Investigation into the Relationship between Gut Microbiota of Cranes and Their Feeding Environment in the Yellow River Delta
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The gut microbiota plays essential roles in host health and environmental adaptation, particularly for migratory birds within wetland ecosystems. This study examined the gut microbial communities of common cranes ( Grus grus ) and White Cranes( Grus leucogeranus ) in the Yellow River Delta using 16S rRNA sequencing of 24 fecal and foraging samples. Alpha diversity (ACE, Chao1, Shannon, Simpson) revealed significant inter-group differences, indicating environmental filtering effects. Beta diversity (PCoA) confirmed strong separation between foraging and fecal samples (PC1 = 25%). Dominant phyla included Proteobacteria (24.6–37.4%), Firmicutes (4.8–29.0%), and Actinobacteriota (12.4–23.3%), with genus-level biomarkers identified via LEfSe: Ligilactobacillus (12.1% in DYH), Cryobacterium (9.2% in DYB), and Rhodococcus (5.4% in DYH). SourceTracker indicated predominantly unknown microbial origins (> 70%), suggesting uncharacterized environmental reservoirs. Functional prediction highlighted group-specific metabolic adaptations, including elevated amino acid transport in DYH (9.8% vs. 7.1% in DYBT; P < 0.05) and conserved defense mechanisms (8.5% across groups). Our findings demonstrate that crane gut microbiota is shaped by synergistic host foraging behavior and wetland environmental factors. This study provides novel insights into host-microbe-environment interactions in migratory birds and suggests potential microbial indicators for monitoring wetland ecosystem health.