食腐能使早熟鸟类的肠道微生物群迅速成熟。

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC ACS Applied Electronic Materials Pub Date : 2023-08-01 DOI:10.1093/evlett/qrad021
Elin Videvall, Hanna M Bensch, Anel Engelbrecht, Schalk Cloete, Charlie K Cornwallis
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引用次数: 1

摘要

食粪是一种动物消耗粪便的行为,在包括鸟类和哺乳动物在内的许多物种中都有发现。这种现象在青少年中尤为普遍,但其原因尚不清楚。一种假设是,食腐可以使后代获得有益的肠道微生物,帮助发育。然而,尽管这种行为具有潜在的重要性,但调查其对青少年影响的研究却很少。在这里,我们通过实验来验证这一观点,研究鸵鸟雏鸟摄入成年粪便如何影响它们的肠道微生物群发育、生长、摄食行为、病原体丰度和死亡率。我们进行了广泛的纵向实验,持续8周,重复超过2年。实验涉及240只雏鸡,其中128只雏鸡每天接触新鲜的成人粪便,112只雏鸡同时接受对照处理。在实验之前和实验过程中,反复测量、行为观察和微生物肠道群落的DNA元条形码,使我们能够评估行为的多个方面。结果表明,粪食导致(a)幼鸡肠道微生物群发生显著变化,包括微生物组成的多样性大幅增加和快速成熟;(b)生长率提高(添加粪便的雏鸡在8周龄时体重增加9.4%);(c)总体摄食行为发生改变,但采食量没有变化;(d)肠道常见病原体(梭状芽孢杆菌)丰度降低;(e)肠道疾病相关死亡率降低。总之,我们的研究结果表明,幼鱼的食腐行为是非常有益的,可能已经进化到加速肠道微生物群的发育。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Coprophagy rapidly matures juvenile gut microbiota in a precocial bird.

Coprophagy is a behavior where animals consume feces, and has been observed across a wide range of species, including birds and mammals. The phenomenon is particularly prevalent in juveniles, but the reasons for this remain unclear. One hypothesis is that coprophagy enables offspring to acquire beneficial gut microbes that aid development. However, despite the potential importance of this behavior, studies investigating the effects in juveniles are rare. Here we experimentally test this idea by examining how ingestion of adult feces by ostrich chicks affects their gut microbiota development, growth, feeding behavior, pathogen abundance, and mortality. We conducted extensive longitudinal experiments for 8 weeks, repeated over 2 years. It involved 240 chicks, of which 128 were provided daily access to fresh fecal material from adults and 112 were simultaneously given a control treatment. Repeated measures, behavioral observations, and DNA metabarcoding of the microbial gut community, both prior to and over the course of the experiment, allowed us to evaluate multiple aspects of the behavior. The results show that coprophagy causes (a) marked shifts to the juvenile gut microbiota, including a major increase in diversity and rapid maturation of the microbial composition, (b) higher growth rates (fecal-supplemented chicks became 9.4% heavier at 8 weeks old), (c) changes to overall feeding behavior but no differences in feed intake, (d) lower abundance of a common gut pathogen (Clostridium colinum), and (e) lower mortality associated with gut disease. Together, our results suggest that the behavior of coprophagy in juveniles is highly beneficial and may have evolved to accelerate the development of gut microbiota.

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