Author:
Glendinning Laura,Jia Xinzheng,Kebede Adebabay,Oyola Samuel O.,Park Jong-Eun,Park Woncheoul,Assiri Abdulwahab,Holm Jacob Bak,Kristiansen Karsten,Han Jianlin,Hanotte Olivier
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Scavenging indigenous village chickens play a vital role in sub-Saharan Africa, sustaining the livelihood of millions of farmers. These chickens are exposed to vastly different environments and feeds compared to commercial chickens. In this study, we analysed the caecal microbiota of 243 Ethiopian village chickens living in different altitude-dependent agro-ecologies.
Results
Differences in bacterial diversity were significantly correlated with differences in specific climate factors, topsoil characteristics, and supplemental diets provided by farmers. Microbiota clustered into three enterotypes, with one particularly enriched at high altitudes. We assembled 9977 taxonomically and functionally diverse metagenome-assembled genomes. The vast majority of these were not found in a dataset of previously published chicken microbes or in the Genome Taxonomy Database.
Conclusions
The wide functional and taxonomic diversity of these microbes highlights their importance in the local adaptation of indigenous poultry, and the significant impacts of environmental factors on the microbiota argue for further discoveries in other agro-ecologies.
Funder
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
Chinese Government
CGIAR Trust Fund
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office
Cooperative Research Program for Agriculture Science and Technology Development
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC