4.7 Article

Effects of Urbanization and Landscape on Gut Microbiomes in White-Crowned Sparrows

Journal

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 81, Issue 1, Pages 253-266

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00248-020-01569-8

Keywords

Gut microbiome; Urbanization; Bird; Physiology; White-crowned sparrow

Funding

  1. Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department at Tulane University
  2. National Science Foundation [NSF IOS 1827290]

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Habitats are rapidly changing due to urbanization, affecting food availability, environmental stressors, and disease prevalence for many species, leading to divergence in phenotypic traits between urban and rural populations. Recent research shows urbanization is also altering gut microbial communities in a diverse group of host species, with urban and rural bird microbiomes differing in the variables predicting their diversity.
Habitats are changing rapidly around the globe and urbanization is one of the primary drivers. Urbanization changes food availability, environmental stressors, and the prevalence of disease for many species. These changes can lead to divergence in phenotypic traits, including behavioral, physiological, and morphological features between urban and rural populations. Recent research highlights that urbanization is also changing the gut microbial communities found in a diverse group of host species. These changes have not been uniform, leaving uncertainty as to how urban habitats are shaping gut microbial communities. To better understand these effects, we investigated the gut bacterial communities of White-Crowned Sparrow (Zonotrichia leucophrys) populations along an urbanization gradient in the San Francisco Bay area. We examined how gut bacterial communities vary with the local environment and host morphological characteristics. We found direct effects of environmental factors, including urban noise levels and territory land cover, as well as indirect effects through body size and condition, on alpha and beta diversity of gut microbial communities. We also found that urban and rural birds' microbiomes differed in which variables predicted their diversity, with urban communities driven by host morphology, and rural communities driven by environmental factors. Elucidating these effects provides a better understanding of how urbanization affects wild avian physiology.

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