The relationship between dietary trophic level, parasites and the microbiome of Pacific walrus ( Odobenus rosmarus divergens )

Arctic species are likely to experience rapid shifts in prey availability under climate change, which may alter their exposure to microbes and parasites. Here, we describe fecal bacterial and macroparasite communities and assess correlations with diet trophic level in Pacific walruses harvested duri...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 2022-04, Vol.289 (1972), p.20220079
Hauptverfasser: Couch, Claire, Sanders, Justin, Sweitzer, Danielle, Deignan, Kristen, Cohen, Lesley, Broughton, Heather, Steingass, Sheanna, Beechler, Brianna
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container_issue 1972
container_start_page 20220079
container_title Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences
container_volume 289
creator Couch, Claire
Sanders, Justin
Sweitzer, Danielle
Deignan, Kristen
Cohen, Lesley
Broughton, Heather
Steingass, Sheanna
Beechler, Brianna
description Arctic species are likely to experience rapid shifts in prey availability under climate change, which may alter their exposure to microbes and parasites. Here, we describe fecal bacterial and macroparasite communities and assess correlations with diet trophic level in Pacific walruses harvested during subsistence hunts by members of the Native Villages of Gambell and Savoonga on St Lawrence Island, Alaska. Fecal bacterial communities were dominated by relatively few taxa, mostly belonging to phyla Fusobacteriota and Firmicutes. Members of parasite-associated phyla Nematoda, Acanthocephala and Platyhelminthes were prevalent in our study population. We hypothesized that high versus low prey trophic level (e.g. fish versus bivalves) would result in different gut bacterial and macroparasite communities. We found that bacterial community structure correlated to diet, with nine clades enriched in walruses consuming higher-trophic-level prey. While no parasite compositional differences were found at the phylum level, the cestode genus was more prevalent and abundant in walruses consuming higher-trophic-level prey, probably because fish are the intermediate hosts for this genus. This study suggests that diet is important for structuring both parasite and microbial communities of this culturally and ecologically important species, with potential implications for population health under climate change.
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subjects Animals
Arctic Regions
Diet
Global Change and Conservation
Humans
Microbiota
Parasites
Walruses
title The relationship between dietary trophic level, parasites and the microbiome of Pacific walrus ( Odobenus rosmarus divergens )
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