野生動物の排泄物が腸内生態系に与える影響を解明(African Wildlife Poop Sheds Light on What Shapes the Gut Ecosystem)

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2025-10-15 ノースカロライナ州立大学(NC State)

ノースカロライナ州立大学などの研究チームは、ナミビア・エトーシャ国立公園でゾウ、キリン、シマウマなど11種の草食動物の糞便312検体を解析し、腸内微生物叢の多様性と環境要因の関係を明らかにした。降雨量の異なる3地域で比較した結果、5種の細菌が環境指標として機能し、脂質や繊維分解に関与していた。特にゾウでは他種にない2種の「コア微生物」を持ち、多様な食性が腸内生態に影響することが示された。本研究は野生動物の健康や環境変化への適応を理解する基礎となり、保全生態学への応用が期待される。成果は『PLOS One』誌に掲載。

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エトーシャ国立公園の草食動物群における腸内微生物叢の多様性の種間差異 Interspecific variation in gut microbiome diversity across the Etosha National Park herbivore community

Rylee Jensen ,Erin A. McKenney ,James C. Beasley ,Claudine C. Cloete ,Madeline Melton ,Diana J. R. Lafferty
PLOS One
  Published: October 9, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0333639

野生動物の排泄物が腸内生態系に与える影響を解明(African Wildlife Poop Sheds Light on What Shapes the Gut Ecosystem)

Abstract

The community of microbes in the gastrointestinal tract of mammals, known as the gut microbiome (GMB), plays a critical role in host ecology and evolution. GMB variation is modulated by both host physiology and environmental conditions experienced by the host. Here we characterized the GMBs of 11 free-ranging large herbivore species inhabiting Etosha National Park, Namibia. We examined how intrinsic (i.e., sex, gut morphology, feeding guild) and extrinsic (i.e., geographic zone, waterhole site) factors influenced GMB diversity and community structure within and across herbivore species. We extracted DNA from herbivore fecal samples (n = 312) and amplified the 16s rRNA gene region to identify bacterial taxa. We defined core bacterial taxa as those present at ≥1% relative abundance in ≥50% of the samples from each species. Within bovid species, the core phylum Verrucomicrobiota and the core genera RF39, Alistipes, Christensenellaceae_R-7 group, and NK4A214 were significantly different in abundance across geographic zones. Microbial richness was significantly greater in female than male eland, and we detected sex-specific differences in Christensenellaceae_R-7 group across all herbivores and P-251-O5 within gemsbok. Mean Bulla evenness was higher in ruminants than nonruminants and differed significantly between giraffes and impala. Elephants also showed a significant correlation between unweighted UniFrac distance and geographic distance between sample locations. By identifying baseline core microbial abundance and occurrence data for this herbivore community, wildlife managers can incorporate long-term GMB monitoring to track microbial shifts in host species over time.

生物環境工学
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