Experimental old nest material predicts hoopoe Upupa epops eggshell and uropygial gland microbiota.
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Díaz Lora, Silvia; Martín-Vivaldi Martínez, Manuel; Juárez García-Pelayo, Natalia; Azcárate García, Manuel; Rodríguez Ruano, Sonia; Martínez Bueno, Manuel; Soler, Juan JoséEditorial
WILEY
Materia
Symbiotic bacteria Bird ecology Antiparasite defense Mode of transmission Horizontal transmission Vertical transmission Hole nesting Nest material Nest re-use Symbiotic organ
Fecha
2019Referencia bibliográfica
Díaz-Lora S., Martín-Vivaldi M., Juárez García-Pelayo N., Azcárate García M., Rodríguez-Ruano S.M., Martínez-Bueno M. & Soler J.J. (2019) Experimental old nest material predicts hoopoe Upupa epops eggshell and uropygial gland microbiota. Journal of Avian Biology 50.
Patrocinador
Silvia Díaz Lora was financed by a predoctoral contract (BES-2014-069116) and research by three projects from the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades, and European (FEDER) funds (CGL2013-48193-C3-1-P, CGL2013-48193-C3-2-P and CGL2017-83103-P).Resumen
Nest re-use in birds has the potential cost of infection by parasites and pathogens
but may also be a source of beneficial symbiotic bacteria transmitted horizontally.
Eurasian hoopoes Upupa epops host antibiotic-producing bacteria in their uropygial
gland but only while breeding, which suggests that the nest-hole may be a source
of those symbionts. Interestingly, hoopoes do not build nests, thus might prefer for
reproduction nest holes with soft materials from previous reproductions. Here, we
tested experimentally this preference by installing in the field new nest boxes that
were left empty or filled with either sawdust or a mixture of sawdust and hoopoe’s
nest material from the previous year. We explored the experimental effect on the
composition of the uropygial secretion bacterial community, on eggshell bacterial
loads, and on several proxies of reproductive success. Hoopoes bred significantly more
often in nest boxes with nest material than in empty ones, but the type of nest material
did not affect nest box occupancy. Eggs in nest boxes with old-soft material harbored
higher bacterial density on their shells, and the microbiota of the uropygial secretion
of nestlings and females in these nest boxes differed from those in nest boxes without
old-soft material. Moreover, although the experiment did not affect breeding success or
related proxies, several operational taxonomic units from female uropygial secretions
were positively associated with hatching success. This is the first experimental evidence
showing that re-used nest material affects the bacterial community of the uropygial
secretions of hoopoe females. This suggests that the nest material can be a source of
strains for their incorporation to both the uropygial gland and eggshell communities,
highlighting a possible advantage of nest re-use previously unconsidered.