Department of Biological Sciences, Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Behavior, School of Integrative Biology, College of Liberal Arts & Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2024 Mar;33(6):e17289. doi: 10.1111/mec.17289. Epub 2024 Feb 7.
The role of species interactions, as well as genetic and environmental factors, all likely contribute to the composition and structure of the gut microbiome; however, disentangling these independent factors under field conditions represents a challenge for a functional understanding of gut microbial ecology. Avian brood parasites provide unique opportunities to investigate these questions, as brood parasitism results in parasite and host nestlings being raised in the same nest, by the same parents. Here we utilized obligate brood parasite brown-headed cowbird nestlings (BHCO; Molothrus ater) raised by several different host passerine species to better understand, via 16S rRNA sequencing, the microbial ecology of brood parasitism. First, we compared faecal microbial communities of prothonotary warbler nestlings (PROW; Protonotaria citrea) that were either parasitized or non-parasitized by BHCO and communities among BHCO nestlings from PROW nests. We found that parasitism by BHCO significantly altered both the community membership and community structure of the PROW nestling microbiota, perhaps due to the stressful nest environment generated by brood parasitism. In a second dataset, we compared faecal microbiotas from BHCO nestlings raised by six different host passerine species. Here, we found that the microbiota of BHCO nestlings was significantly influenced by the parental host species and the presence of an inter-specific nestmate. Thus, early rearing environment is important in determining the microbiota of brood parasite nestlings and their companion nestlings. Future work may aim to understand the functional effects of this microbiota variability on nestling performance and fitness.
物种相互作用、遗传和环境因素都可能对肠道微生物组的组成和结构有贡献;然而,在野外条件下,要理清这些独立因素之间的关系,对于理解肠道微生物生态学的功能具有挑战性。鸟类巢寄生为研究这些问题提供了独特的机会,因为巢寄生导致寄生虫和宿主雏鸟在同一个巢中、由同一位亲鸟抚养长大。在这里,我们利用几种不同的宿主雀形目鸟类抚养的强制性巢寄生褐头牛鹂雏鸟(BHCO;Molothrus ater),通过 16S rRNA 测序更好地了解巢寄生的微生物生态学。首先,我们比较了受 BHCO 寄生或未受寄生的美洲白鹟雏鸟(PROW;Protonotaria citrea)的粪便微生物群落,以及来自 PROW 巢的 BHCO 雏鸟的群落。我们发现,BHCO 的寄生显著改变了 PROW 雏鸟微生物群的群落成员和群落结构,这可能是由于巢寄生产生的压力环境所致。在第二个数据集,我们比较了由六种不同宿主雀形目鸟类抚养的 BHCO 雏鸟的粪便微生物群。在这里,我们发现 BHCO 雏鸟的微生物群受亲鸟宿主物种和种间同巢雏鸟的存在显著影响。因此,早期的饲养环境对于确定巢寄生雏鸟及其同伴雏鸟的微生物群至关重要。未来的研究可能旨在了解这种微生物群变异性对雏鸟表现和适应性的功能影响。