Abstract

Generalist species able to exploit anthropogenic food sources are becoming increasingly common in urban environments. Coyotes (Canis latrans) are one such urban generalist that now resides in cities across North America, where diseased or unhealthy coyotes are frequently reported in cases of human-wildlife conflict. Coyote health and fitness may be related to habitat use and diet via the gut microbiome, which has far-reaching effects on animal nutrition and physiology. In this study, we used stomach contents, stable isotope analysis, 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, and measures of body condition to identify relationships among habitat use, diet, fecal microbiome composition, and health in urban and rural coyotes. Three distinct relationships emerged: (1) Urban coyotes consumed more anthropogenic food, which was associated with increased microbiome diversity, higher abundances of Streptococcus and Enterococcus, and poorer average body condition. (2) Conversely, rural coyotes harbored microbiomes rich in Fusobacteria, Sutterella, and Anaerobiospirillum, which were associated with protein-rich diets and improved body condition. (3) Diets rich in anthropogenic food were associated with increased abundances of Erysipelotrichiaceae, Lachnospiraceae, and Coriobacteriaceae, which correlated with larger spleens in urban coyotes. Urban coyotes also had an increased prevalence of the zoonotic parasite Echinococcus multilocularis, but there were no detectable connections between parasite infection and microbiome composition. Our results demonstrate how the consumption of carbohydrate-rich anthropogenic food by urban coyotes alters the microbiome to negatively affect body condition, with potential relationships to parasite susceptibility and conflict-prone behavior.

Highlights

  • Generalist species able to exploit anthropogenic food sources are becoming increasingly common in urban environments

  • Our results demonstrate how the consumption of carbohydrate-rich anthropogenic food by urban coyotes alters the microbiome to negatively affect body condition, with potential relationships to parasite susceptibility and conflict-prone behavior

  • We used 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing to characterize fecal bacterial communities and PCR to test for E. multilocularis infection

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Summary

Introduction

Generalist species able to exploit anthropogenic food sources are becoming increasingly common in urban environments. Our results demonstrate how the consumption of carbohydrate-rich anthropogenic food by urban coyotes alters the microbiome to negatively affect body condition, with potential relationships to parasite susceptibility and conflict-prone behavior. Coyotes mainly consume insects, rodents, and young or diseased u­ ngulates[34], they may consume fruit and anthropogenic f­ood[32,35] They are a definitive host for the helminth parasite Echinococcus multilocularis, which is expanding its range in North America and can cause a rare but severe zoonosis in ­humans[36]. Knowledge of which microbial signatures are associated with diet, body condition, or parasite infection in coyotes would provide novel insights into host-microbiome relationships in wild canids and have direct management implications for evaluating or monitoring host fitness, especially in the contexts of potential conflict or the spread of canid-borne zoonoses

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