Active migration is associated with specific and consistent changes to gut microbiota in Calidris shorebirds
1. Gut microbes are increasingly recognised for their role in regulating an animal's metabolism and immunity. However, identifying repeatable associations between host physiological processes and their gut microbiota has proved challenging, in part because microbial communities often respond st...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of animal ecology 2018-03, Vol.87 (2), p.428-437 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Gut microbes are increasingly recognised for their role in regulating an animal's metabolism and immunity. However, identifying repeatable associations between host physiological processes and their gut microbiota has proved challenging, in part because microbial communities often respond stochastically to host physiological stress (e.g. fasting, forced exercise or infection). 2. Migratory birds provide a valuable system in which to test host-microbe interactions under physiological extremes because these hosts are adapted to predictable metabolic and immunological challenges as they undergo seasonal migrations, including temporary gut atrophy during long-distance flights. These physiological challenges may either temporarily disrupt gut microbial ecosystems, or, alternatively, promote predictable host-microbe associations during migration. 3. To determine the relationship between migration and gut migrating, we compared gut microbiota composition between migrating and ("resident") conspecific shorebirds sharing a flock. We performed this across two sandpiper species, Calidris ferruginea and Calidris ruficollis, in north-western Australia, and an additional C. ruficollis population 3,000 km away in southern Australia. 4. We found that migrants consistently had higher abundances of the bacterial genus Corynebacterium (average 28% abundance) compared to conspecific residents (av-erage |
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ISSN: | 0021-8790 1365-2656 |
DOI: | 10.1111/1365-2656.12784 |