Vyacheslav Barkalov
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by Vyacheslav Barkalov.
Heredity | 2016
Hajime Ikeda; Shota Sakaguchi; Valentin Yakubov; Vyacheslav Barkalov; Hiroaki Setoguchi
Arctic–alpine plants have enormous ranges in the Northern Hemisphere. Phylogeographic studies have provided insights into their glacial survival as well as their postglacial colonization history. However, our understanding of the population dynamics of disjunct alpine populations in temperate regions remains limited. During Pleistocene cold periods, alpine populations of arctic–alpine species in East Asia were either connected to an ice-free Beringia refugium or they persisted with prolonged isolation after their establishment. To estimate which of these scenarios is more likely, we elucidated the genetic structure of Phyllodoce caerulea (Ericaceae) in Beringia and northern Japan, East Asia. Sequence variation in multiple nuclear loci revealed that P. caerulea can be distinguished into northern and southern groups. A demographic analysis demonstrated that the north–south divergence did not predate the last glacial period and detected introgression from Phyllodoce aleutica, relative widely distributed in East Asia, exclusively into the southern group. Therefore, although there has been genetic divergence between northern Japan and Beringia in P. caerulea, the divergence is unlikely to have resulted from their prolonged geographic separation throughout several cycles of glacial and interglacial periods. Instead, our study suggests that the introgression contributed to the genetic divergence of P. caerulea and that the range of P. caerulea was plausibly connected between northern Japan and Beringia during the last glacial period. Overall, our study not only provides a biogeographic insight into alpine populations of arctic–alpine plants in East Asia but also emphasizes the importance of careful interpretation of genetic structure for inferring phylogeographic history.
Population Ecology | 2014
Teruyoshi Nagamitsu; Takeshi Hoshikawa; Takayuki Kawahara; Vyacheslav Barkalov; Renat Sabirov
Disjunct geographic distributions of boreal plant species at the southern edges of their ranges are expected to result in low genetic diversity and high genetic differentiation in the disjunct populations. This prediction was tested in a riparian willow, Salix arbutifolia, distributed in the northeastern Eurasian continent and the Sakhalin, Hokkaido, and Honshu Islands, using chloroplast DNA haplotypes and nuclear microsatellite genotypes. Hokkaido and Honshu populations shared a chloroplast haplotype identical to a closely related species, S. cardiophylla. This haplotype was divergent from haplotypes in the Eurasian continent (Primorsky) and the Sakhalin Island. In the nuclear microsatellites, most Hokkaido populations were genetically closer to Primorsky populations than to Sakhalin populations in spite of the geographical vicinity between Sakhalin and Hokkaido. The unexpected genetic divergence between Sakhalin and Hokkaido implies a complicated history of migration and colonization. The most peripheral populations in Honshu had the lowest genetic diversity and were most differentiated from the others. Thus, low genetic diversity and high genetic differentiation at the range periphery suggest substantial effects of genetic drift on genetic structure in the disjunct populations of Salix arbutifolia at the southern edge of its range.
Molecular Ecology | 2017
Hajime Ikeda; Pernille Bronken Eidesen; Valentin Yakubov; Vyacheslav Barkalov; Christian Brochmann; Hiroaki Setoguchi
The circumarctic ranges of arctic‐alpine plants are thought to have been established in the late Pliocene/early Pleistocene, when the modern arctic tundra was formed in response to climate cooling. Previous findings of range‐wide genetic structure in arctic‐alpine plants have been thought to support this hypothesis, but few studies have explicitly addressed the temporal framework of the genetic structure. Here, we estimated the demographic history of the genetic structure in the circumarctic Kalmia procumbens using sequences of multiple nuclear loci and examined whether its genetic structure reflects prolonged isolation throughout the Pleistocene. Both Bayesian clustering and phylogenetic analyses revealed genetic distinction between alpine and arctic regions, whereas detailed groupings were somewhat discordant between the analyses. By assuming a population grouping based on the phylogenetic analyses, which likely reflects a deeper intraspecific divergence, we conducted model‐based analyses and demonstrated that the intraspecific genetic divergence in K. procumbens likely originated during the last glacial period. Thus, there is no need to postulate range separation throughout the Pleistocene to explain the current genetic structure in this species. This study demonstrates that range‐wide genetic structure in arctic‐alpine plants does not necessarily result from the late Pliocene/early Pleistocene origin of their circumarctic ranges and emphasizes the importance of a temporal framework of the current genetic structure for understanding the biogeographic history of the arctic flora.
Check List | 2015
Tomoko Fukuda; Hiroki Yamagishi; Andrei Loguntsev; Vyacheslav Barkalov; Yukio Ishikawa
Vascular plants of the Kunashiri Island, the southernmost island of the Kuril Islands, were inventoried during an expedition to Kunashiri, 19–25 July 2013. This study was conducted as a part of the Sika Deer ( Cervus nippon yezoensis ) management program in Shiretoko World Natural Heritage Site, to assess vegetation damage under strong browsing pressure by the deer. A checklist of the vascular plants was made from each study locality. As Kunashiri Island is very close to Shiretoko Heritage Site, with similar climatic and geographical conditions, this plant list will provide a preliminary comparison of the floral composition between Kunashiri and Shiretoko or Hokkaido. Our research revealed that vegetation is well preserved on Kunashiri, and this floral list will serve as a reference of the original floral composition of Shiretoko World Natural Heritage Site prior to damage by deer.
Journal of Biogeography | 2003
Theodore W. Pietsch; Victor V. Bogatov; Kunio Amaoka; Yuri N. Zhuravlev; Vyacheslav Barkalov; Sarah Gage; Hideki Takahashi; Arkady S. Lelej; Sergey Yu. Storozhenko; Norobu Minakawa; Daniel J. Bennett; Trevor R. Anderson; Masahiro Ohara; Larisa Prozorova; Yasuhiro Kuwahara; Sergey K. Kholin; Mamoru Yabe; Duane E. Stevenson; Erin L. MacDonald
New Phytologist | 2014
Hajime Ikeda; Valentin Yakubov; Vyacheslav Barkalov; Hiroaki Setoguchi
Biological Journal of The Linnean Society | 2014
Hajime Ikeda; Hiroyuki Higashi; Valentin Yakubov; Vyacheslav Barkalov; Hiroaki Setoguchi
Archive | 2012
Theodore W. Pietsch; Victor V. Bogatov; Sergey Yu. Storozhenko; Arkady S. Lelej; Vyacheslav Barkalov; Hideki Takahashi; S. L. Joneson; Sergey K. Kholin; K. A. Glew; J. A. Harpel; Pavel V. Krestov; E. A. Makarchenko; Noboru Minakawa; Masahiro Ohara; Daniel J. Bennett; Trevor R. Anderson; R. L. Crawford; Larisa Prozorova; Yasuhiro Kuwahara; S. V. Shedko; Mamoru Yabe; P. J. Woods; Duane E. Stevenson
Journal of Biogeography | 2017
Daijiro Hata; Hiroyuki Higashi; Valentin Yakubov; Vyacheslav Barkalov; Hajime Ikeda; Hiroaki Setoguchi
北海道大学総合博物館研究報告 = Bulletin of the Hokkaido University Museum | 2006
Hideki Takahashi; Vyacheslav Barkalov; Sarah Gage; Birgit Semsrott; Marina lIushko; Yuri N. Zhuravlev