Risely Alice, Waite David, Ujvari Beata, Klaassen Marcel, Hoye Bethany
Centre for Integrative Ecology, Deakin University, Geelong, Vic., Australia.
Australian Centre for Ecogenomics, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Mol Ecol. 2017 Oct;26(20):5842-5854. doi: 10.1111/mec.14326. Epub 2017 Sep 28.
Migratory animals encounter suites of novel microbes as they move between disparate sites during their migrations, and are frequently implicated in the global spread of pathogens. Although wild animals have been shown to source a proportion of their gut microbiota from their environment, the susceptibility of migrants to enteric infections may be dependent upon the capacity of their gut microbiota to resist incorporating encountered microbes. To evaluate migrants' susceptibility to microbial invasion, we determined the extent of microbial sourcing from the foraging environment and examined how this influenced gut microbiota dynamics over time and space in a migratory shorebird, the Red-necked stint Calidris ruficollis. Contrary to previous studies on wild, nonmigratory hosts, we found that stint on their nonbreeding grounds obtained very little of their microbiota from their environment, with most individuals sourcing only 0.1% of gut microbes from foraging sediment. This microbial resistance was reflected at the population level by only weak compositional differences between stint flocks occupying ecologically distinct sites, and by our finding that stint that had recently migrated 10,000 km did not differ in diversity or taxonomy from those that had inhabited the same site for a full year. However, recent migrants had much greater abundances of the genus Corynebacterium, suggesting a potential microbial response to either migration or exposure to a novel environment. We conclude that the gut microbiota of stint is largely resistant to invasion from ingested microbes and that this may have implications for their susceptibility to enteric infections during migration.
迁徙动物在迁徙过程中从不同地点移动时会接触到一系列新的微生物,并且常常与病原体的全球传播有关。尽管野生动物已被证明其肠道微生物群有一部分来自其所处环境,但迁徙动物对肠道感染的易感性可能取决于其肠道微生物群抵抗纳入所接触微生物的能力。为了评估迁徙动物对微生物入侵的易感性,我们确定了觅食环境中微生物来源的程度,并研究了这如何随时间和空间影响一种迁徙滨鸟——红颈滨鹬(Calidris ruficollis)的肠道微生物群动态。与之前对野生非迁徙宿主的研究相反,我们发现处于非繁殖地的红颈滨鹬从其环境中获得的微生物群极少,大多数个体仅从觅食沉积物中获取0.1%的肠道微生物。这种对微生物的抵抗力在种群层面上表现为,占据生态上不同地点的红颈滨鹬群体之间的组成差异微弱,以及我们的研究发现,最近迁徙了10000公里的红颈滨鹬在多样性或分类学上与在同一地点栖息了一整年的红颈滨鹬没有差异。然而,最近迁徙的红颈滨鹬中棒状杆菌属的丰度要高得多,这表明微生物可能对迁徙或接触新环境有反应。我们得出结论,红颈滨鹬的肠道微生物群在很大程度上能够抵抗摄入微生物的入侵,这可能对它们在迁徙期间对肠道感染的易感性产生影响。