Humanization of wildlife gut microbiota in urban environments

0301 basic medicine archaea QH301-705.5 Science Animals, Wild metagenome 03 medical and health sciences 11. Sustainability Animals Humans Biology (General) Cities bacteria canis 2. Zero hunger anolis Ecology Bacteria Q Urbanization transmission R Lizards 15. Life on land Gastrointestinal Microbiome 13. Climate action Medicine
DOI: 10.7554/elife.76381 Publication Date: 2022-05-31T00:00:19Z
ABSTRACT
Urbanization is rapidly altering Earth’s environments, demanding investigation of the impacts on resident wildlife. Here, we show that urban populations of coyotes (Canis latrans), crested anole lizards (Anolis cristatellus), and white-crowned sparrows (Zonotrichia leucophrys) acquire gut microbiota constituents found in humans, including gut bacterial lineages associated with urbanization in humans. Comparisons of urban and rural wildlife and human populations revealed significant convergence of gut microbiota among urban populations relative to rural populations. All bacterial lineages overrepresented in urban wildlife relative to rural wildlife and differentially abundant between urban and rural humans were also overrepresented in urban humans relative to rural humans. Remarkably, the bacterial lineage most overrepresented in urban anoles was a Bacteroides sequence variant that was also the most significantly overrepresented in urban human populations. These results indicate parallel effects of urbanization on human and wildlife gut microbiota and suggest spillover of bacteria from humans into wildlife in cities.
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