Abstract

Habitat disturbance, a common consequence of anthropogenic land use practices, creates human–animal interfaces where humans, wildlife, and domestic species can interact. These altered habitats can influence host–microbe dynamics, leading to potential downstream effects on host physiology and health. Here, we explored the effect of ecological overlap with humans and domestic species and infection with the protozoan parasite Giardia duodenalis on the bacteria of black and gold howler monkeys (Alouatta caraya), a key sentinel species, in northeastern Argentina. Fecal samples were screened for Giardia duodenalis infection using a nested PCR reaction, and the gut bacterial community was characterized using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. Habitat type was correlated with variation in A. caraya gut bacterial community composition but did not affect gut bacterial diversity. Giardia presence did not have a universal effect on A. caraya gut bacteria across habitats, perhaps due to the high infection prevalence across all habitats. However, some bacterial taxa were found to vary with Giardia infection. While A. caraya's behavioral plasticity and dietary flexibility allow them to exploit a range of habitat conditions, habitats are generally becoming more anthropogenically disturbed and, thus, less hospitable. Alterations in gut bacterial community dynamics are one possible indicator of negative health outcomes for A. caraya in these environments, since changes in host–microbe relationships due to stressors from habitat disturbance may lead to negative repercussions for host health. These dynamics are likely relevant for understanding organism responses to environmental change in other mammals.

Highlights

  • Habitat disturbance, a common consequence of anthropogenic land use practices, can reduce survival and reproductive rates in some mammals, negatively affecting biodiversity (Arroyo-Rodríguez& Mandujano, 2006; Barelli et al, 2015; Oklander et al, 2010)

  • We examined the effect of ecological overlap with humans and domestic species—a proxy for anthropogenic habitat disturbance— and infection by the protozoan parasite Giardia duodenalis on the gut bacteria of A. caraya

  • This study examined the effects of habitat disturbance and G. du­ odenalis infection on the A. caraya gut microbiota in northeastern Argentina

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

A common consequence of anthropogenic land use practices, can reduce survival and reproductive rates in some mammals, negatively affecting biodiversity Habitat disturbance may impact interactions between hosts and their associated microbial communities, which may lead to downstream effects on host physiology and health, including nutritional deficits, higher prevalence of pathogens, and lower gut microbial diversity (Amato et al, 2013; Barelli et al, 2015; Estrada et al, 2017). A. caraya interact with humans and domestic animals in multiple ways, including crossing terrestrially from forest patch to patch, sharing the same water sources as cattle, and engaging in altercations with domestic dogs (Kowalewski et al, 2011; Raño et al, 2016) These interactions may lead to greater susceptibility to zoonotic diseases and greater sensitivity to gut dysbiosis via horizontal microbial transmission. Based on studies of other primates (McKenna et al, 2008; McKenney et al, 2017), we predicted that Giardia infection in A. caraya would be correlated with decreased bacterial diversity and changes in bacterial community composition

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
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