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Dive into the research topics where Yulia V. Bespalaya is active.

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Featured researches published by Yulia V. Bespalaya.


Biological Reviews | 2017

Conservation status of freshwater mussels in Europe: state of the art and future challenges.

Manuel Lopes-Lima; Ronaldo Sousa; Juergen Geist; David C. Aldridge; Rafael Araujo; Jakob Bergengren; Yulia V. Bespalaya; Erika Bódis; Lyubov E. Burlakova; Dirk Van Damme; Karel Douda; Elsa Froufe; Dilian Georgiev; Clemens Gumpinger; Alexander Y. Karatayev; Ümit Kebapçi; Ian Killeen; Jasna Lajtner; Bjørn M. Larsen; Rosaria Lauceri; Anastasios Legakis; Sabela Lois; Stefan Lundberg; Evelyn Moorkens; Gregory Motte; Karl-Otto Nagel; Paz Ondina; Adolfo Outeiro; Momir Paunović; Vincent Prié

Freshwater mussels of the Order Unionida provide important ecosystem functions and services, yet many of their populations are in decline. We comprehensively review the status of the 16 currently recognized species in Europe, collating for the first time their life‐history traits, distribution, conservation status, habitat preferences, and main threats in order to suggest future management actions. In northern, central, and eastern Europe, a relatively homogeneous species composition is found in most basins. In southern Europe, despite the lower species richness, spatially restricted species make these basins a high conservation priority. Information on freshwater mussels in Europe is unevenly distributed with considerable differences in data quality and quantity among countries and species. To make conservation more effective in the future, we suggest greater international cooperation using standardized protocols and methods to monitor and manage European freshwater mussel diversity. Such an approach will not only help conserve this vulnerable group but also, through the protection of these important organisms, will offer wider benefits to freshwater ecosystems.


Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2016

Multi-locus fossil-calibrated phylogeny, biogeography and a subgeneric revision of the Margaritiferidae (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Unionoida).

Ivan N. Bolotov; Ilya V. Vikhrev; Yulia V. Bespalaya; Mikhail Y. Gofarov; Alexander V. Kondakov; Ekaterina S. Konopleva; Nikita N. Bolotov; Artyom A. Lyubas

The taxonomy and biogeographic history of the bivalve family Margaritiferidae are controversial because previous molecular studies did not provide a well-resolved phylogenetic framework for these enigmatic freshwater mussels that have extensive but disjunct distribution in North America, Eurasia and North Africa. In this study, we present a new, fossil-calibrated phylogenetic hypothesis based on five molecular markers (∼4kb of total length) for ten species. Our results indicate that all recent margaritiferids are in the single genus, Margaritifera Schumacher, 1816. Additionally, we identified three relatively well-supported phylogenetic clades that are valid subgenera, i.e., Margaritifera s. str. (Holarctic), Margaritanopsis (=Cumberlandia) (southeast North America-southeast Asia disjunct) and Pseudunio (Mediterranean). We suggest that the crown lineage of the Margaritiferidae most likely originated in the Cretaceous (mean age 93Ma, 95% CI 66-126Ma). The combined results of ancestral area reconstructions based on the three different approaches (S-DIVA, DEC and S-DEC) showed that ancient vicariance events could have played an important role in speciation within the family. The rates of mitochondrial evolution of margaritiferids are notably slow, which may be associated with their longevity, long generation time and low metabolic rates. Our findings highlight the complex biogeographic history of the Margaritiferidae as an intermixing of ancient vicariance and dispersal events, which were most likely associated with some inland barriers, continental movements and a sea level dynamic.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Ancient River Inference Explains Exceptional Oriental Freshwater Mussel Radiations

Ivan N. Bolotov; Alexander V. Kondakov; Ilya V. Vikhrev; Olga V. Aksenova; Yulia V. Bespalaya; Mikhail Y. Gofarov; Yulia S. Kolosova; Ekaterina S. Konopleva; Vitaly M. Spitsyn; Kitti Tanmuangpak; Sakboworn Tumpeesuwan

The concept of long-lived (ancient) lakes has had a great influence on the development of evolutionary biogeography. According to this insight, a number of lakes on Earth have existed for several million years (e.g., Baikal and Tanganyika) and represent unique evolutionary hotspots with multiple intra-basin radiations. In contrast, rivers are usually considered to be variable systems, and the possibility of their long-term existence during geological epochs has never been tested. In this study, we reconstruct the history of freshwater basin interactions across continents based on the multi-locus fossil-calibrated phylogeny of freshwater mussels (Unionidae). These mussels most likely originated in Southeast and East Asia in the Jurassic, with the earliest expansions into North America and Africa (since the mid-Cretaceous) following the colonization of Europe and India (since the Paleocene). We discovered two ancient monophyletic mussel radiations (mean age ~51–55 Ma) within the paleo-Mekong catchment (i.e., the Mekong, Siam, and Malacca Straits paleo-river drainage basins). Our findings reveal that the Mekong may be considered a long-lived river that has existed throughout the entire Cenozoic epoch.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Taxonomy and distribution of freshwater pearl mussels (Unionoida: Margaritiferidae) of the Russian Far East.

Ivan N. Bolotov; Yulia V. Bespalaya; Ilya V. Vikhrev; Olga V. Aksenova; Paul E. Aspholm; Mikhail Y. Gofarov; Olga K. Klishko; Yulia S. Kolosova; Alexander V. Kondakov; Artyom A. Lyubas; Inga Paltser; Ekaterina S. Konopleva; Sakboworn Tumpeesuwan; Nikita I. Bolotov; Irina S. Voroshilova

The freshwater pearl mussel family Margaritiferidae includes 13 extant species, which are all listed by IUCN as endangered or vulnerable taxa. In this study, an extensive spatial sampling of Margaritifera spp. across the Russian Far East (Amur Basin, Kamchatka Peninsula, Kurile Archipelago and Sakhalin Island) was conducted for a revision of their taxonomy and distribution ranges. Based on their DNA sequences, shell and soft tissue morphology, three valid species were identified: Margaritifera dahurica (Middendorff, 1850), M. laevis (Haas, 1910) and M. middendorffi (Rosén, 1926). M. dahurica ranges across the Amur basin and some of the nearest river systems. M. laevis is distributed in Japan, Sakhalin Island and the Kurile Archipelago. M. middendorffi was previously considered an endemic species of the Kamchatka. However, it is widespread in the rivers of Kamchatka, Sakhalin Island, the Kurile Islands (across the Bussol Strait, which is the most significant biogeographical boundary within the archipelago), and, likely, in Japan. The Japanese species M. togakushiensis Kondo & Kobayashi, 2005 seems to be conspecific with M. middendorffi because of similar morphological patterns, small shell size (<100 mm long) and overlapped ranges, but it is in need of a separate revision. Phylogenetic analysis reveals that two NW Pacific margaritiferid species, M. laevis and M. middendorffi, formed a monophyletic 18S rDNA clade together with the North American species M. marrianae and M. falcata. The patterns that were found in these Margaritifera spp. are similar to those of freshwater fishes, indicating multiple colonizations of Eastern Asia by different mitochondrial lineages, including an ancient Beringian exchange between freshwater faunas across the Pacific.


Tropical Conservation Science | 2014

Ecology and conservation of the endangered Indochinese freshwater pearl mussel, Margaritifera laosensis (Lea, 1863) in the Nam Pe and Nam Long rivers, Northern Laos

Ivan N. Bolotov; Ilya V. Vikhrev; Yulia V. Bespalaya; V. S. Artamonova; Mikhail Y. Gofarov; Julia Kolosova; Alexander V. Kondakov; A. A. Makhrov; Artyom A Frolov; Sakboworn Tumpeesuwan; Artyom A. Lyubas; Tatyana Romanis; Ksenya Titova

In this paper we present the first ecological data of Indochinese freshwater pearl mussel, Margaritifera laosensis populations. We also provide a comparative study of the ecology of this tropical species with populations of other Margaritiferidae. We conducted surveys in ten tributaries of the River Nam Ou (Middle Mekong Drainage, Northern Laos). Reproductively viable populations were found only in the Nam Long and Nam Pe rivers, which are two of the only three known viable populations of this species in the world. The habitats of M. laosensis include mountainous oligotrophic rivers with circumneutral pH. Optimal mesohabitats are riffles and runs with a median depth of 0.2 m and median current velocity of 0.3 ms−1. Pearl mussels were more common in gravel and fine gravel riverbed substrates. Surveys revealed 252 specimens, but only 78 (31.0%) were alive. The largest mussels observed were 110 mm in length and only 11–12 years of age. The presence of smaller-sized mussels indicates recent recruitment in both populations. The most significant threats to M. laosensis populations are harvest by local people and land development in the River Nam Ou Basin.


Zootaxa | 2014

A taxonomic revision of two local endemic Radix spp. (Gastropoda: Lymnaeidae) from Khodutka geothermal area, Kamchatka, Russian Far East.

Ivan N. Bolotov; Yulia V. Bespalaya; Olga V. Aksenova; Andrey Aksenov; Nikita I. Bolotov; Mikhail Y. Gofarov; Alexander V. Kondakov; Inga Paltser; Ilya V. Vikhrev

Khodutka geothermal area is located near Khodutka and Priemysh volcanoes and is one of the largest geothermal areas of the Kamchatka Peninsula. Vakin (2003) described geological, geochemical and geothermic conditions of this geothermal area in detail. The main thermal water sources have temperatures up to 87°C and a discharge of approximately 150 l×sec. -1 are flows out into the warm lake with dimensions of ca. 250 m length and 80 m width. This warm river is ca. 20 m in width beginning from the lake and flows to the Bolshaya Khodutka River basin. Two local endemic Radix species were described from this geothermal area, especially Lymnaea ( Radix ) hadutkae Kruglov & Starobogatov, 1989 and L. ( R. ) thermokamtschatica Kruglov & Starobogatov, 1989 (Kruglov & Starobogatov 1989, 1993; Kruglov 2005). These species were separated using proportions of shell and reproductive system (Kruglov & Starobogatov 1989, 1993; Starobogatov et al. 2004). According to the diagnosis, L. ( R. ) hadutkae differs in the ear-shape shell, a form of the provaginal duct with cylindrical distal part and conical proximal part, and larger value of the index of the copulatory apparatus (ICA: proportion of the preputium to phallotheca is 1.27) from other species within the section Thermoradix Kruglov & Starobogatov, 1989. The last whorl is large, 0.86–0.89 of the shell height; an excess of the last whorl over upper margin of the aperture is 0.15–0.16 of the aperture height. L. ( R. ) thermokamtschatica has the cylindrical provaginal duct, relatively short bursa duct (1.5X longer than the bursa copulatrix diameter) and very long phallotheca (ICA is 0.77). The last whorl is large, 0.85–0.87 of the shell height; an excess of the last whorl over upper margin of the aperture is 0.2–0.25 of the aperture height. In accordance with an identification key (Starobogatov et al. 2004), the main diagnostic feature is an excess of the last whorl over the shell aperture, which has ≤0.78 and ≥0.80 of the penultimate whorl width in the first and second species, respectively. In the present paper, we revised these taxa using newly collected topotypes and additional Radix spp. specimens from other areas of the Russian Far East.


Comptes Rendus Biologies | 2016

Radix dolgini: The integrative taxonomic approach supports the species status of a Siberian endemic snail (Mollusca, Gastropoda, Lymnaeidae).

Olga V. Aksenova; Yulia V. Bespalaya; Ivan N. Bolotov; Katrin Schniebs; Mikhail Y. Gofarov; Alexander V. Kondakov

The molecular techniques are the standard tool for the study of the taxonomic position and phylogenetic affinities of the lymnaeid genus Radix Montfort, 1810, and the majority of the European representatives of this taxon have been studied in this respect. However, a plethora of nominal species of Radix described from Northern Asia (Siberia and the Russian Far East) are still characterized only morphologically, raising some doubts concerning their validity. In this paper, we present the triple (morphological, molecular, and zoogeographical) evidence that there is at least one endemic species of Radix, Radix dolgini (Gundrizer and Starobogatov, 1979), widely distributed in Siberia and Western Mongolia. Phylogenetically, it is a sister species to the European R. labiata (Rossmaessler, 1835) [=R. peregra auct.], and their common ancestor most probably lived in the Pliocene, nearly 3.25Myr ago. Our results assume the existence of an extended dispersal barrier for freshwater hydrobionts between Europe and Siberia in the Late Pliocene that may be important for biogeographical explanations. Three other nominal Siberian species of Radix: R. kurejkae (Gundrizer and Starobogatov, 1979), R. gundrizeri (Kruglov and Starobogatov, 1983), and R. ulaganica (Kruglov and Starobogatov, 1983) proved to be the junior synonyms of R. dolgini.


Systematics and Biodiversity | 2016

Ladislavella tumrokensis: The first molecular evidence of a Nearctic clade of lymnaeid snails inhabiting Eurasia

Olga V. Aksenova; Yulia V. Bespalaya; Ivan N. Bolotov; Mikhail Y. Gofarov; Alexander V. Kondakov

In this study, we provide the first molecular evidence for a possible connection between freshwater mollusc faunas across the Bering Strait via the Beringian Land Bridge using data inferred from gastropods of the family Lymnaeidae. The gastropods collected from geothermal springs in the Tumrok Mountains, West Kamchatka, Russia, share the nuclear internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) and the cytochrome oxidase subunit I gene (COI) haplotypes, thus being as sister to those recorded for lymnaeid snails in the Stagnicola elodes group from Canada and the USA. Two lymnaeid species, Lymnaea (Orientogalba) tumrokensis Kruglov and Starobogatov, 1985 and Lymnaea (Polyrhytis) kurenkovi Kruglov and Starobogatov, 1989, were described from the Tumrok geothermal locality, but actually they are morphological variations of a single taxon of subspecies rank re-classified here as Ladislavella catascopium tumrokensis. This subspecies is the first discovered representative in the genus, which formed a dwarf race in a geothermal habitat. Our findings highlight the possible exchange between freshwater faunas in Beringia during the Pleistocene and an important role of geothermal ecosystems as possible cryptic refugia for freshwater hydrobionts.


Royal Society Open Science | 2015

Reproduction of Pisidium casertanum (Poli, 1791) in Arctic lake

Yulia V. Bespalaya; Ivan N. Bolotov; Olga V. Aksenova; Alexander V. Kondakov; Inga Paltser; Mikhail Y. Gofarov

Freshwater invertebrates are able to develop specific ecological adaptations that enable them to successfully inhabit an extreme environment. We investigated the brooding bivalve of Pisidium casertanum in Talatinskoe Lake, Vaigach Island, Arctic Russia. Here, quantitative surveys were conducted, with the collection and dissections of 765 molluscs, on the basis of which analyses on the brood sacs length (marsupia) and the number and size of embryos, were performed. In this study, the number of brooded embryos was positively correlated with the parents shell length. The number of extramarsupial embryos was much lower than the number of intramarsupial embryos. Our research also showed that the brood sac length and embryos within one individual can vary significantly. Thus, we detected that P. casertanum has a specific brooding mechanism, accompanied by asynchronous development and embryos release by the parent. We suggest that such a mode could result in the coin-flipping effect that, presumably, increases the population breeding success in the harsh environment of the Arctic lake.


Polar Biology | 2015

Occurrence of a Sphaerium species (Bivalvia: Sphaeriidae) of Nearctic origin in European Arctic Russia (Vaigach Island) indicates an ancient exchange between freshwater faunas across the Arctic

Yulia V. Bespalaya; Ivan N. Bolotov; Olga V. Aksenova; Alexander V. Kondakov; Mikhail Y. Gofarov; Inga Paltser

Although a recent series of studies has examined the phylogeography and diversity of Arctic invertebrates related to the glacial history on a pan-Arctic scale, large gaps remain in the knowledge on the origin, dispersal and biogeography of freshwater mollusks in the Russian Arctic. In samples from two lakes on Vaigach Island, Arctic European Russia, we found five specimens of an undescribed Sphaerium species (Bivalvia: Sphaeriidae), which is most closely related to Nearctic species (particularly Sphaerium rhomboideum), with the majority of known occurrences in the Great Lakes region of North America. This finding suggests a Nearctic rather than Palearctic origin of this lineage. Genetic evidence demonstrated the existence of freshwater refugia in the European Arctic during the last glacial maximum, and a Nearctic origin of the Vaigach lineage would suggest the existence of a phylogeographic element distinct from other bivalve molluscs of Northern and Alpine Europe origin inhabiting the European Arctic.

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Ivan N. Bolotov

Northern (Arctic) Federal University

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Alexander V. Kondakov

Northern (Arctic) Federal University

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Mikhail Y. Gofarov

Northern (Arctic) Federal University

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Olga V. Aksenova

Northern (Arctic) Federal University

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Ilya V. Vikhrev

Northern (Arctic) Federal University

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Svetlana E. Sokolova

Northern (Arctic) Federal University

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Inga Paltser

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Yulia S. Kolosova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A. A. Makhrov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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