Advances in the study of microbiota in reproductive biology: A short review of recent research, following Leclaire et al. (2022).
Sondra C TurjemanPublished in: Molecular ecology (2023)
Research on microbiota dynamics in humans (Gilbert et al., 2018), model organisms (Douglas, 2019), and free-ranging, wild animals (Grond et al., 2018) has taken off in the past decades, and even in nonmodel organisms, research has already shifted from initial characterization studies to those examining associations with behaviour and fitness (Bodawatta et al., 2022; Corl et al., 2020; Risely et al., 2018; Turjeman et al., 2020). The microbiota is known to change through pregnancy and parturition (Koren et al., 2012), and there is also evidence in humans that infertility may be associated with microbiota composition (Silva & Giacobini, 2019), but how the microbiota is related to reproductive fitness in free-ranging species is largely understudied or primarily focused on pathogen transmission (sexually transmitted infection) (Lombardo, 1998; Sheldon, 1993). In a From the Cover article in this issue of Molecular Ecology, Leclaire et al. (2022) begin to tease apart the relationship between the microbiota and reproductive fitness using the black-legged kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla) as their study species. Following characterization of the microbiota in multiple body sites of breeders and nonbreeders, they discovered that breeding and nonbreeding females had distinct microbiota, that higher performing female breeders had lower abundances of potentially pathogenic taxa, and that feathers of these birds were characterized by reduced microbiota diversity compared to low-performance breeders. Leclaire and her colleagues provide some of the first evidence of body-wide differences in microbiota composition in relation to breeding status. Their research further supports the relationship between the microbiota and host fitness, and additional studies focusing on this topic can continue to unravel intricacies in host-microbiota-reproductive strategy evolution (Comizzoli et al., 2021; Rowe et al., 2020). Here, I review the results of Leclaire et al. (2022) and provide a wider context for their research by reviewing other studies in the field, focusing on avian species.