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Dive into the research topics where Valentina N. Kuranova is active.

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Featured researches published by Valentina N. Kuranova.


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2015

Geographic variation of life‐history traits in the sand lizard, Lacerta agilis: testing Darwin's fecundity‐advantage hypothesis

Evgeny S. Roitberg; Galina V. Eplanova; T. I. Kotenko; F. Amat; Miguel A. Carretero; Valentina N. Kuranova; N. A. Bulakhova; Oleksandr Zinenko; V. A. Yakovlev

The fecundity‐advantage hypothesis (FAH) explains larger female size relative to male size as a correlated response to fecundity selection. We explored FAH by investigating geographic variation in female reproductive output and its relation to sexual size dimorphism (SSD) in Lacerta agilis, an oviparous lizard occupying a major part of temperate Eurasia. We analysed how sex‐specific body size and SSD are associated with two putative indicators of fecundity selection intensity (clutch size and the slope of the clutch size–female size relationship) and with two climatic variables throughout the species range and across two widespread evolutionary lineages. Variation within the lineages provides no support for FAH. In contrast, the divergence between the lineages is in line with FAH: the lineage with consistently female‐biased SSD (L. a. agilis) exhibits higher clutch size and steeper fecundity slope than the lineage with an inconsistent and variable SSD (L. a. exigua). L. a. agilis shows lower offspring size (egg mass, hatchling mass) and higher clutch mass relative to female mass than L. a. exigua, that is both possible ways to enhance offspring number are exerted. As the SSD difference is due to male size (smaller males in L. a. agilis), fecundity selection favouring larger females, together with viability selection for smaller size in both sexes, would explain the female‐biased SSD and reproductive characteristics of L. a. agilis. The pattern of intraspecific life‐history divergence in L. agilis is strikingly similar to that between oviparous and viviparous populations of a related species Zootoca vivipara. Evolutionary implications of this parallelism are discussed.


Evolutionary Biology-new York | 2013

Variation of Reproductive Traits and Female Body Size in the Most Widely-Ranging Terrestrial Reptile: Testing the Effects of Reproductive Mode, Lineage, and Climate

Evgeny S. Roitberg; Valentina N. Kuranova; N. A. Bulakhova; Valentina F. Orlova; Galina V. Eplanova; Oleksandr Zinenko; Regina R. Shamgunova; Sylvia Hofmann; Vladimir A. Yakovlev

The European common lizard, Zootoca vivipara, is the most widespread terrestrial reptile in the world. It occupies almost the entire Northern Eurasia and includes four viviparous and two oviparous lineages. We analysed how female snout-vent length (SVL), clutch size (CS), hatchling mass (HM), and relative clutch mass (RCM) is associated with the reproductive mode and climate throughout the species range and across the evolutionary lineages within Z. vivipara. The studied variables were scored for 1,280 females and over 3,000 hatchlings from 44 geographically distinct study samples. Across the species range, SVL of reproductive females tends to decrease in less continental climates, whereas CS corrected for female SVL and RCM tend to decrease in climates with cool summer. Both relationships are likely to indicate direct phenotypic responses to climate. For viviparous lineages, the pattern of co-variation between female SVL, CS and HM among populations is similar to that between individual females within populations. Consistent with the hypothesis that female reproductive output is constrained by her body volume, the oviparous clade with shortest retention of eggs in utero showed highest HM, the oviparous clade with longer egg retention showed lower HM, and clades with the longest egg retention (viviparous forms) had lowest HM. Viviparous populations exhibited distinctly lower HM than the other European lacertids of similar female SVL, many of them also displaying unusually high RCM. This pattern is consistent with Winkler and Wallin’s model predicting a negative evolutionary link between the total reproductive investment and allocation to individual offspring.


Amphibia-reptilia | 2011

Inter-observer and intra-observer differences in measuring body length: a test in the common lizard, Zootoca vivipara

Evgeny S. Roitberg; Valentina F. Orlova; Valentina N. Kuranova; N. A. Bulakhova; Oleksandr Zinenko; Katarina Ljubisavljević; Regina R. Shamgunova; Miguel A. Carretero; Astrid Clasen; Michael Fokt; Wolfgang Böhme

The snout-vent length (SVL), a conventional measure of overall body size in lizards and snakes, is used in a wide variety of ecological, evolutionary, and taxonomical studies. Trends in SVL variation are often analysed using data from several researchers (observers), but possible confounding effects due to inter-observer differences in measurement protocols have never been appropriately examined. This study reports inter-observer biases between eleven herpetologists who measured the same specimens of the Eurasian common lizards (21 adult specimens were examined by eight observers and additional 192 specimens by two observers). Intra-observer bias over time (1.5-15 months between measuring sessions) was also estimated. In the vast majority of comparisons, mean difference between the first author and another observer varied from −1.0 to +0.8 mm, or from −1.9 to +1.6% if expressed as a percent of the specimens SVL value. Some non-regular effects of sex and study sample on the studied bias were revealed, and their possible reasons are discussed. We are advising the researchers who intensively collect SVL and other morphometric data to consider testing intra-observer and inter-observer biases and to establish etalon samples available for re-examinations.


International Journal of Environmental Studies | 2015

The study of terrestrial vertebrates of the Ob River basin

Boris D. Kuranov; Valentina N. Kuranova; Oleg G. Nekhoroshev

The paper describes the 300-year history of studying the terrestrial vertebrates in the Ob basin and the current state of researches into amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals. We examine the role of the research centres in Western Siberia in studying the terrestrial vertebrates in the Ob basin, from the steppe in the south to the tundra in the north and the uplands of the Altai, Kuznetsky Alatau and Salair. We describe the degree of exploration of the terrestrial vertebrates in 11 Russian regions located in the area. The paper includes discussions of rare species, population, spatial distribution and man’s impact on the animals. We also indicate areas where there is insufficient study.


Russian Journal of Herpetology | 2013

Some Aspects of Reproductive Biology of Zootoca vivipara (Jacquin, 1787) in the Asian Part of Its Area

Valentina F. Orlova; Valentina N. Kuranova; N. A. Bulakhova


Russian Journal of Herpetology | 2013

The Study of the Ecological Niche Segregation for Sympatric Species of Lizards Lacerta agilis and Zootoca vivipara

Valentina N. Kuranova; S. V. Patrakov; N. A. Bulakhova; O. A. Krechetova


Russian Journal of Herpetology | 2011

TETRAPLOID GREEN TOAD SPECIES (Bufo pewzowi) FROM THE ALTAY MOUNTAINS: THE FIRST RECORD FOR RUSSIA

Spartak N. Litvinchuk; V. I. Kazakov; Rosa A. Pasynkova; Leo J. Borkin; Valentina N. Kuranova


Archive | 2006

Reproductive activity of Lacerta agilis and Zootoca vivipara (Reptilia: Sauria: Lacertidae) in western Siberia

Sergey S. Saveliev; N. A. Bulakhova; Valentina N. Kuranova


Russian Journal of Herpetology | 2011

Distribution and Conservation Status of the Smooth Newt ( Lissotriton vulgaris ) in Western Siberia and Kazakhstan

D. V. Skorinov; Valentina N. Kuranova; Leo J. Borkin; Spartak N. Litvinchuk


Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Series 3. Biology | 2016

Sperm morphology in two cryptic species of the genus Salamandrella (Caudata: Hynobiidae)

Vadim V. Yartsev; Valentina N. Kuranova; Galina S. Martynova

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Evgeny S. Roitberg

University of Koblenz and Landau

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Galina V. Eplanova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Leo J. Borkin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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V. I. Kazakov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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