Publications by authors named "V V Alexeev"

Article Synopsis
  • Genetic analyses of seal lice were conducted to explore the evolutionary history of seal populations in the Arctic Ocean and the Baltic Sea, particularly focusing on unique landlocked ringed seal populations in lakes Saimaa and Ladoga.
  • The study found that lice and their seal hosts have distinct genetic profiles reflecting postglacial divergence and geological changes, indicating a correlation between louse population sizes and their seal host populations.
  • Significantly, ancient gene flow between the lice from Baltic gray seals and ringed seals suggests that these populations had greater interactions in the past, highlighting how analyzing parasites can reveal intricate population dynamics of their animal hosts.
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Studies on host-parasite systems that have experienced distributional shifts, range fragmentation, and population declines in the past can provide information regarding how parasite community richness and genetic diversity will change as a result of anthropogenic environmental changes in the future. Here, we studied how sequential postglacial colonization, shifts in habitat, and reduced host population sizes have influenced species richness and genetic diversity of (Acanthocephala: Polymorphidae) parasites in northern European marine, brackish, and freshwater seal populations. We collected population samples from Arctic, Baltic, Ladoga, and Saimaa ringed seal subspecies and Baltic gray seals, and then applied COI barcoding and triple-enzyme restriction-site associated DNA (3RAD) sequencing to delimit species, clarify their distributions and community structures, and elucidate patterns of intraspecific gene flow and genetic diversity.

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The modern unambiguous climate change reveals in a rapid increase of air temperature, which is more distinctly expressed in the Arctic than in any other part of the world, affecting people health and well-being. The main objective of the current research is to explore the inter- and intra-annual changes in thermal stress for people in the Arctic, specifically for two parts of Beringia: Alaska, USA, and Chukotka, Russia, using climatology of the universal thermal climate index (UTCI). Data for 39 locations are taken from the ERA5-HEAT reanalysis for the period 1979-2020.

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Recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (RDEB) patients develop poorly healing skin wounds that are frequently colonized with microbiota. Because T cells play an important role in clearing such pathogens, we aimed to define the status of adaptive T cell-mediated immunity in RDEB wounds. Using a non-invasive approach for sampling of wound-associated constituents, we evaluated microbial contaminants in cellular fraction and exudates obtained from RDED wounds.

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Three subspecies of the ringed seal () are found in northeastern Europe: in the Baltic Sea, in Lake Saimaa in Finland, and in Lake Ladoga in Russia. We investigated the poorly-known cestode helminth communities of these closely related but ecologically divergent subspecies using COI barcode data. Our results show that, while cestodes from the Baltic Sea represent , all worms from the two lakes are identified as , a species that has previously not been reported from seals.

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