Social Microbial Transmission in a Solitary Mammal
: Petrullo, Lauren; Webber, Quinn; Raulo, Aura; Boutin, Stan; Lane, Jeffrey E.; McAdam, Andrew G.; Dantzer, Ben
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
: 2025
: Ecology Letters
: Ecology Letters
: e70186
: 28
: 8
: 1461-023X
: 1461-0248
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/ele.70186
: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ele.70186
: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/499678638
Microbial transmission is hypothesised to be a major benefit of sociality, facilitated by affiliative behaviours such as grooming and communal nesting in group-living animals. Whether microbial transmission is also present in animals that do not form groups because territoriality limits interactions and prevents group formation remains unknown. Here, we investigate relationships among gut microbiota, population density and dynamic behavioural and spatial measures of territoriality in wild North American red squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus). Periods of high population density predicted population-level gut microbial homogeneity but individual-level diversification, alongside changes in obligately anaerobic, non-sporulating taxa indicative of social transmission. Microbial alpha-diversity increased with more frequent territorial intrusions, and pairs with stronger intrusion-based social associations had more similar gut microbiota. As some of the first evidence for social microbial transmission in a solitary system, our findings suggest that fluctuations in density and territorial behaviours can homogenise and diversify host microbiomes among otherwise non-interacting animals.
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This work was supported by funds from the University of Arizona, the University of Michigan, the National Science Foundation (DEB-2010726 to Lauren Petrullo, DEB-0515849 to Andrew G. McAdam, IOS-1749627 to Ben Dantzer, and DEB-2338394 to Andrew G. McAdam and Ben Dantzer) and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada to (Stan Boutin, Andrew G. McAdam, Jeffrey E. Lane, Quinn Webber). This is KRSP paper #131.