Disentangling relationships between physiology, morphology, diet, and gut microbial diversity in American kestrel nestlings

Author:

Houtz Jennifer L.1ORCID,Melo Mercy23ORCID,Therrien Jean‐François2ORCID,Cornell Allison4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Dept of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell Univ. Ithaca New York USA

2. Hawk Mountain Sanctuary Kempton Pennsylvania USA

3. Dept of Environmental Conservation, Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst Amherst Massachusetts USA

4. Dept of Biology, Penn State Altoona Altoona Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

Gut microbiota are increasingly recognized as important drivers of host health and fitness across vertebrate taxa. Given that gut microbial composition is directly influenced by the environment, gut microbiota may also serve as an eco‐physiological mechanism connecting host ecology, such as diet, and physiology. Although gut microbiota have been well‐studied in mammalian systems, little is known about how gut microbial diversity and composition impact morphological and physiological development in wild birds. Here, we characterized both diet and gut microbial diversity of free‐living American kestrel Falco sparverius nestlings throughout development to test whether gut microbial diversity predicts host morphological and physiological traits in either contemporary or time‐lagged manners. Gut microbial alpha diversity on day 21 of nestling development was positively correlated with diet alpha diversity representative of the majority of nestling development (days 5–20). Gut microbial alpha diversity early in development was negatively correlated with body mass in both contemporary and time‐lagged manners. Gut microbial alpha diversity early in development was positively correlated with blood glucose later in development. As nestlings experience rapid growth demands in preparation to fledge, these time‐lagged associations may indicate that gut microbial diversity at early critical developmental windows may determine the future trajectory of morphological and physiological traits underlying metabolism that ultimately impact fitness.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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