4.5 Article

Assessing age, breeding stage, and mating activity as drivers of variation in the reproductive microbiome of female tree swallows

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 11, 期 16, 页码 11398-11413

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.7929

关键词

extra-pair paternity; hormone implant; mating strategy; reproductive microbiome; tree swallows

资金

  1. Society for the Study of Evolution
  2. Gates Millennium Foundation
  3. Sigma Xi
  4. Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology (SICB)
  5. NSF GRFP
  6. Virginia Society of Ornithology
  7. American Ornithological Society
  8. Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that factors such as mating activity, breeding stage, and age did not significantly influence the cloacal microbiome of female tree swallows. However, female age was positively correlated with cloacal microbiome richness and influenced overall community structure. Additionally, cloacal microbiome alpha diversity decreased and community structure shifted between breeding stages, showing age-related differences in the microbiome.
Sexually transmitted microbes are hypothesized to influence the evolution of reproductive strategies. Though frequently discussed in this context, our understanding of the reproductive microbiome is quite nascent. Indeed, testing this hypothesis first requires establishing a baseline understanding of the temporal dynamics of the reproductive microbiome and of how individual variation in reproductive behavior and age influence the assembly and maintenance of the reproductive microbiome as a whole. Here, we ask how mating activity, breeding stage, and age influence the reproductive microbiome. We use observational and experimental approaches to explain variation in the cloacal microbiome of free-living, female tree swallows (Tachycineta bicolor). Using microsatellite-based parentage analyses, we determined the number of sires per brood (a proxy for female mating activity). We experimentally increased female sexual activity by administering exogenous 17ss-estradiol. Lastly, we used bacterial 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing to characterize the cloacal microbiome. Neither the number of sires per brood nor the increased sexual activity of females significantly influenced female cloacal microbiome richness or community structure. Female age, however, was positively correlated with cloacal microbiome richness and influenced overall community structure. A hypothesis to explain these patterns is that the effect of sexual activity and the number of mates on variation in the cloacal microbiome manifests over an individual's lifetime. Additionally, we found that cloacal microbiome alpha diversity (Shannon Index, Faith's phylogenetic distance) decreased and community structure shifted between breeding stages. This is one of few studies to document within-individual changes and age-related differences in the cloacal microbiome across successive breeding stages. More broadly, our results contribute to our understanding of the role that host life history and behavior play in shaping the cloacal microbiomes of wild birds.

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