West Annie G, Digby Andrew, Lear Gavin, Taylor Michael W
School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, 1142, New Zealand.
Department of Conservation, Kākāpō Recovery Team, PO Box 743, Invercargill, New Zealand.
Anim Microbiome. 2022 Sep 30;4(1):55. doi: 10.1186/s42523-022-00204-w.
The critically endangered kākāpō is a flightless, nocturnal parrot endemic to Aotearoa New Zealand. Recent efforts to describe the gastrointestinal microbial community of this threatened herbivore revealed a low-diversity microbiota that is often dominated by Escherichia-Shigella bacteria. Given the importance of associated microbial communities to animal health, and increasing appreciation of their potential relevance to threatened species conservation, we sought to better understand the development of this unusual gut microbiota profile. To this end, we conducted a longitudinal analysis of faecal material collected from kākāpō chicks during the 2019 breeding season, in addition to associated nest litter material.
Using an experimental approach rarely seen in studies of threatened species microbiota, we evaluated the impact of a regular conservation practice on the developing kākāpō microbiota, namely the removal of faecal material from nests. Artificially removing chick faeces from nests had negligible impact on bacterial community diversity for either chicks or nests (p > 0.05). However, the gut microbiota did change significantly over time as chick age increased (p < 0.01), with an increasing relative abundance of Escherichia-Shigella coli over the study period and similar observations for the associated nest litter microbiota (p < 0.01). Supplementary feeding substantially altered gut bacterial diversity of kākāpō chicks (p < 0.01), characterised by a significant increase in Lactobacillus bacteria.
Overall, chick age and hand rearing conditions had the most marked impact on faecal bacterial communities. Similarly, the surrounding nest litter microbiota changed significantly over time since a kākāpō chick was first placed in the nest, though we found no evidence that removal of faecal material influenced the bacterial communities of either litter or faecal samples. Taken together, these observations will inform ongoing conservation and management of this most enigmatic of bird species.
极度濒危的鸮鹦鹉是一种不会飞的夜行性鹦鹉,原产于新西兰的奥特亚罗瓦。最近对这种濒危食草动物的胃肠道微生物群落进行描述的研究表明,其微生物群多样性较低,且通常以大肠埃希氏菌-志贺氏菌属细菌为主。鉴于相关微生物群落对动物健康的重要性,以及人们越来越认识到它们对濒危物种保护的潜在相关性,我们试图更好地了解这种不寻常的肠道微生物群特征的发展过程。为此,我们除了对相关鸟巢垫料进行分析外,还对2019年繁殖季节从鸮鹦鹉雏鸟收集的粪便样本进行了纵向分析。
我们采用了一种在濒危物种微生物群研究中很少见的实验方法,评估了一种常规保护措施对发育中的鸮鹦鹉微生物群的影响,即清除鸟巢中的粪便。人工清除鸟巢中的雏鸟粪便对雏鸟或鸟巢的细菌群落多样性影响可忽略不计(p>0.05)。然而,随着雏鸟年龄的增长,肠道微生物群确实随时间发生了显著变化(p<0.01),在研究期间大肠埃希氏菌-志贺氏菌属的相对丰度增加,相关鸟巢垫料微生物群也有类似观察结果(p<0.01)。补充喂养显著改变了鸮鹦鹉雏鸟的肠道细菌多样性(p<0.01),其特征是乳酸杆菌属细菌显著增加。
总体而言,雏鸟年龄和人工饲养条件对粪便细菌群落影响最为显著。同样,自从鸮鹦鹉雏鸟首次放入鸟巢后,周围鸟巢垫料微生物群也随时间发生了显著变化,不过我们没有发现清除粪便会影响垫料或粪便样本细菌群落的证据。综上所述,这些观察结果将为对这种最神秘鸟类的持续保护和管理提供参考。