Host avian species and environmental conditions influence the microbial
ecology of brood parasitic Brown-headed Cowbird nestlings: What rules
the roost?
Abstract
The role of species interactions, as well as genetic and environmental
factors, all likely contribute to the composition and structure of the
gut microbiome, however disentangling these independent actors under
field conditions represents a challenge for a functional understanding
of gut microbial ecology. Avian brood parasites provide unique
opportunities to investigate these questions, as brood parasitism
results in parasite and host nestlings being raised in the same nest, by
the same parents. Here we utilized obligate brood parasite Brown-headed
Cowbird nestlings (BHCO; Molothrus ater) raised by several different
host passerine species to better understand, via 16S rRNA sequencing,
the microbial ecology of brood parasitism. First, we compared fecal
microbial communities of Prothonotary Warbler nestlings (PROW;
Protonotaria citrea) that were either parasitized or non-parasitized by
BHCO, and communities among BHCO nestlings from PROW nests. We found
that parasitism by BHCO significantly altered both the community
membership and community structure of the PROW nestling host-associated
bacterial microbiome (HABM), perhaps due to the stressful nest
environment generated by brood parasitism. In a second dataset, we
compared fecal HABMs from BHCO nestlings raised by 6 different host
passerines species. Here, we found that the HABM of BHCO nestlings was
significantly influenced by the parental host species and the presence
of an interspecific nestmate. Thus, early rearing environment is
important in determining the HABM of brood parasite nestlings, and their
companion nestlings. Future work may aim to understand the functional
effects of this HABM variability on nestling performance and fitness.