Boyan Petrov
National Museum of Natural History
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Publication
Featured researches published by Boyan Petrov.
Molecular Ecology | 2008
Gerald Kerth; Boyan Petrov; Andrej Conti; Danijela Anastasov; Manfred Weishaar; Suren Gazaryan; Julie Jaquiéry; Barbara König; Nicolas Perrin; Nadia Bruyndonckx
Investigating macro‐geographical genetic structures of animal populations is crucial to reconstruct population histories and to identify significant units for conservation. This approach may also provide information about the intraspecific flexibility of social systems. We investigated the history and current structure of a large number of populations in the communally breeding Bechsteins bat (Myotis bechsteinii). Our aim was to understand which factors shape the species’ social system over a large ecological and geographical range. Using sequence data from one coding and one noncoding mitochondrial DNA region, we identified the Balkan Peninsula as the main and probably only glacial refugium of the species in Europe. Sequence data also suggest the presence of a cryptic taxon in the Caucasus and Anatolia. In a second step, we used seven autosomal and two mitochondrial microsatellite loci to compare population structures inside and outside of the Balkan glacial refugium. Central European and Balkan populations both were more strongly differentiated for mitochondrial DNA than for nuclear DNA, had higher genetic diversities and lower levels of relatedness at swarming (mating) sites than in maternity (breeding) colonies, and showed more differentiation between colonies than between swarming sites. All these suggest that populations are shaped by strong female philopatry, male dispersal, and outbreeding throughout their European range. We conclude that Bechsteins bats have a stable social system that is independent from the postglacial history and location of the populations. Our findings have implications for the understanding of the benefits of sociality in female Bechsteins bats and for the conservation of this endangered species.
Toxicon | 2010
Alexander Westerström; Boyan Petrov; Nikolay Tzankov
We report the first detailed accounts of bites by the Balkan adder, Vipera berus bosniensis from Bulgaria. Documentation of bites by this subspecies is very rare in the literature and most available accounts are from the northern limit of its distribution. V. berus bosniensis is considered to possess neurotoxic venom but little evidence has hitherto been available to support this supposition. In this case series symptoms typical of adder bites developed including oedema, nausea, dizziness, lymphangitis, vomiting, and diarrhoea together with aberrant symptoms such as diplopia and ptosis that confirm the presence of neurotoxic venom in Balkan adders. In addition, unusual and atypical symptoms of adder bites such as painless bites and muscle cramps appeared. The inadequate treatment in hospital and the remote habitats in which this species is encountered are potential sources of complication.
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2017
Nikolaos Psonis; Aglaia Antoniou; Oleg V. Kukushkin; Daniel Jablonski; Boyan Petrov; Jelka Crnobrnja-Isailović; Konstantinos Sotiropoulos; Iulian Gherghel; Petros Lymberakis; Nikos Poulakakis
The monophyletic species subgroup of Podarcis tauricus is distributed in the western and southern parts of the Balkans, and includes four species with unresolved and unstudied inter- and intra-specific phylogenetic relationships. Using sequence data from two mitochondrial and three nuclear genes and applying several phylogenetic methods and species delimitation approaches to an extensive dataset, we have reconstructed the phylogeny of the Podarcis wall lizards in the Balkans, and re-investigated the taxonomic status of the P. tauricus species subgroup. Multilocus analyses revealed that the aforementioned subgroup consists of five major clades, with P. melisellensis as its most basal taxon. Monophyly of P. tauricus sensu stricto is not supported, with one of the subspecies (P. t. ionicus) displaying great genetic diversity (hidden diversity or cryptic species). It comprises five, geographically distinct, subclades with genetic distances on the species level. Species delimitation approaches revealed nine species within the P. tauricus species subgroup (P. melisellensis, P. gaigeae, P. milensis, and six in the P. tauricus complex), underlining the necessity of taxonomic re-evaluation. We thus synonymize some previously recognized subspecies in this subgroup, elevate P. t. tauricus and P. g. gaigeae to the species level and suggest a distinct Albanian-Greek clade, provisionally named as the P. ionicus species complex. The latter clade comprises five unconfirmed candidate species that call for comprehensive studies in the future.
Global Ecology and Biogeography | 2015
Winifred F. Frick; Sébastien J. Puechmaille; Joseph R. Hoyt; Barry Nickel; Kate E. Langwig; Jeffrey T. Foster; Tomáš Bartonička; Dan Feller; Anne Jifke Haarsma; Carl Herzog; Ivan Horáček; Jeroen van der Kooij; Bart Mulkens; Boyan Petrov; Rick Reynolds; Luísa Rodrigues; Craig W. Stihler; Gregory G. Turner; A. Marm Kilpatrick
Acta Soc. Zool. Bohem. | 2003
Petr Benda; Teodora Ivanova; Ivan Horáček; Vladimír Hanák; Jaroslav Červený; Jiří Gaisler; Antoaneta Gueorguieva; Boyan Petrov; Vladimír Vohralík
Acta Zoologica Bulgarica | 2004
Isabel Schunger; Christian Dietz; Desislava Merdschanova; Spartak Merdschanov; Kamen Christov; Ivailo Borissov; Stanimira Staneva; Boyan Petrov
Acta Zoologica Bulgarica | 2003
Christo Deltshev; Stoyan Lazarov; Boyan Petrov
Balkan Speleological Conference “Sofia’2014”,Sofia, Bulgaria, 28 – 30 March 2014 | 2014
Mario Langourov; Stoyan Lazarov; Pavel Stoev; Borislav V. Gueorguiev; Christo Deltshev; Boyan Petrov; Stoitse Andreev; Nikolai Simov; Rostislav Bekchiev; Vera Antonova; Toshko Ljubomirov; Ivailo Dedov; Dilian Georgiev
Ecologica Montenegrina | 2016
Maria Naumova; Stoyan Lazarov; Boyan Petrov; Christo Deltshev
Biometals | 2016
Katharina Schmidt; Kurt Steiner; Boyan Petrov; Oleg Georgiev; Walter Schaffner