| Literature DB >> 22194798 |
Clarissa Schwab1, Bogdan Cristescu, Joseph M Northrup, Gordon B Stenhouse, Michael Gänzle.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diet and environment impact the composition of mammalian intestinal microbiota; dietary or health disturbances trigger alterations in intestinal microbiota composition and render the host susceptible to enteric pathogens. To date no long term monitoring data exist on the fecal microbiota and pathogen load of carnivores either in natural environments or in captivity. This study investigates fecal microbiota composition and the presence of pathogenic Escherichia coli and toxigenic clostridia in wild and captive grizzly bears (Ursus arctos) and relates these to food resources consumed by bears. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22194798 PMCID: PMC3240615 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0027905
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Sampling areas for wild grizzly bear populations in Alberta, Canada.
Animals monitored in this study.
| Population | Location | Animal | Sex | Age in years (in 2009) | Animal ID |
| 1 | South-western Alberta | G077 | F | 8 | W1 |
| G090 | M | Approx. 10 | W2 | ||
| G084 | M | 6 | W3 | ||
| G125 | M | nd | W4 | ||
| 2 | West-central Alberta | G023 | F | 20 | W5 |
| G113 | F | 7 | W6 | ||
| G112 | M | Approx. 2 | W7 | ||
| G115 | M | nd | W8 | ||
| 3 | Calgary Zoo | ZF | F | 19 | C1 |
| ZM | M | 22 | C2 |
first fecal sample taken at capture, not included in visual analysis of fecal dietary content,
not determined.
Figure 2Bacterial groups present in the feces of wild and captive grizzly bears.
Bacterial groups (A, total Eubacteria; B, Enterobacteriaceae; C, Enterococcus; D, Lactobacillus, Pediococcus, Leuconostoc, Weissella; E, Clostridium cluster I; F, Clostridium cluster XI, G, Clostridium cluster XIV; H, Bacteroides-Prevotella-Porphyrmonas) detected in feces of a four wild (W1,W2, W5, and W6) and two captive (C1, C2) grizzly bears during sampling in 2009. Box plots show the 25 to 75% percentile range of the data in the box, the 5 to 95% range (whiskers), the median (middle line), and the mean (dashed line). Outliers are indicated by dots. Boxplots corresponding to the three populations are indicated by colour (population 1 blue, population two turquois, population 3 green). Differences between populations were analysed using one-way ANOVA. If data was not distributed normally, Kruskal-Wallis One Way Analysis of Variance on Ranks was applied (total Eubacteria, Enterobacteriaceae, Enterococcus, Clostridium cluster XI). Populations that do not share a common superscript (A,B) are significantly different (p<0.05). Abundance of Clostridium clusters I and XI was also compared in wild and captive animals (Kruskal-Wallis One Way Analysis of Variance on Ranks); their abundance was significantly different (p<0.05) if values for wild and captive animals do not share a common superscript (a,b).
Presence of pathogen toxin genes in feces of wild and captive grizzly bears.
| Clostridial toxin genes [log gene copy numbers g−1] |
| |||||
| Population | Animal (number of samples) |
|
| EAST | LT | STa |
| 1 | W1 (6) | ND | ND | 7.3±1.6A | + | + |
| W2 (11) | + | + | 7.5±1.2A | + | + | |
| 2 | W5 (14) | + | ND | 6.3±1.8AB | + | + |
| W6 (8) | ND | + | 6.0±1.7AB | ND | + | |
| 3 | C1 (7) | 5.6±1.3 | ND | 5.6±1.0B | + | + |
| C2 (8) | 5.2±1.1 | ND | 5.6±1.7B | + | + | |
ND not detected,
(n = 1) 3.7±0.1 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 3) 2.5±0.2–3.2±0.4 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 2) 6.5±0.1–10.5±0 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 1) 10.1±0 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 1) 4.7±0.2 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 1) 4.7±0.3 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 4) 4.7±0.1 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 1) 4.7±0.1 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 1) 4.2±0 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 1) 5.2±0 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 2) 4.2±0.1 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 5) 4.2±0.4–8.1±0 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 1) 4.4±0 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 1) 4.7±0.2 log gene copy numbers g−1,
(n = 1) 3.8±0 log gene.
Figure 3Correlation of housing conditions and stability of fecal bacterial communities in grizzly bears.
Score and loading biplot indicating the correlation between habitat, fecal microbiota, diet, and enteric pathogens of individual wild (W1, W2, W5, and W6) and captive grizzly bears (C1, C2). The first two principal components PC1 (x-axis) and PC2 (y-axis) account for 43% of the total variance. Variables with low weights are not displayed. The three populations are indicated by colours and symbols (population 1, blue triangle; population 2, turquoise inverse triangle; population, 3 green square). Eu, total Eubacteria; Eb, Enterobacteriaceae; Ec, Enterococci; BPP, Bacteroides-Prevotella-Porphyrmonas; CI, Clostridium cluster I; CIV, Clostridium cluster IV; CXI, Clostridium cluster XI; CXIV, Clostridium cluster XIV; EAST, heat-stable enterotoxin; STa, shiga-like toxin A gene; cpa, C. perfringens alpha toxin gene A.