Publications by authors named "Michael O'Mahoney"

Background: Microbes play vital roles across coral reefs both in the environment and inside and upon macrobes (holobionts), where they support critical functions such as nutrition and immune system modulation. These roles highlight the potential ecosystem-level importance of microbes, yet most knowledge of microbial functions on reefs is derived from a small set of holobionts such as corals and sponges. Declining seawater pH - an important global coral reef stressor - can cause ecosystem-level change on coral reefs, providing an opportunity to study the role of microbes at this scale.

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Background: Stereotyped sunning behaviour in birds has been hypothesized to inhibit keratin-degrading bacteria but there is little evidence that solar irradiation affects community assembly and abundance of plumage microbiota. The monophyletic New World vultures (Cathartiformes) are renowned for scavenging vertebrate carrion, spread-wing sunning at roosts, and thermal soaring. Few avian species experience greater exposure to solar irradiation.

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Background: Current knowledge about seasonal variation in the gut microbiota of vertebrates is limited to a few studies based on mammalian fecal samples. Seasonal changes in the microbiotas of functionally distinct gut regions remain unexplored. We investigated seasonal variation (summer versus winter) and regionalization of the microbiotas of the crop, ventriculus, duodenum, cecum, and colon of the greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus), an avian folivore specialized on the toxic foliage of sagebrush (Artemesia spp.

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Article Synopsis
  • Recent reviews highlight that using only fecal or cloacal samples limits our understanding of bird gut microbiota.
  • This study examined the microbiota in different parts of the digestive tract (esophagus, duodenum, cecum, colon) of urban Canada geese, generating over 8 million sequences that identified 420 bacterial types.
  • The findings show significant differences in microbial richness and composition across gut regions, with the esophagus having the most unique microbiota and the colon being the least distinct due to mixing of communities, suggesting fecal samples may not accurately represent gut microbiota diversity.
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