Heni Alexander Christoph, Fackelmann Gloria, Eibner Georg, Kreinert Swetlana, Schmid Julian, Schwensow Nina Isabell, Wiegand Jonas, Wilhelm Kerstin, Sommer Simone
Institute of Evolutionary Ecology and Conservation Genomics, Ulm University, 89081, Ulm, Germany.
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Ancón, Republic of Panama.
Anim Microbiome. 2023 Apr 6;5(1):22. doi: 10.1186/s42523-023-00237-9.
Human encroachment into nature and the accompanying environmental changes are a big concern for wildlife biodiversity and health. While changes on the macroecological scale, i.e. species community and abundance pattern, are well documented, impacts on the microecological scale, such as the host's microbial community, remain understudied. Particularly, it is unclear if impacts of anthropogenic landscape modification on wildlife gut microbiomes are species-specific. Of special interest are sympatric, generalist species, assumed to be more resilient to environmental changes and which often are well-known pathogen reservoirs and drivers of spill-over events. Here, we analyzed the gut microbiome of three such sympatric, generalist species, one rodent (Proechimys semispinosus) and two marsupials (Didelphis marsupialis and Philander opossum), captured in 28 study sites in four different landscapes in Panama characterized by different degrees of anthropogenic disturbance.
Our results show species-specific gut microbial responses to the same landscape disturbances. The gut microbiome of P. semispinosus was less diverse and more heterogeneous in landscapes with close contact with humans, where it contained bacterial taxa associated with humans, their domesticated animals, and potential pathogens. The gut microbiome of D. marsupialis showed similar patterns, but only in the most disturbed landscape. P. opossum, in contrast, showed little gut microbial changes, however, this species' absence in the most fragmented landscapes indicates its sensitivity to long-term isolation.
These results demonstrate that wildlife gut microbiomes even in generalist species with a large ecological plasticity are impacted by human encroachment into nature, but differ in resilience which can have critical implications on conservation efforts and One Health strategies.
人类对自然的侵蚀以及随之而来的环境变化是野生动物生物多样性和健康的一大担忧。虽然宏观生态尺度上的变化,即物种群落和丰度模式,已有充分记录,但对微观生态尺度的影响,如宿主的微生物群落,仍研究不足。特别是,尚不清楚人为景观改造对野生动物肠道微生物群的影响是否具有物种特异性。特别令人感兴趣的是同域分布的泛化种,它们被认为对环境变化更具恢复力,并且通常是众所周知的病原体宿主和溢出事件的驱动因素。在此,我们分析了三种这样的同域分布泛化种的肠道微生物群,一种啮齿动物(半棘长吻松鼠)和两种有袋动物(长吻袋貂和白喉负鼠),它们是在巴拿马四个不同景观的28个研究地点捕获的,这些景观具有不同程度的人为干扰。
我们的结果表明,不同物种的肠道微生物对相同的景观干扰有特异性反应。在与人类密切接触的景观中,半棘长吻松鼠的肠道微生物群多样性较低且更具异质性,其中包含与人类、其家养动物和潜在病原体相关的细菌分类群。长吻袋貂的肠道微生物群也表现出类似模式,但仅在受干扰最严重的景观中如此。相比之下,白喉负鼠的肠道微生物变化很小,然而,该物种在最破碎的景观中不存在,这表明其对长期隔离很敏感。
这些结果表明,即使是具有较大生态可塑性的泛化种,其野生动物肠道微生物群也会受到人类对自然的侵蚀的影响,但恢复力有所不同,这可能对保护工作和“同一健康”战略产生关键影响。