Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
Department of Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
Biol Lett. 2021 Nov;17(11):20210389. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2021.0389. Epub 2021 Nov 3.
The 'social microbiome' can fundamentally shape the costs and benefits of group-living, but understanding social transmission of microbes in free-living animals is challenging due to confounding effects of kinship and shared environments (e.g. highly associated individuals often share the same spaces, food and water). Here, we report evidence for convergence towards a social microbiome among introduced common vampire bats, , a highly social species in which adults feed only on blood, and engage in both mouth-to-body allogrooming and mouth-to-mouth regurgitated food sharing. Shotgun sequencing of samples from six zoos in the USA, 15 wild-caught bats from a colony in Belize and 31 bats from three colonies in Panama showed that faecal microbiomes were more similar within colonies than between colonies. To assess microbial transmission, we created an experimentally merged group of the Panama bats from the three distant sites by housing these bats together for four months. In this merged colony, we found evidence that dyadic gut microbiome similarity increased with both clustering and oral contact, leading to microbiome convergence among introduced bats. Our findings demonstrate that social interactions shape microbiome similarity even when controlling for past social history, kinship, environment and diet.
“社会微生物组”从根本上影响着群居的成本和收益,但由于亲缘关系和共同环境的混杂影响(例如,高度相关的个体通常共享相同的空间、食物和水),理解自由生活动物中微生物的社会传播具有挑战性。在这里,我们报告了在引入的普通吸血蝙蝠(Desmodus rotundus)中出现的向社会微生物组趋同的证据,这是一种高度社会化的物种,其成年个体只以血液为食,并进行口对口的异体梳理和口对口的反刍食物共享。对来自美国六个动物园的 6 个样本、来自伯利兹一个群体的 15 只野生捕获的蝙蝠和来自巴拿马三个群体的 31 只蝙蝠进行的 shotgun 测序表明,群体内的粪便微生物组比群体间更相似。为了评估微生物的传播,我们通过将这些蝙蝠一起饲养四个月,创建了一个来自巴拿马三个不同地点的蝙蝠的实验性合并群体。在这个合并的群体中,我们发现证据表明,双歧肠道微生物组的相似性随着聚类和口腔接触而增加,导致引入的蝙蝠的微生物组趋同。我们的研究结果表明,即使在控制过去的社会历史、亲缘关系、环境和饮食的情况下,社交互动也会影响微生物组的相似性。