Department of Pathology, Bacteriology and Avian Diseases, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Ghent University, Merelbeke, Belgium.
Department of Clinical Sciences and Public Health, Faculty of Veterinary Science, Mahidol University, Phuttamonthon, Nakhon Pathom, Thailand.
PLoS One. 2018 Oct 4;13(10):e0204022. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0204022. eCollection 2018.
The hatching success of a bird's egg is one of the key determinants of avian reproductive success, which may be compromised by microbial infections causing embryonic death. During incubation, outer eggshell bacterial communities pose a constant threat of pathogen translocation and embryo infection. One of the parental strategies to mitigate this threat is the incorporation of maternal immune factors into the egg albumen and yolk. It has been suggested that habitat changes like forest fragmentation can affect environmental factors and life-history traits that are linked to egg contamination. This study aims at investigating relationships between microbial pressure, immune investment and hatching success in two abundant forest bird species and analyzing to what extent these are driven by extrinsic (environmental) factors. We here compared (1) the bacterial load and composition on eggshells, (2) the level of immune defenses in eggs, and (3) the reproductive success between great (Parus major) and blue (Cyanistes caeruleus) tits in Belgium and examined if forest fragmentation affects these parameters. Analysis of 70 great tit and 34 blue tit eggshells revealed a similar microbiota composition (Enterobacteriaceae, Lactobacillus spp., Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes), but higher bacterial loads in great tits. Forest fragmentation was not identified as an important explanatory variable. Although a significant negative correlation between hatching success and bacterial load on the eggshells in great tits corroborates microbial pressure to be a driver of embryonic mortality, the overall hatching success was only marginally lower than in blue tits. This may be explained by the significantly higher levels of lysozyme and IgY in the eggs of great tits, protecting the embryo from increased infection pressure. Our results show that immune investment in eggs is suggested to be a species-specific adaptive trait that serves to protect hatchlings from pathogen pressure, which is not directly linked to habitat fragmentation.
鸟卵的孵化成功率是鸟类繁殖成功的关键决定因素之一,而微生物感染导致胚胎死亡可能会影响其孵化成功率。在孵化过程中,蛋壳外的细菌群落不断威胁着病原体的转移和胚胎感染。亲鸟的策略之一是将母体的免疫因子纳入卵清蛋白和卵黄中。有人认为,森林破碎化等生境变化会影响与卵污染有关的环境因素和生活史特征。本研究旨在调查两种丰富的森林鸟类的微生物压力、免疫投资与孵化成功率之间的关系,并分析这些关系在多大程度上受到外部(环境)因素的驱动。我们在这里比较了(1)蛋壳上的细菌负荷和组成,(2)卵中的免疫防御水平,以及(3)比利时大山雀和蓝山雀的繁殖成功率,并检验了森林破碎化是否会影响这些参数。对 70 只大山雀和 34 只蓝山雀的蛋壳分析显示,其微生物群落组成相似(肠杆菌科、乳杆菌属、厚壁菌门和拟杆菌门),但大山雀的细菌负荷更高。森林破碎化未被确定为一个重要的解释变量。虽然大山雀蛋壳上的孵化成功率与细菌负荷之间存在显著的负相关关系,这表明微生物压力是胚胎死亡率的驱动因素,但大山雀的整体孵化成功率仅略低于蓝山雀。这可能是因为大山雀卵中的溶菌酶和 IgY 水平显著较高,从而保护胚胎免受感染压力的影响。我们的研究结果表明,卵中的免疫投资可能是一种物种特异性的适应性特征,有助于保护雏鸟免受病原体压力的影响,而这种压力与栖息地破碎化并无直接联系。