生物
基因组
濒危物种
微生物群
肠道菌群
囚禁
生态学
微生物种群生物学
肠道微生物群
觅食
微生物生态学
栖息地
系统发育多样性
生态系统
微生物遗传学
动物
遗传多样性
供应
丰度(生态学)
生物多样性
失调
进化生物学
互惠主义(生物学)
作者
Du Zhang,Qi Hu,Yunyun Zhou,Huiliang Yu,Wei Cong,Minghao Cheng,Junwen Wang,Xueduan Liu,Kai Zou,Shuizhi Long,Chongnan Zhao,Jun Jiang,Yuguang Zhang
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41522-025-00836-1
摘要
Gut microbiota are crucial for the fitness of endangered wildlife, yet how different conservation strategies affect these microbial ecosystems and their metabolic activities remains insufficiently understood. This study employed integrated metagenomic and metabolomic analyses to compare the gut microbial communities and fecal metabolomes of endangered golden snub-nosed monkeys (Rhinopithecus roxellana) under three distinct conservation scenarios: natural wild, food provisioning, and captivity. We established a comprehensive species-specific gut microbial gene catalog and observed significant microbial and metabolic divergence associated with each conservation strategy. Monkeys in managed settings (captive and provisioned) exhibited larger gut microbial gene catalogs than wild individuals. While alpha diversity was highest in the provisioned group, both captive and provisioned groups showed notably altered microbial community structures and co-occurrence networks compared to the wild baseline. Captivity was linked to the most pronounced shifts, including a microbiome assembly more strongly governed by deterministic processes, reduced network stability, and an enrichment of habitat specialists, alongside an increased abundance of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) and virulence factors (VFs), and distinct alterations in microbiota-metabolite co-variation patterns, particularly concerning amino acid metabolism. These findings highlight that food provisioning, when managed to emulate natural conditions, is associated with a less disruptive microbial and metabolic profile than intensive captivity, offering crucial insights for developing microbiome-informed conservation practices to enhance the health and long-term viability of this endangered primate.
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