• Title/Summary/Keyword: national park trail

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Typology of Deteriorated Hiking Trails in Mountain National Parks of Korea (산악 국립공원 등산로의 훼손 유형과 요인)

  • Kim, Tae-Ho
    • Journal of the Korean association of regional geographers
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    • v.17 no.4
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    • pp.416-431
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    • 2011
  • Hiking trails in Mt Jiri, and Mt Halla, National Park have been examined in terms of their degrading factors. The trails are deteriorated by natural erosion processes as well as human trampling. Trail deterioration is classified into tread lowering, sidewall retreat, path widening and divergence based upon a place where erosional processes occur. Tread lowering and sidewall retreat is generally produced by natural erosion factors, whereas path widening and divergence is generated by human trampling. Rainwash is the most contributing process to tread lowering. By contrast, several processes such as rainwash, needle ice action, deflation, tree falling and animal activity play a major role in sidewall retreat according to physical conditions of a hiking trail. Path widening and divergence could be classified by a factor producing human trampling. There are lots of cases related to rainwash such as the tree root, gravel, and bedrock, exposed by a surface flow lowering a tread and the riser produced by tread scouring. A puddle of rainwater on a flat tread and a fallen tree of Abies koreana in a forest region are also major factors to cause path widening and divergence. A paved tread with stones encourages a hiker to walk out of a trail. Taking a shortcut also results in path widening and divergence without a factor giving a hiker inconvenience on a trail.

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Mt. Kwangdok for Nature Trail

  • Park, In-Keun;Rim, Young-Deuk
    • Proceedings of the Zoological Society Korea Conference
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    • 1997.10b
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    • pp.319.2-319
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    • 1997
  • No Abstract, See Full Text

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Analysis of Vegetation Structure on the 2nd Old Trail in Mudeungsan National Park (무등산국립공원 옛길 2구간의 식생구조분석)

  • Yu, Seung-Bong;Lee, Sang-Cheol;Kang, Hyun-Mi;Kim, Young-Seon;Shin, Hae-Seon;Jang, Jung-Eun;Choi, Song-Hyun
    • Korean Journal of Environment and Ecology
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    • v.34 no.3
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    • pp.224-234
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    • 2020
  • This study was conducted to investigate the vegetation structure of Zone 2 of Mudeungsan National Park Old Trail. A total of 60 survey plots were installed to survey the forest structure, and TWINSPAN and DCA analysis classified them into 5 communities. The community I was classified into Deciduous broad-leaf tree, II into Pinus densiflora-Quercus serrata, III into Quercus serrata, IV into Lindera erythrocarpa, and V into Quercus mongolica. The grouped communities showed some differences in species compositions according to elevation. In the four communities except for community IV, Styrax japonicus and Sasa borealis formed a dominant population in understory layers and in shrub layers, respectively, and the current community forms are expected to be maintained. Monitoring of vegetation succession of lower vegetation after temporary flowering and withering in the ridges developed in the shrub layers in communities II through IV is required. In the long-term aspect, the competition between the pine tree and oak tree communities requires observation of a decrease in the power of the pine tree community. Mudeungsan National Park's Old Trail ecologically valuable as it has a vegetation structure that is distinctively classified according to altitude and is a habitat of Lindera sericea, the flagship species of Mudeungsan National Park. It means that the excellent forest ecosystem of Old Trail must be conserved through sustainable utilization.

A study on the deduction of the barrier factors in the forest trail for the disabled using wheelchairs (휠체어 사용자를 고려한 숲길의 장애요소 도출에 관한 연구)

  • Kweon, Hyeong-Keun;Lee, Joon-Woo;Park, Bum-Jin;Sin, Won-Sop;Yeom, In-Hwan
    • Korean Journal of Agricultural Science
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    • v.38 no.2
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    • pp.235-241
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    • 2011
  • Recently, as people have become more interested in health issues, their demand on forest trails for bush walking exercise has increased. The purpose of the study is to select barrier factors into forest trail for disabled using wheelchairs. As a result this, it has selected 31 barrier factors through the Delphi method. Of all the these factors, the information board of forest trails, showing the location of the trails, has indicated the highest score of importance at 4.50. Next, securing hiker' walking safety space has indicated an importance level of 4.44; both the slope of forest trails and the height of obstacles have indicated an importance level of 4.38; and the effective width of forest trails has indicated the highest score of importance level of 4.33. From these indicated levels of importance, the respondents of the Delphi method consider the safety of users of forest trail' as the most important factor while the physically disables are hiking. That is why these factors have resulted in acquiring relatively higher values.

DOBI is cleaved by caspases during TRAIL-induced apoptotic cell death

  • Park, Sun-Young;Shin, Jin-Na;Woo, Ha-Na;Piya, Su-Jan;Moon, Ae-Ran;Seo, Young-Woo;Seol, Dai-Wu;Kim, Tae-Hyoung
    • BMB Reports
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    • v.42 no.8
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    • pp.511-515
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    • 2009
  • Downstream of Bid (DOBI) known as Pus10, has been identified as a modulator of TRAIL-induced cell death using RNAi library screening. The crystal structure of DOBI has revealed that it is a crescent-shaped protein containing the pseudouridine synthase catalytic domain and a THUMP-containing domain. Here, we demonstrated that DOBI is expressed in various tissues such as heart and lung, and is also expressed in various tumor cells such as HeLa and A549. Although ectopic expression of DOBI does not promote TRAIL death signaling in HeLa cells, knock-down of DOBI expression using shRNA inhibited TRAIL death signaling. DOBI is cleaved into a 54 kD cleaved DOBI during cell death, and the recombinant DOBI protein can be directly cleaved by caspases-3, or -8 in vitro. Together, these data suggest that the cleaved DOBI may acquire a new function, possibly by cooperating with tBid in the mitochondrial event of cell death caused by TRAIL.

Users' Evaluation for the Trail Structures in the Dobong District of Bukhansan National Park, Korea (북한산국립공원 도봉지역 탐방로 보행시설에 대한 탐방객 평가)

  • Yoo, Ki-Joon;Cho, Woo;Cho, Keun-Sik
    • Korean Journal of Environment and Ecology
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    • v.22 no.2
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    • pp.145-151
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    • 2008
  • The purpose of this study was to understand users' attitudes for trail structure conditions in Dobong district, Bukhansan National Park, Korea. For this purpose, the research conducted a respondent's-personal entry-method based questionnaire survey on 250 visitors using inquiry routes in Dobong areas in Bukhansan National Park in July, 2007. The survey result showed that the 6 types of pedestrian trail structures were relatively in better shape in its quality and quantity while the responses for 3 types of structures, such as wood deck, wood railings, and stone paving, were positive in terms of harmony with landscape, preservation of resources, and user convenience. In conclusion, it is considered to be essential to bring in nature-friendly materials for walking facilities in National Parks and also necessary to consider the visual effect arising from the harmony with landscape together with the functions of conservation of resources and inquiry convenience.