4.7 Article

Gut microbiota of dung beetles correspond to dietary specializations of adults and larvae

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 24, Pages 6092-6106

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.13901

Keywords

16S rRNA; C/N ratio; digestion; Euoniticellus; microbiome; symbiosis

Funding

  1. Fulbright Foundation (United States - India Educational Foundation)
  2. Putnam Expedition Grant from the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University
  3. NSF [DDIG 1110515]
  4. NSF Graduate Student research Fellowship [DGE 1144152]
  5. Department of Entomology and Research Group Insect Symbiosis at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology

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Vertebrate dung is central to the dung beetle life cycle, constituting food for adults and a protective and nutritive refuge for their offspring. Adult dung beetles have soft mandibles and feed primarily on nutritionally rich dung particles, while larvae have sclerotized mandibles and consume coarser dung particles with a higher C/N ratio. Here, using the dung beetles Euoniticellus intermedius and E. triangulatus, we show that these morphological adaptations in mandibular structure are also correlated with differences in basic gut structure and gut bacterial communities between dung beetle life stages. Metagenome functional predictions based on 16S rDNA characterization further indicated that larval gut communities are enriched in genes involved in cellulose degradation and nitrogen fixation compared to adult guts. Larval gut communities are more similar to female gut communities than they are to those of males, and bacteria present in maternally provisioned brood balls and maternal 'gifts' (secretions deposited in the brood ball along with the egg) are also more similar to larval gut communities than to those of males. Maternal secretions and maternally provisioned brood balls, as well as dung, were important factors shaping the larval gut community. Differences between gut microbiota in the adults and larvae are likely to contribute to differences in nutrient assimilation from ingested dung at different life history stages.

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