Host phylogeny and functional traits differentiate gut microbiomes in a diverse natural community of small mammals

Author:

Brown Bianca R. P.123ORCID,Goheen Jacob R.34,Newsome Seth D.5,Pringle Robert M.36,Palmer Todd M.37,Khasoha Leo M.34,Kartzinel Tyler R.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology, Evolutionary & Organismal Biology Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA

2. Institute at Brown for Environment and Society Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA

3. Mpala Research Centre Nanyuki Kenya

4. Department of Zoology and Physiology University of Wyoming Laramie Wyoming USA

5. Department of Biology University of New Mexico Albuquerque New Mexico USA

6. Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology Princeton University Princeton New Jersey USA

7. Department of Biology University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractDifferences in the bacterial communities inhabiting mammalian gut microbiomes tend to reflect the phylogenetic relatedness of their hosts, a pattern dubbed phylosymbiosis. Although most research on this pattern has compared the gut microbiomes of host species across biomes, understanding the evolutionary and ecological processes that generate phylosymbiosis requires comparisons across phylogenetic scales and under similar ecological conditions. We analysed the gut microbiomes of 14 sympatric small mammal species in a semi‐arid African savanna, hypothesizing that there would be a strong phylosymbiotic pattern associated with differences in their body sizes and diets. Consistent with phylosymbiosis, microbiome dissimilarity increased with phylogenetic distance among hosts, ranging from congeneric sets of mice and hares that did not differ significantly in microbiome composition to species from different taxonomic orders that had almost no gut bacteria in common. While phylosymbiosis was detected among just the 11 species of rodents, it was substantially weaker at this scale than in comparisons involving all 14 species together. In contrast, microbiome diversity and composition were generally more strongly correlated with body size, dietary breadth, and dietary overlap in comparisons restricted to rodents than in those including all lineages. The starkest divides in microbiome composition thus reflected the broad evolutionary divergence of hosts, regardless of body size or diet, while subtler microbiome differences reflected variation in ecologically important traits of closely related hosts. Strong phylosymbiotic patterns arose deep in the phylogeny, and ecological filters that promote functional differentiation of cooccurring host species may disrupt or obscure this pattern near the tips.

Funder

Brown University

National Science Foundation

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

University of Wyoming

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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