4.3 Article

Bacterial microbiomes from mucus and breath of southern resident killer whales (Orcinus orca)

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CONSERVATION PHYSIOLOGY
卷 10, 期 1, 页码 -

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OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/conphys/coac014

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  1. National Marine Fisheries Service (US Department of Commerce)
  2. National Fish and Wildlife Foundation [58350]

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Opportunities to assess the health of odontocetes are limited, but this study demonstrates the value of analyzing non-invasive samples such as expelled mucus and exhaled breath. The research focused on the bacterial microbiomes of southern resident killer whales and identified differences between mucus, breath, and seawater samples. The study also emphasized the importance of genotyping mucus samples to better understand an individual animal's health.
Opportunities to assess odontocete health are restricted due to their limited time at the surface, relatively quick movements and large geographic ranges. For endangered populations such as the southern resident killer whales (SKRWs) of the northeast Pacific Ocean, taking advantage of non-invasive samples such as expelled mucus and exhaled breath is appealing. Over the past 12 years, such samples were collected, providing a chance to analyse and assess their bacterial microbiomes using amplicon sequencing. Based on operational taxonomic units, microbiome communities from SRKW and transient killer whales showed little overlap between mucus, breath and seawater from SRKW habitats and six bacterial phyla were prominent in expelled mucus but not in seawater. Mollicutes and Fusobacteria were common and abundant in mucus, but not in breath or seawater, suggesting these bacterial classes may be normal constituents of the SRKW microbiome. Out of 134 bacterial families detected, 24 were unique to breath and mucus, including higher abundances of Burkholderiaceae, Moraxellaceae and Chitinophagaceae. Although there were multiple bacterial genera in breath or mucus that include pathogenic species (e.g. Campylobacter, Hemophilus, Treponema), the presence of these bacteria is not necessarily evidence of disease or infection. Future emphasis on genotyping mucus samples to the individual animal will allow further assessment in the context of that animal's history, including body condition index and prior contaminants burden. This study is the first to examine expelled mucus from cetaceans for microbiomes and demonstrates the value of analysing these types of non-invasive samples.

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