Rosamond Kristen M, Esser Helen Joan, Assink Rebekka B, Jaramillo-Ortiz Laura, Rowe Melissah, Kirke Ellie C, Matson Kevin D
Department of Biology, University of Missouri-St. Louis, St. Louis, MO 63121, USA.
Wildlife Ecology and Conservation Group, Wageningen University & Research, 6708 PB Wageningen, The Netherlands.
Integr Comp Biol. 2025 Sep 13;65(2):430-444. doi: 10.1093/icb/icaf091.
Biodiversity-disease studies typically focus on how changes in community composition (e.g., species richness, abundance, and functional or phylogenetic metrics of biodiversity) affect disease risk. In doing so, these studies tend to overlook intraspecific variation in the organisms comprising the community. Yet, intraspecific variation, which occurs to varying degrees both within and between communities, could also modulate biodiversity-disease relationships. One important driver of intraspecific variation is the microbiome. By directly and indirectly influencing health and susceptibility to infection and disease, microbiomes are integral to organismal functioning. Thus, the microbiome plays a crucial role in host quality. We define host quality as an integration of host traits related to parasite exposure, establishment, growth, and infectivity, which ultimately shape parasite fitness. The microbiome can impact host quality via a variety of mechanisms including host size and developmental stage, immune function, reproduction, nutrient acquisition, and behavior. However, the potential for such microbiome-driven changes in host quality to trigger cascading effects on community-level processes, specifically by altering parasite transmission dynamics and community competence, has not been well explored. Here, we examine and illustrate a pathway by which the microbiome may influence variation in organismal biology (i.e., host quality) of hosts in communities. Furthermore, we consider how major anthropogenic drivers of microbiome shifts, such as climate change, pollution, land use change, and domestication, might influence this pathway and thereby alter outcomes. Future studies bridging microbiome and disease ecology research will provide opportunities to unify these concepts across scales and between the plant and animal domains. To date, most microbiome research has focused on humans, crops, and laboratory animals. However, to better understand the potential for knock-on ecological effects of microbiomes, more attention must be paid to the microbiomes of wild plants and animals. Ultimately, more experimental and theoretical data are needed to clarify how the microbiome impacts host quality and disease dynamics, as well as how anthropogenic factors continuously reshape these relationships.
生物多样性与疾病的研究通常聚焦于群落组成的变化(例如,物种丰富度、丰度以及生物多样性的功能或系统发育指标)如何影响疾病风险。在这样做的过程中,这些研究往往忽视了构成群落的生物体的种内变异。然而,种内变异在群落内部和群落之间都有不同程度的发生,它也可能调节生物多样性与疾病的关系。种内变异的一个重要驱动因素是微生物组。通过直接和间接影响健康以及对感染和疾病的易感性,微生物组对于生物体的功能至关重要。因此,微生物组在宿主质量中起着关键作用。我们将宿主质量定义为与寄生虫暴露、定殖、生长和传染性相关的宿主特征的整合,这些特征最终决定了寄生虫的适应性。微生物组可以通过多种机制影响宿主质量,包括宿主大小和发育阶段、免疫功能、繁殖、营养获取和行为。然而,这种由微生物组驱动的宿主质量变化引发对群落水平过程的级联效应的可能性,特别是通过改变寄生虫传播动态和群落能力,尚未得到充分探索。在这里,我们研究并阐述了微生物组可能影响群落中宿主的生物体生物学变异(即宿主质量)的一条途径。此外,我们考虑微生物组变化的主要人为驱动因素,如气候变化、污染、土地利用变化和驯化,可能如何影响这条途径,从而改变结果。未来连接微生物组和疾病生态学研究的研究将提供机会,在不同尺度以及植物和动物领域之间统一这些概念。迄今为止,大多数微生物组研究都集中在人类、农作物和实验动物上。然而,为了更好地理解微生物组产生连锁生态效应的可能性,必须更多地关注野生植物和动物的微生物组。最终,需要更多的实验和理论数据来阐明微生物组如何影响宿主质量和疾病动态,以及人为因素如何持续重塑这些关系。