Ornamentation and body condition, but not glucocorticoids, predict wild songbird cloacal microbiome community and diversity

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Issue Date
2024-12-03
Authors
Slevin, Morgan C.
Houtz, Jennifer L.
Vitousek, Maren N.
Baldassarre, Daniel T.
Anderson, Rindy C.
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Carotenoid , Gut microbiome , Northern cardinal , Signaling
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Abstract
Animal populations can exhibit dramatic variation in individual fitness, and microbiota are emerging as a potentially understudied factor influencing host health. Bacterial diversity and community structure of the gut microbiome are associated with many aspects of fitness in animals, but relatively little is known about the generality of these relationships in wild populations and non-mammalian taxa. We studied the northern cardinal Cardinalis cardinalis, a member of a taxon that is ecologically important but underrepresented in microbiome research: songbirds. To test for relationships between the microbiota and host fitness, we sampled the cloacal microbiomes of wild cardinals and measured body condition index, assessed coloration of sexual ornaments (beak and plumage), and collected blood to estimate the glucocorticoid response to stress. Both alpha and beta bacterial diversity were related to individual variation in body condition and several sexual ornaments, but not glucocorticoid concentrations. Our results from a free-living songbird population add to a growing body of research linking avian host fitness to internal bacterial community characteristics. This study sets the stage for manipulative experiments to determine how challenges to fitness and microbiomes may upset these relationships.
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Biology
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© 2024 Nordic Society Oikos. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Citation
Slevin, M.C., Houtz, J.L., Vitousek, M.N., Baldassarre, D.T. and Anderson, R.C. (2024), Ornamentation and body condition, but not glucocorticoids, predict wild songbird cloacal microbiome community and diversity. Oikos e10905. https://doi.org/10.1111/oik.10905
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Published version
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Wiley
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