7 research outputs found

    No downregulation of immune function during breeding in two year-round breeding bird species in an equatorial East African environment

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    Some equatorial environments exhibit substantial within-location variation in environmental conditions throughout the year and yet have year-round breeding birds. This implies that breeding in such systems are potentially unrelated to the variable environmental conditions. By breeding not being influenced by environmental conditions, we become sure that any differences in immune function between breeding and non-breeding birds do not result from environmental variation, therefore allowing for exclusion of the confounding effect of variation in environmental conditions. This create a unique opportunity to test if immune function is down-regulated during reproduction compared to non-breeding periods. We compared the immune function of sympatric male and female chick-feeding and non-breeding red-capped Calandrella cinerea and rufous-naped larks Mirafra africana in equatorial East Africa. These closely-related species occupy different niches and have different breeding strategies in the same grassland habitat. Red-capped larks prefer areas with short grass or almost bare ground, and breed during low rainfall periods. Rufous-naped larks prefer areas of tall grass and scattered shrubs and breed during high rainfall. We measured the following immune indices: nitric oxide, haptoglobin, agglutination and lysis, and measured total monthly rain, monthly average minimum (T-min) and maximum (T-max) temperatures. Contrary to our predictions, we found no down-regulation of immune function during breeding; breeding birds had higher nitric oxide than non-breeding ones in both species, while the other three immune indices did not differ between breeding phases. Red-capped larks had higher nitric oxide concentrations than Rufous-naped larks, which in turn had higher haptoglobin levels than red-capped larks. T-max was higher during breeding than during non-breeding for red-capped larks only, suggesting potential confounding effect of T-max on the comparison of immune function between breeding and non-breeding birds for this species. Overall, we conclude that in the two year-round breeding equatorial larks, immune function is not down-regulated during breeding

    Cloacal microbiota are biogeographically structured in larks from desert, tropical and temperate areas.

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    BACKGROUND: In contrast with macroorganisms, that show well-documented biogeographical patterns in distribution associated with local adaptation of physiology, behavior and life history, strong biogeographical patterns have not been found for microorganisms, raising questions about what determines their biogeography. Thus far, large-scale biogeographical studies have focused on free-living microbes, paying little attention to host-associated microbes, which play essential roles in physiology, behavior and life history of their hosts. Investigating cloacal gut microbiota of closely-related, ecologically similar free-living songbird species (Alaudidae, larks) inhabiting desert, temperate and tropical regions, we explored influences of geographical location and host species on α-diversity, co-occurrence of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) and genera, differentially abundant and dominant bacterial taxa, and community composition. We also investigated how geographical distance explained differences in gut microbial community composition among larks. RESULTS: Geographic location did not explain variation in richness and Shannon diversity of cloacal microbiota in larks. Out of 3798 ASVs and 799 bacterial genera identified, 17 ASVs (< 0.5%) and 43 genera (5%) were shared by larks from all locations. Desert larks held fewer unique ASVs (25%) than temperate zone (31%) and tropical larks (34%). Five out of 33 detected bacterial phyla dominated lark cloacal gut microbiomes. In tropical larks three bacterial classes were overrepresented. Highlighting the distinctiveness of desert lark microbiota, the relative abundances of 52 ASVs differed among locations, which classified within three dominant and 11 low-abundance phyla. Clear and significant phylogenetic clustering in cloacal microbiota community composition (unweighted UniFrac) showed segregation with geography and host species, where microbiota of desert larks were distinct from those of tropical and temperate regions. Geographic distance was nonlinearly associated with pairwise unweighted UniFrac distances. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that host-associated microbiota are geographically structured in a group of widespread but closely-related bird species, following large-scale macro-ecological patterns and contrasting with previous findings for free-living microbes. Future work should further explore if and to what extent geographic variation in host-associated microbiota can be explained as result of co-evolution between gut microbes and host adaptive traits, and if and how acquisition from the environmental pool of bacteria contributes to explaining host-associated communities
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