Dear MARMAM community,

On behalf of my co-authors, I am very happy to share our new publication in
PLOS ONE
"Characterising the gut microbiome of stranded harbour seals (*Phoca
vitulina*) in rehabilitation."

The article is Open access, it is available here:
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0295072

Abstract

Animal rehabilitation centres provide a unique opportunity to study the
microbiome of wild animals because subjects will be handled for their
treatment and can therefore be sampled longitudinally. However,
rehabilitation may have unintended consequences on the animals’ microbiome
because of a less varied and suboptimal diet, possible medical treatment
and exposure to a different environment and human handlers. Our study
describes the gut microbiome of two large seal cohorts, 50 pups (0–30 days
old at arrival) and 23 weaners (more than 60 days old at arrival) of
stranded harbour seals admitted for rehabilitation at the Sealcentre
Pieterburen in the Netherlands, and the effect of rehabilitation on it.
Faecal samples were collected from all seals at arrival, two times during
rehabilitation and before release. Only seals that did not receive
antimicrobial treatment were included in the study. The average time in
rehabilitation was 95 days for the pups and 63 days for the weaners. We
observed that during rehabilitation, there was an increase in the relative
abundance of some of the *Campylobacterota spp* and *Actinobacteriota spp*.
The alpha diversity of the pups’ microbiome increased significantly during
their rehabilitation (p-value <0.05), while there were no significant
changes in alpha diversity over time for weaners. We hypothesize that aging
is the main reason for the observed changes in the pups’ microbiome. At
release, the sex of a seal pup was significantly associated with the
microbiome’s alpha (i.e., Shannon diversity was higher for male pups,
p-value <0.001) and beta diversity (p-value 0.001). For weaners, variation
in the microbiome composition (beta diversity) at release was partly
explained by sex and age of the seal (p-values 0.002 and 0.003
respectively). We mainly observed variables known to change the gut
microbiome composition (e.g., age and sex) and conclude that rehabilitation
in itself had only minor effects on the gut microbiome of seal pups and
seal weaners.

Please feel free to reach out if you have any questions.

Best wishes,

Ana Rubio-Garcia
Head of the Veterinary, Care and Research departments
ana.rubiogar...@zeehondencentrum.nl
+31(0)6 12981154



*SEAL, SEA, SCIENCE.*

*DOE JE MEE?*

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Hoofdstraat 94a

9968 AG Pieterburen

T +31 (0)595 526 526

E: *i...@zeehondencentrum.nl <i...@zeehondencentrum.nl>*

www.zeehondencentrum.nl

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