Temporal patterns of gut microbiota in lemurs (Eulemur rubriventer) living in intact and disturbed habitats in a novel sample type

Author:

Grieneisen Laura1ORCID,Hays Allison23,Cook Erica2,Blekhman Ran4,Tecot Stacey23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology University of British Columbia—Okanagan Campus Kelowna BC Canada

2. Laboratory for the Evolutionary Endocrinology of Primates University of Arizona Tucson AZ USA

3. School of Anthropology University of Arizona Tucson AZ USA

4. Section of Genetic Medicine, Department of Medicine University of Chicago Chicago IL USA

Abstract

AbstractThe gut microbiome is a plastic phenotype; gut microbial composition is highly variable across an individual host's lifetime and between host social groups, and this variation has consequences for host health. However, we do not yet fully understand how longitudinal microbial dynamics and their social drivers may be influenced by ecological stressors, such as habitat degradation. Answering these questions is difficult in most wild animal systems, as it requires long‐term collections of matched host, microbiome, and environmental trait data. To test if temporal and social influences on microbiome composition differ by the history of human disturbance, we leveraged banked, desiccated fecal samples collected over 5 months in 2004 from two ecologically distinct populations of wild, red‐bellied lemurs (Eulemur rubriventer) that are part of a long‐term study system. We found that social group explained more variation in microbiome composition than host population membership did, and that temporal variation in common microbial taxa was similar between populations, despite differences in history of human disturbance. Furthermore, we found that social group membership and collection month were both more important than individual lemur identity. Taken together, our results suggest that synchronized environments use can lead to synchronized microbial dynamics over time, even between habitats of varying quality, and that desiccated samples could become a viable approach for studying primate gut microbiota. Our work opens the door for other projects to utilize historic biological sample data sets to answer novel temporal microbiome questions in an ecological context.

Funder

University of British Columbia

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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