Structure, variation and assembly of body‐wide microbiomes in endangered crested ibis Nipponia nippon

Author:

Zhu Ying1ORCID,Ma Ruifeng1,Hu Lei1ORCID,Yang Haiqiong23,Gong Haizhou4,He Ke5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Qinghai‐Tibetan Plateau, Provincial Key Laboratory for Alpine Grassland Conservation and Utilization on Qinghai‐Tibetan Plateau Southwest Minzu University Chengdu China

2. Emei Breeding Center for Crested Ibis Emei China

3. College of Veterinary Medicine, Sichuan Agricultural University Chengdu China

4. College of Animal Science and Technology, Yangzhou University Yangzhou China

5. College of Animal Science and Technology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Zhejiang A & F University Hangzhou China

Abstract

AbstractLimited knowledge of bird microbiome in the all‐body niche hinders our understanding of host–microbial relationships and animal health. Here, we characterized the microbial composition of the crested ibis from 13 body sites, representing the cloaca, oral, feather and skin habitats, and explored assembly mechanism structuring the bacterial community of the four habitats respectively. The bacterial community characteristics were distinct among the four habitats. The skin harboured the highest alpha diversity and most diverse functions, followed by feather, oral and cloaca. Individual‐specific features were observed when the skin and feathers were concentrated independently. Skin and feather samples of multiple body sites from the same individual were more similar than those from different individuals. Although a significant proportion of the microbiota in the host (85.7%–96.5%) was not derived from the environmental microbiome, as body sites became more exposed to the environment, the relative importance of neutral processes (random drift or dispersal) increased. Neutral processes were the most important contributor in shaping the feather microbiome communities (R2 = .859). A higher percentage of taxa (29.3%) on the skin were selected by hosts compared to taxa on other body habitats. This study demonstrated that niche speciation and partial neutral processes, rather than environmental sources, contribute to microbiome variation in the crested ibis. These results enhance our knowledge of baseline microbial diversity in birds and will aid health management in crested ibises in the future.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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