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Identifying the factors that structure host-associated microbiota is critical to understand the role these microbes may play in host ecology and evolutionary history. To begin to address this question we investigate the diversity and persistence of the bacterial community of the giant Neotropical bullet ant, Paraponera clavata. We included samples from four widely dispersed locations to address the role geography plays in shaping these communities. To understand how the digestive tract can filter bacterial communities, we sampled mouth and gut communities. To investigate the stability of community members we sampled wild caught and individuals kept on a sterile diet. Only a single bacterial taxon in the Firmicutes is consistently present across individuals, indicating a remarkably simple "core" bacterial community for the giant Neotropical bullet ant. Geography did not explain host bacterial diversity, but we did find significant reductions in diversity between the mouth and the gut tract. Lastly, our diet manipulations highlight the importance of controlled experiments to tease apart persistent microbial communities from environmental transients.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/icb/icx037 | DOI Listing |
Mol Phylogenet Evol
August 2025
Department of Biology, Southeast Missouri State University, Cape Girardeau, MO 63701, USA. Electronic address:
The delimitation of species boundaries has been a constant challenge to the fields of systematics, natural history, and conservation biology. Subtle and minor morphological differences in a widespread species complex make delimiting species boundaries particularly difficult. High throughput targeted sequencing of hundreds of loci has allowed researchers to obtain improved insights into evolutionary processes and resolved previously ambiguous phylogenetic relationships.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrob Pathog
August 2025
Laboratório de Protozoologia e Rickettsioses Vetoriais (ProtozooVet), Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil. Electronic address:
Hemoplasmas are bacteria that infect erythrocytes of a wide range of animals, including humans. This study investigated blood and tissue of twenty-two mustelids from Southern and Midwestern Brazil through cPCR targeting the 16S and 23S rRNA genes. Hemoplasma DNA was detected in Lontra longicaudis and Galictis cuja with an occurrence of 77 % (17/22).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Med Mushrooms
March 2025
Universidade Federal de São Carlos.
Mushrooms are an important source of food for animals. However, some species produce toxic compounds for humans. Moreover, some people can experience adverse health effects even when the consumed species is edible.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Helminthol
February 2025
Departamento de Zoología, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Ciudad Universitaria C. P. 04510, Ciudad de México, México.
Members of the genus Travassos, 1916 are generalist parasites able to infect a broad spectrum of carnivorous hosts, such as marsupials, procyonids, felids, and canids, and are distributed globally. Adult specimens were collected from the intestines of three white-nosed coatis (), whereas cystacanths (larval form) were found in the body cavities of two amphibian species (paratenic hosts) in localities from northern and southeastern Mexico. Morphologically, both stages were identified as (Travassos, 1917) on the basis of the following features: trunk cylindrical, narrow anteriorly, enlarging midbody, tapering gradually to narrow posteriorly; proboscis globular with six circular rows of hooks with six hooks each, decreasing in size posteriorly; neck short with sensory papilla; tubular lemnisci long, extending to the posterior region; protonephridia dendritic type; and eight cement glands, compact with a single giant nuclei.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlob Ecol Conserv
November 2024
Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Kamýcká 129, Praha - Suchdol 16500, Czech Republic.
The Neotropics are a global biodiversity hotspot that has undergone dramatic land use changes over the last decades. However, a temporal perspective on the continental-wide distributions of species in this region is still missing. To unveil it, we model the entire area of occupancy of five Neotropical carnivore species at two time periods (2000-2013 and 2014-2021) using integrated species distribution models (ISDMs) in a Bayesian framework.
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