| Literature DB >> 33154444 |
Victor Narat1,2, Katherine R Amato3,4, Noémie Ranger5, Maud Salmona5,6, Séverine Mercier-Delarue5, Stephanie Rupp7, Philippe Ambata8, Richard Njouom9, François Simon5, Tamara Giles-Vernick10,11, Jérôme LeGoff12,13.
Abstract
Comparisons of mammalian gut microbiota across different environmental conditions shed light on the diversity and composition of gut bacteriome and suggest consequences for human and animal health. Gut bacteriome comparisons across different environments diverge in their results, showing no generalizable patterns linking habitat and dietary degradation with bacterial diversity. The challenge in drawing general conclusions from such studies lies in the broad terms describing diverse habitats ("wild", "captive", "pristine"). We conducted 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing to characterize intestinal microbiota of free-ranging sympatric chimpanzees and gorillas in southeastern Cameroon and sympatric chimpanzees and gorillas in a European zoo. We conducted participant-observation and semi-structured interviews among people living near these great apes to understand better their feeding habits and habitats. Unexpectedly, bacterial diversity (ASV, Faith PD and Shannon) was higher among zoo gorillas than among those in the Cameroonian forest, but zoo and Cameroonian chimpanzees showed no difference. Phylogeny was a strong driver of species-specific microbial composition. Surprisingly, zoo gorilla microbiota more closely resembled that of zoo chimpanzees than of Cameroonian gorillas. Zoo living conditions and dietary similarities may explain these results. We encourage multidisciplinary approach integrating environmental sampling and anthropological evaluation to characterize better diverse environmental conditions of such investigations.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33154444 PMCID: PMC7645722 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-75847-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Environment, diet and interspecies contacts for gorillas and chimpanzees in southeastern Cameroon and in the European zoo.
| Study site | Chimpanzees | Gorillas | Sources | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group size | Cameroon | 9 | 9–12 | Number of nests during feces sampling | |
| Zoo | 4 males and 3 females | 1 adult male, 4 females, 5 infants/juveniles | Direct observation | ||
| Environment | Cameroon | 0.17 ind/km2 | 2.5–3 ind/km2 | [ | |
| Mainly in mixed mature forests with closed canopy | Mainly in open canopy forests with dense herbaceous vegetation | [ | |||
| ~ 0.1% of the area | [ | ||||
| Zoo | 215 m2 Straw and wood chips on the ground Various horizontal and vertical structures | 115 m2 Straw and wood chips on the ground Various horizontal and vertical structures | Interviews with zoo zookeepers and direct observations | ||
7000 m2 Herbaceous vegetation: herbs, iris, water daffodils, bramble Trees: goat willow, wild cherry, hornbeam, oak, chestnut Water channel around the island | 5000 m2 Herbaceous vegetation: herbs, bramble, water daffodil, rushes Trees: oak, maple, chestnut Water channel around the island | Interviews with zoo zookeepers and direct observations | |||
| Diet | Cameroon | Mainly fruits Leaves, shoots, pith Occasionally mammals, insects and honey 132 plant species | Mainly leaves, shoots, pith and roots but increasing of fruit consumption when fruit availability is higher Occasionally insects 150–180 plant species | [ | |
| Regular/Frequent | Frequent | [ | |||
| Ash consumption reported once | Not reported | [ | |||
| Zoo | 4–7/day. All individuals eat together | 4–7/day. Separate: silverback eats alone; small groups composed of adult female and her offspring | Interviews with zoo zookeepers and direct observations | ||
~ 80% vegetable matter and 20% fruits 15–20 different food species/preparation | Interviews with zoo zookeepers and direct observations | ||||
| Salad, carrot, apple, "Old World Monkey" chow, Rice and one fruit (banana, orange, kiwi, pear …) | Salad, celery, turnip, fennel, apple, cabbages, “Old World Monkey” chow Branches (mainly hazelnut) for bark, fruits, leaves | Interviews with zoo zookeepers and direct observations | |||
| Vegetables only | Cucumber, endive, carrot | Interviews with zoo zookeepers and direct observations | |||
| Salad, apple, carrot, bell pepper, 1 fruit (banana, orange, kiwi, pear …) | Salad, leek, tomato, bell pepper, broccoli, 1 fruit (varied) Locally-made biscuit (wheat flour, soy flour, oatmeal, vitamins, salt) Large branches (bark) | Interviews with zoo zookeepers and direct observations | |||
Cold weather: Tea, vegetable broth Hot weather: grenadine syrup Hard boiled egg Cooked meat (chicken, turkey) | Almonds, other nuts and seeds | Interviews with zoo zookeepers and direct observations | |||
Seeds (wheat, maize, sunflower, almond, peanuts, walnuts, oatmeal) Flour worms Boiled potatoes Bread | During winter: enrichment with wheat flour or honey in enclosure | Interviews with zoo zookeepers and direct observations | |||
Spring: Wild cherry (young leaves, fruits), Hornbeam (bark) Autumn: Oak (Fruits), Chestnut (Fruits) All seasons: iris (leaves) Mixed piece of fruits with straw, herbs or dried leaves to masticate as a kind of “chewing gum” Geophagy (rare) | All seasons: herbs, rushes (leaves), water daffodil (leaves), bramble (leaves and fruits when available) | Interviews with zoo zookeepers | |||
Charcoal (from burned twigs/trees) Water consumption from channel | Interviews with zoo zookeepers | ||||
| Contacts with humans, other NHPs species and prey | Cameroon | With humans: Hunting/Injuries/Pets, likely low influence on great ape intestinal microbiome Potential conflicts between gorillas and chimpanzees (rare) | [ Semi-structured interviews with local populations | ||
| Potential hunting behavior (of monkeys, duikers, rodents and pangolins) | No mammal hunting reported | [ (based on observations at Lope National Park, Gabon and Nouabale-Ndoki National Park, Republic of Congo) | |||
Spatial overlap with humans and 7 other NHP species: Feeding on the same trees or in the same areas between gorillas and chimpanzees when wild mangoes are highly available | [ Semi-structures interviews with local people | ||||
| Zoo | Veterinary care Daily close proximity between zookeepers and great apes (separated by fences/cages) Medical Training | Interviews with zoo zookeepers and direct observations | |||
| Frequent physical contact (almost daily) with zookeepers through the grid (mutual grooming and play) | No physical contact | ||||
Cleaning procedures: Every 3 days Hot water at high pressure New straw No bleach | Island shared with Cleaning procedures: Every 5 days Scrubbed with water and soap New straw No bleach | Interviews with zoo zookeepers and direct observations | |||
High probability of human contamination with fomites through foods, enrichment and structures Water channel shared by 32 other NHP species of zoo | Interviews with zoo zookeepers and direct observations | ||||
Figure 1Mean rarefaction curves for each group (species/site). Error bars represent standard deviation.
Figure 2Boxplots of mean alpha diversity among Cameroon and zoo chimpanzees and gorillas for (a) ASV richness, (b) Faith PD index and (c) Shannon index. Pairwise comparisons were performed with Mann–Whitney U test and Bonferroni correction for multiple testing. P < 0.001 (***).
Figure 3Dendrogram of Principal Component Analysis between samples based on: (a) Bray Curtis distance, (b) Weighted Unifrac distance and (c) Unweighted Unifrac distance. CG, Cameroon gorillas; CC, Cameroon chimpanzees; ZG, zoo gorillas; ZC, zoo chimpanzees.
Figure 4Phyla, families and genera with significant differences in relative abundance (corrected p-value < 0.05) between zoo (grey) and Cameroon (black) chimpanzees. The horizontal bars represent the ratio transformed in log10. C indicates the presence of taxa found only in Cameroon (absent in the zoo); Z indicates the presence of taxa found only in the zoo (absent in Cameroon); the # indicates no significant difference and the shows only phylum and family of corresponding genera.
Figure 5Phyla, families and genera with significant differences in relative abundance (corrected p-value < 0.05) between zoo (grey) and Cameroon (black) gorillas. The horizontal bars represent the ratio transformed in log10. C indicates the presence of taxa found only in Cameroon (absent in the zoo); Z indicates the presence of taxa found only in the zoo (absent in Cameroon); the # indicates no significant difference and the shows only phylum and family of corresponding genera.
Figure 6Location of the study area, southeastern Cameroon. The map was developed with QGIS software v. 3.4.3 (https://qgis.org/fr/site/). Sources of layers: www.wri.org (cities and regions); www.protectedplanet.net (protected areas).