Abstract

Simple SummarySeveral studies have described the bacterial composition in the intestines of horses, and several factors of influence have been detected. Variation in the results between studies, however, is substantial. Therefore, the current study aimed to study the bacterial composition in the faeces of healthy horses and ponies kept under standard housing and management condition in The Netherlands. Seventy-nine horses and ponies originating from two farms were included. Several factors, such as location, age, the season of sampling, horse type (horses vs. ponies) and pasture access significantly affected the bacterial composition. The current study provides important baseline information on variation in the bacterial composition in healthy horses and ponies under standard housing and management conditions. The aforementioned factors identified in this study to affect the bacterial population of the gut should be considered in future studies regarding the bacterial population of the equine gut.Several studies have described the faecal microbiota of horses and the factors that influence its composition, but the variation in results is substantial. This study aimed to investigate the microbiota composition in healthy equids in The Netherlands under standard housing and management conditions and to evaluate the effect of age, gender, horse type, diet, pasture access, the season of sampling and location on it. Spontaneously produced faecal samples were collected from the stall floor of 79 healthy horses and ponies at two farms. The validity of this sampling technique was evaluated in a small pilot study including five ponies showing that the microbiota composition of faecal samples collected up to 6 h after spontaneous defaecation was similar to that of the samples collected rectally. After DNA extraction, Illumina Miseq 16S rRNA sequencing was performed to determine microbiota composition. The effect of host and environmental factors on microbiota composition were determined using several techniques (NMDS, PERMANOVA, DESeq2). Bacteroidetes was the largest phylum found in the faecal microbiota (50.1%), followed by Firmicutes (28.4%). Alpha-diversity and richness decreased significantly with increasing age. Location, age, season, horse type and pasture access had a significant effect on beta-diversity. The current study provides important baseline information on variation in faecal microbiota in healthy horses and ponies under standard housing and management conditions. These results indicate that faecal microbiota composition is affected by several horse-related and environment-related factors, and these factors should be considered in future studies of the equine faecal microbiota.

Highlights

  • A well-functioning intestinal tract and intestinal microbiota are considered essential for maintaining health in horses [1]

  • Sixty-one animals located at farm I were included in the analysis to study the effects of age, gender, horse type, roughage, concentrates, pasture access and season on faecal microbiota composition

  • Eighteen horses originating from farm II were compared to 17 horses of the same breed and age from farm I to study the effect of location/farm on faecal microbiota composition

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Summary

Introduction

A well-functioning intestinal tract and intestinal microbiota are considered essential for maintaining health in horses [1]. Geographic variation in microbiota composition has been demonstrated in humans [22], and the same might be true for horses, highlighting the need for studies from different geographic regions assessing faecal microbiota composition in horses. Most studies have compared relatively homogenous groups of horses exposed to one changing variable This has the advantage of detecting subtle differences attributable to the tested variable, but at the same time, limits the extent to which results can be extrapolated to other populations of horses managed differently. This study aimed to describe the microbiota composition in healthy horses and ponies in The Netherlands kept under standard housing and management conditions and assess which factors influence faecal microbiota composition

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