1. Exposure to crop production alters cecal prokaryotic microbiota, inflates virulome and resistome in wild prairie grouse
- Author
-
Serguei V. Drovetski, Brian K. Schmidt, Jonas E. Lai, Michael S. Gross, Michelle L. Hladik, Kenan O. Matterson, and Natalie K. Karouna-Renier
- Subjects
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Microbiota ,Animals ,General Medicine ,Toxicology ,Pollution ,Chickens ,Grassland ,Quail ,Crop Production - Abstract
Chemically intensive crop production depletes wildlife food resources, hinders animal development, health, survival, and reproduction, and it suppresses wildlife immune systems, facilitating emergence of infectious diseases with excessive mortality rates. Gut microbiota is crucial for wildlife's response to environmental stressors. Its composition and functionality are sensitive to diet changes and environmental pollution associated with modern crop production. In this study we use shotgun metagenomics (median 8,326,092 sequences/sample) to demonstrate that exposure to modern crop production detrimentally affects cecal microbiota of sharp-tailed grouse (Tympanuchus phasianellus: 9 exposed, 18 unexposed and greater prairie chickens (T. cupido; 11, 11). Exposure to crop production had greater effect on microbiota richness (t = 6.675, P 0.001) and composition (PERMANOVA r
- Published
- 2021