2012
DOI: 10.1080/19768354.2012.720939
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Identification of bird species and their prey using DNA barcode on feces from Korean traditional village groves and forests (maeulsoop)

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Cited by 25 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Upon collection, faeces were placed in 200 proof ethanol in cryotubes, stored and tested for bacteria as described above for mist‐net faecal samples. Additionally, we followed the protocol described in Joo and Park (2012) to identify bird species that defecated the samples collected from fields and food wash/packing areas using the COI gene and Sanger sequencing, except that we did not include the plasmid insertion and cloning steps.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Upon collection, faeces were placed in 200 proof ethanol in cryotubes, stored and tested for bacteria as described above for mist‐net faecal samples. Additionally, we followed the protocol described in Joo and Park (2012) to identify bird species that defecated the samples collected from fields and food wash/packing areas using the COI gene and Sanger sequencing, except that we did not include the plasmid insertion and cloning steps.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dong-gu is translated as "the hill" in the English version of the Park's (2009) novel, presumably because it is related with the Korean traditional landscape management practice of cultivating a grove at the entrance of the village to slow the discharge of the exiting water (Lee 2017). Such a grove is called sugu-magi, maeulsoop, or bibosoop and its ecological and social functions have been well studied by social-ecological researchers (e.g., Lee et al 2007, Koh et al 2010, Joo and Park 2012, Yu et al 2014, Lee and Krasny 2015.…”
Section: Second Level Of Tek: Land and Resource Management Systems (1mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…). From fecal samples collected on the installed seed traps in our maeulsoop sites, Joo & Park () identified seven bird species including a small‐sized bird (e.g. Passer montanus ) and a medium‐sized bird (e.g.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The other two peaks that appeared at small landscape scales (100 and 500 m) for genus richness in seed rain samples might be a result of the seeds being dispersed by relatively small birds foraging in the maeulsoop patches . From fecal samples collected on the installed seed traps in our maeulsoop sites, Joo & Park (2012) identified seven bird species including a small-sized bird (e.g. Passer montanus) and a medium-sized bird (e.g.…”
Section: Responsementioning
confidence: 99%