Yang Haile, Leng Xiaoqian, Du Hao, Luo Jiang, Wu Jinping, Wei Qiwei
Key Laboratory of Freshwater Biodiversity Conservation, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs of China, Yangtze River Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences, Wuhan, China.
Front Microbiol. 2020 Apr 21;11:488. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.00488. eCollection 2020.
As one of the most important tool for biodiversity restoration and endangered species conservation, reintroduction has been implemented worldwide. In reintroduction projects, prerelease conditioning could effectively increase postrelease fitness and survival by improving animals' adaptation to transformation from artificial to natural environments. However, how early-life diet training affects individuals' adaptation, fitness, and survival after release remains largely unknown. We hypothesized that early-life diet training would adjust the host's gut microbial community, the gut microbial community would influence the host's diet preference, and the host's diet preference would impact its adaptation to diet provision transformation and then determine postrelease fitness and survival. To verify this hypothesis, we investigated the growth characteristics and gut microbes of Yangtze sturgeon () trained with natural and formula diets at both the prerelease and postrelease stages. The results showed that (1) the gut microbial communities of the individuals trained with a natural diet (i.e., natural diet group) and formula diet (i.e., formula diet group) evolved to the optimal status for their corresponding diet provisions, (2) the individuals in the natural diet group paid a lower cost (i.e., changed their gut microbial communities less) during diet transformation and release into the natural environment than did the individuals in the formula diet group, and (3) the gut microbes in the natural diet group better supported postrelease fitness and survival than did the gut microbes in the formula diet group. The results indicated that better prerelease diet training with more appropriate training diets and times could improve the reintroduction of Yangtze sturgeon by adjusting the prerelease gut microbial community. Because a relationship between diet (preference) and gut microbes is common in animals from insects (such as ) to mammals (such as ), our hypothesis verified by the case study on Yangtze sturgeon applies to other animals. We therefore encourage future studies to identify optimal training diets and times for each species to best adjust its prerelease gut microbial community and then improve its postrelease fitness and survival in reintroduction projects.
作为生物多样性恢复和濒危物种保护的最重要工具之一,放归已在全球范围内实施。在放归项目中,放生前的预处理可以通过提高动物对从人工环境到自然环境转变的适应能力,有效提高放归后的健康水平和存活率。然而,早期饮食训练如何影响个体放归后的适应能力、健康水平和存活率,在很大程度上仍不清楚。我们假设,早期饮食训练会调节宿主的肠道微生物群落,肠道微生物群落会影响宿主的饮食偏好,而宿主的饮食偏好会影响其对饮食供应转变的适应能力,进而决定放归后的健康水平和存活率。为了验证这一假设,我们研究了在放生前和放归后阶段用天然饲料和配方饲料进行训练的长江鲟的生长特征和肠道微生物。结果表明:(1)用天然饲料训练的个体(即天然饲料组)和用配方饲料训练的个体(即配方饲料组)的肠道微生物群落均进化到与其相应饮食供应相适应的最佳状态;(2)与配方饲料组的个体相比,天然饲料组的个体在饮食转变和放归自然环境过程中付出的代价更低(即肠道微生物群落变化更小);(3)天然饲料组的肠道微生物比配方饲料组的肠道微生物更能支持放归后的健康水平和存活率。结果表明,通过更合适的训练饲料和时间进行更好的放生前饮食训练,可以通过调节放生前的肠道微生物群落来改善长江鲟的放归效果。由于从昆虫(如 )到哺乳动物(如 )的动物中,饮食(偏好)与肠道微生物之间的关系很常见,我们通过长江鲟案例研究验证的假设也适用于其他动物。因此,我们鼓励未来的研究确定每种物种的最佳训练饲料和时间,以最佳地调节其放生前的肠道微生物群落,进而提高其在放归项目中的放归后健康水平和存活率。