensis, V. amurensis forma. glabrescens, V. flexuosa, V. thunbergii var. sinuata and Ampelopsis brevipedunculata var. heterophylla were studied. As a result, it was clarified that 'MeoRuIp' was the leaf of Vitis amurensis and Vitis flexuosa.

Vegetation and flora of Hibiscus hamabo inhabited naturally in Soan Island

  • Ahn, Young-Hee;Chung, Kyu-Hwan;Park, Hee-Seung
    • Journal of Environmental Science International
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    • v.12 no.11
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    • pp.1181-1187
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    • 2003
  • Hibiscus hamabo, called "Hwang-geun", growing about 3m in height is a deciduous shrub or subtree of Malvaceae. Because the number of these species is very limited in the world, the Ministry of Environment has designated H. hamabo as a preserved plant. The Korea Forest Service also protects it strictly by law since H. hamabo is an out-of-the-way plant and possibly may be exterminated soon in Korea. Investigation for distribution and ecological characteristics of the habitat for H. hamabo was carried out on Soan Island. Two wild H. hamabo were found at the forest edge (equation omitted) along the sea coast located in the southern part of Soan Island and this was the first report in the Korean academic world. These two wild H. hamabos were growing in a naturally inhibited area. The diameters at the base were 12cm and 15cm. The Tree heights were 150cm and 210cm and the number of branches of each wild H. hamabo was 4 and 7. However, the present condition of these plants was not good. Environmental conditions of the naturally inhibited area of H. hamabo were very mild because it is located at the edge of the forest and is always sunny during the daytime since the slope of the inhibited area is facing South. The ground drained very well since the soil was made of gravels and sand. Because the percent of vegetation of the subtree layer where H. hamabo was growing was 40%, the cover degree and sociability of flex crenata trees and Eurya japonica were found to be high. In the naturally inhibited area of H. hamabo, a dominant value of Rubus parvifolius in the lower part of the herb layer was very high and many plants in Compositae, such as Artemisia princeps var. orientalis and Erigeron annuus, were also present. A dominant value of liana, such as Vitis thunbergii var. sinuata, Rosa multiflora, Clematis terniflora and Hedera rhombea, and Gramineae plants that rhizomes were well developed and aggressively propagated, such as Miscanthus sinensis var. purpurascens, Phragmites communis, Spodiopogon cotulifer and Oplismenus undulatifolius which were surveyed as high, too. These results imply that H. hamabo might be exterminated soon through a natural selection if the proper management of the naturally inhibited area of H. hamabo is not conducted continually.