4.7 Article

The meta-gut: community coalescence of animal gut and environmental microbiomes

期刊

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-02349-1

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资金

  1. US National Science Foundation [NSF DEB 1354053, 1354062, 1753727, 2103884]
  2. Yale MacMillan Fellowship for International and Area Studies
  3. Yale Institute for Biospheric Studies Small Grants Program
  4. EEB Chair's Fund
  5. Division Of Environmental Biology
  6. Direct For Biological Sciences [2103884, 1753727] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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All animals carry specialized microbiomes that are continuously released into the environment through waste excretion. The concept of a meta-gut system is proposed, where the gut microbiome released from an animal could influence biogeochemical processes in recipient ecosystems and potentially impact other hosts. This dynamic may also occur in high-density animal gathering areas, particularly in aquatic environments.
All animals carry specialized microbiomes, and their gut microbiota are continuously released into the environment through excretion of waste. Here we propose the meta-gut as a novel conceptual framework that addresses the ability of the gut microbiome released from an animal to function outside the host and alter biogeochemical processes mediated by microbes. We demonstrate this dynamic in the hippopotamus (hippo) and the pools they inhabit. We used natural field gradients and experimental approaches to examine fecal and pool water microbial communities and aquatic biogeochemistry across a range of hippo inputs. Sequencing using 16S RNA methods revealed community coalescence between hippo gut microbiomes and the active microbial communities in hippo pools that received high inputs of hippo feces. The shared microbiome between the hippo gut and the waters into which they excrete constitutes a meta-gut system that could influence the biogeochemistry of recipient ecosystems and provide a reservoir of gut microbiomes that could influence other hosts. We propose that meta-gut dynamics may also occur where other animal species congregate in high densities, particularly in aquatic environments.

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