AI Article Synopsis

  • The kākāpō is a critically endangered New Zealand parrot undergoing intensive management to boost its low population numbers through efforts like supplementary feeding and translocation to predator-free islands.
  • Previous studies show that kākāpō have a low-diversity fecal microbiota, but it remains unclear if human interventions have influenced this.
  • A study using advanced sequencing techniques found that neither supplementary feeding nor the island location significantly altered the kākāpō's fecal microbial community, indicating the low diversity is likely a natural characteristic of the species.

Article Abstract

The critically endangered kākāpō, an herbivorous parrot endemic to New Zealand, is subject to intensive management to increase its population size. Key aspects of the management program include supplementary feeding and translocation of kākāpō between different predator-free islands to optimize the genetic composition of the breeding populations. While these practices have helped boost the kākāpō population, their impact on the kākāpō fecal microbiota is uncertain. Previous studies have found that the kākāpō possesses a low-diversity fecal microbiota, typically dominated by spp. However, the question of whether the low diversity of the kākāpō fecal microbiota is an inadvertent consequence of human interventions has yet to be investigated. To that end, we used high-throughput Illumina sequencing of 16S rRNA gene amplicons obtained from fecal material of 63 kākāpō representing different diets, islands, and ages. Remarkably, neither supplementary feeding nor geographic location were associated with significant differences in the overall fecal microbial community structures of adult kākāpō, suggesting that the kākāpō's low-diversity fecal microbiota is both inherent to this species and robust to these external influences.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5655120PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2017.02033DOI Listing

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