4.6 Article

The association between fecal microbiota, age and endoparasitism in adult alpacas

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 17, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0272556

Keywords

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Funding

  1. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture [1023220]
  2. Greater Appalachian Llama and Alpaca Association
  3. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [R21AI144521]

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This study examined the correlation between nematode worm burden and intestinal microbiota composition in adult alpacas. Fecal samples were collected from 102 healthy alpacas at three different time points. The results showed high temporal stability in the fecal microbiota of healthy alpacas. The intensity of nematode infection was only significantly correlated with microbiota composition 14 days after treatment. Alpaca age was found to be the only consistent predictor of microbiota taxonomic composition.
Endoparasitism is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in alpacas (Lama pacos), with growing emergence of anthelmintic resistance. The purpose of the study was to correlate nematode worm burden and selected host phenotypic characteristics, such as age and weight, with the composition of the intestinal microbiota of adult alpacas. Fecal samples were collected per rectum from 102 healthy adult (2.1-11.2 years) alpacas at 3 separate timepoints (pre- and post-treatment with 8.8 mg/kg oral Levamisole HCL, and 4.6 months later) at a single farm. The profile of the fecal bacterial microbiota was characterized using 16S amplicon sequencing. Serial clinical exams and fecal egg counts were compared using related-samples analyses. The fecal microbiota of identically managed, healthy alpacas was characterized by a high level of temporal stability, as both a and beta-diversity significantly correlated between sampling timepoints. Pairwise beta-diversity between samples collected at each timepoint was low, ranging from 0.16-0.21 UniFrac distance units. The intensity of strongylid nematode infection (including Haemonchus, Ostertagia, Trichostrongylus) was only significantly correlated with microbiota composition in samples collected 14 days after treatment with levamisole. Analysis of similarity revealed no clustering of microbiota from anthelmintic responders or non-responders. Alpaca age explained the largest proportion of fecal microbiota variation and was the only consistently significant predictor of fecal microbiota taxonomic composition, by impacting the ratio of relative Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes abundance. Firmicutes, mostly Clostridiales, was the most abundant taxon across all collections.

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