Abstract

The establishment and early colonisation of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract has been recognised as a crucial stage in chick development, with pioneering microbial species responsible for influencing the development of the GI tract and influencing host health, fitness and disease status throughout life. Development of the microbiota in long lived seabirds is poorly understood. This study characterised the microbial composition of little penguin and short-tailed shearwater chicks throughout development, using Quantitative Real Time PCR (qPCR) and 16S rRNA sequencing. The results indicated that microbial development differed between the two seabird species with the short-tailed shearwater microbiota being relatively stable throughout development whilst significant fluctuations in the microbial composition and an upward trend in the abundance of Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes were observed in the little penguin. When the microbial composition of adults and chicks was compared, both species showed low similarity in microbial composition, indicating that the adult microbiota may have a negligible influence over the chick’s microbiota.

Highlights

  • Data Availability Statement: Submitted to the NCBI SRA archive (Bioproject PRJNA347517)

  • In little penguin (LP), Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes appeared to dominate the microbial composition throughout development, followed by Proteobacteria

  • The differences between little penguins and short-tailed shearwaters could be in part due to differences in diet composition, digestive physiology, nesting environment and host phylogeny, all of which have been previously shown to strongly influence the microbial composition of vertebrates [7, 72,73,74]

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this study was to characterise the microbial community of these two seabird species during development from newly hatched chicks to fully fledged juveniles. This study aimed to examine the establishment and microbial succession that occurs in little penguin and short-tailed shearwater chicks throughout development

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