Alexander M. Burdin
Russian Academy of Sciences
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Alexander M. Burdin.
Journal of Wildlife Diseases | 2011
Tracey Goldstein; Verena A. Gill; Pamela A. Tuomi; Daniel H. Monson; Alexander M. Burdin; Patricia A. Conrad; J. Lawrence Dunn; Cara L. Field; Christine K. Johnson; David A. Jessup; James L. Bodkin; Angela M. Doroff
Northern sea otter (Enhydra lutris kenyoni) abundance has decreased dramatically over portions of southwest Alaska, USA, since the mid-1980s, and this stock is currently listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. In contrast, adjacent populations in south central Alaska, USA, and Russia have been stable to increasing during the same period. Sea otters bordering the area classified in the recent decline were live-captured during 2004–2006 at Bering Island, Russia, and the Kodiak Archipelago, Alaska, USA, to evaluate differences in general health and current exposure status to marine and terrestrial pathogens. Although body condition was lower in animals captured at Bering Island, Russia, than it was at Kodiak, USA, clinical pathology values did not reveal differences in general health between the two regions. Low prevalences of antibodies (>5%) were found in Kodiak, USA, and on Bering Island, Russia, to Toxoplasma gondii, Sarcocystis neurona, and Leptospira interrogans. Exposure to phocine herpesvirus-1 was found in both Kodiak, USA (15.2%), and Bering Island, Russia (2.3%). Antibodies to Brucella spp. were found in 28% of the otters tested on Bering Island, Russia, compared with only 2.7% of the samples from Kodiak, USA. Prevalence of exposure to Phocine distemper virus (PDV) was 41% in Kodiak, USA, but 0% on Bering Island, Russia. Archived sera from southwest and south-central Alaska dating back to 1989 were negative for PDV, indicating exposure occurred in sea otters in Kodiak, USA, in recent years. Because PDV can be highly pathogenic in naïve and susceptible marine mammal populations, tissues should be examined to explore the contribution of this virus to otter deaths. Our results reveal an increase in exposure to pathogens in sea otters in Kodiak, Alaska, USA, since the 1990s.
Journal of Mammalogy | 2012
Amanda L. Bradford; David W. Weller; André E. Punt; Yulia V. Ivashchenko; Alexander M. Burdin; Glenn R. VanBlaricom; Robert L. Brownell
Abstract The role of environmental limitation and density-dependent regulation in shaping populations is debated in ecology. Populations at low densities may offer an unobstructed view of basic environmental and physiological interactions that impact individual fitness and thus population productivity. The energy reserves of an organism are reflected in its body condition, a measure linking individual fitness and the environment. From 1997 to 2007, we monitored the critically endangered western gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus) population on its primary summer feeding ground off the northeastern coast of Sakhalin Island, Russia. This effort resulted in a large data set of photo-identification images from 5,007 sightings of 168 individual whales that we used to visually assess western gray whale body condition. We quantified temporal variation in the resulting 1,539 monthly body condition determinations with respect to observations of reproductive status and sex. Western gray whale body condition varied annually, and we identified years of significantly better (2004) and worse (1999, 2006, and 2007) body condition. This study is the 1st to track the within-season body condition of individual whales. Body condition improved significantly as the summer progressed, although results suggest that not all whales replenish their energy stores by the end of the season. The body condition of lactating females was significantly worse than that of other whales at all times and was most often determined to be compromised. The body condition of their weaning calves exhibited no temporal variation and was consistently good. It is possible lactating females provide an energetic buffer to their offspring at the expense of their own body condition and future reproductive success. Findings from the analysis establish a foundation for quantifying links between western gray whale body condition, demographic parameters, and environmental conditions; and provide a baseline for monitoring individual and population condition of an ecosystem sentinel species in a changing environment. Overall, this study highlights the presence of density-independent environmental and physiological mechanisms that affect the abundance and growth of populations.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
James A. Estes; Alexander M. Burdin; Daniel F. Doak
Significance Human-caused extinctions are normally thought to result from overexploitation or habitat alteration. A third possible cause of extinction is the loss of interactions associated with keystone species. Using recent and historical information on sea otters and kelp forests, we show that the extinction of Stellers sea cow from the Commander Islands in the mid-1700s would have been a nearly inevitable consequence of the overhunting of sea otters, which occurred a decade earlier. The late Pleistocene extinction of so many large-bodied vertebrates has been variously attributed to two general causes: rapid climate change and the effects of humans as they spread from the Old World to previously uninhabited continents and islands. Many large-bodied vertebrates, especially large apex predators, maintain their associated ecosystems through top-down forcing processes, especially trophic cascades, and megaherbivores also exert an array of strong indirect effects on their communities. Thus, a third possibility for at least some of the Pleistocene extinctions is that they occurred through habitat changes resulting from the loss of these other keystone species. Here we explore the plausibility of this mechanism, using information on sea otters, kelp forests, and the recent extinction of Stellers sea cows from the Commander Islands. Large numbers of sea cows occurred in the Commander Islands at the time of their discovery by Europeans in 1741. Although extinction of these last remaining sea cows during early years of the Pacific maritime fur trade is widely thought to be a consequence of direct human overkill, we show that it is also a probable consequence of the loss of sea otters and the co-occurring loss of kelp, even if not a single sea cow had been killed directly by humans. This example supports the hypothesis that the directly caused extinctions of a few large vertebrates in the late Pleistocene may have resulted in the coextinction of numerous other species.
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2012
Olga A. Filatova; John K. B. Ford; Craig O. Matkin; Lance G. Barrett-Lennard; Alexander M. Burdin; Erich Hoyt
Ultrasonic whistles were previously found in North Atlantic killer whales and were suggested to occur in eastern North Pacific killer whales based on the data from autonomous recorders. In this study ultrasonic whistles were found in the recordings from two encounters with the eastern North Pacific offshore ecotype killer whales and one encounter with the western North Pacific killer whales of unknown ecotype. All ultrasonic whistles were highly stereotyped and all but two had downsweep contours. These results demonstrate that specific sound categories can be shared by killer whales from different ocean basins.
Journal of Heredity | 2018
Gaëtan Richard; Olga V. Titova; Ivan D. Fedutin; Debbie Steel; Ilya G Meschersky; Marie Hautin; Alexander M. Burdin; Erich Hoyt; Olga A. Filatova; Jean-Luc Jung
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) differences between humpback whales on different feeding grounds can reflect the cultural transmission of migration destinations over generations, and therefore represent one of the very few cases of gene-culture coevolution identified in the animal kingdom. In Russian Pacific waters, photo-identification (photo-ID) studies have shown minimal interchange between whales feeding off the Commander Islands and those feeding in the Karaginsky Gulf, regions that are separated by only 500 km and have previously been lumped together as a single Russian feeding ground. Here, we assessed whether genetic differentiation exists between these 2 groups of humpback whales. We discovered a strong mtDNA differentiation between the 2 feeding sites (FST = 0.18, ΦST = 0.14, P < 0.001). In contrast, nuclear DNA (nuDNA) polymorphisms, determined at 8 microsatellite loci, did not reveal any differentiation. Comparing our mtDNA results with those from a previous ocean-basin study reinforced the differences between the 2 feeding sites. Humpback whales from the Commanders appeared most similar to those of the western Gulf of Alaska and the Aleutian feeding grounds, whereas Karaginsky differed from all other North Pacific feeding grounds. Comparison to breeding grounds suggests mixed origins for the 2 feeding sites; there are likely connections between Karaginsky and the Philippines and to a lesser extent to Okinawa, Japan, whereas the Commanders are linked to the Mexican breeding grounds. The mtDNA differentiation between the Commander Islands and Karaginsky Gulf suggests a case of gene-culture coevolution, correlated to fidelity to a specific feeding site within a particular feeding ground. From a conservation perspective, our findings emphasize the importance of considering these 2 feeding sites as separate management units.
Journal of Wildlife Diseases | 2017
Tristan L. Burgess; Christine K. Johnson; Alexander M. Burdin; Verena A. Gill; Angela M. Doroff; Pamela A. Tuomi; Woutrina A. Smith; Tracey Goldstein
Abstract Infection with Brucella spp., long known as a cause of abortion, infertility, and reproductive loss in domestic livestock, has increasingly been documented in marine mammals over the past two decades. We report molecular evidence of Brucella infection in Asian sea otters (Enhydra lutris lutris). Brucella DNA was detected in 3 of 78 (4%) rectal swab samples collected between 2004 and 2006 on Bering Island, Russia. These 78 animals had previously been documented to have a Brucella seroprevalence of 28%, markedly higher than the prevalence documented in sea otters (Enhydra lutris) in North America. All of the DNA sequences amplified were identical to one or more previously isolated Brucella spp. including strains from both terrestrial and marine hosts. Phylogenetic analysis of this sequence suggested that one animal was shedding Brucella spp. DNA with a sequence matching a Brucella abortus strain, whereas two animals yielded a sequence matching a group of strains including isolates classified as Brucella pinnipedialis and Brucella melitensis. Our results highlight the diversity of Brucella spp. within a single sea otter population.
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2013
C. Scott Baker; Debbie Steel; John Calambokidis; Erin A. Falcone; Úrsula González-Peral; Jay Barlow; Alexander M. Burdin; Phillip J. Clapham; John K. B. Ford; Christine M. Gabriele; David K. Mattila; Lorenzo Rojas-Bracho; Janice M. Straley; Barbara L. Taylor; J. Urban; Paul R. Wade; David W. Weller; Briana H. Witteveen; Manami Yamaguchi
Marine Mammal Science | 2007
Paul R. Wade; Vladimir N. Burkanov; Marilyn E. Dahlheim; Nancy A. Friday; Lowell W. Fritz; Thomas R. Loughlin; Sally A. Mizroch; Marcia M. Muto; Dale W. Rice; Lance G. Barrett-Lennard; Nancy Black; Alexander M. Burdin; John Calambokidis; Sal Cerchio; John K. B. Ford; Jeff K. Jacobsen; Craig O. Matkin; Dena R. Matkin; Amee V. Mehta; Robert J. Small; Janice M. Straley; Shannon M. McCluskey; Glenn R. VanBlaricom; Phillip J. Clapham
Marine Mammal Science | 2011
Jay Barlow; John Calambokidis; Erin A. Falcone; C. Scott Baker; Alexander M. Burdin; Phillip J. Clapham; John K. B. Ford; Christine M. Gabriele; Richard G. LeDuc; David K. Mattila; Terrance J. Quinn; Lorenzo Rojas-Bracho; Janice M. Straley; Barbara L. Taylor; Jorge Urbán R.; Paul R. Wade; David W. Weller; Briana H. Witteveen; Manami Yamaguchi
Marine Mammal Science | 1999
David W. Weller; Bernd Würsig; Amanda L. Bradford; Alexander M. Burdin; Sergey A. Blokhin; Hiroya Minakuchi; Robert L. Brownell