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The time-course of broiler intestinal microbiota development after administration of cecal contents to incubating eggs
journal contribution
posted on 2018-05-23, 00:00 authored by Emma Donaldson, Dragana StanleyDragana Stanley, RJ Hughes, RJ MooreBackground. The microbial populations that inhabit the gastrointestinal tract (GIT) are known to influence the health and growth performance of the host. Clean hatcheries and machine-based incubation practices in the commercial poultry industry can lead to the acquisition of aberrant microbiota in the GIT of chickens and a very high level of bird-to-bird variation. The lack of microbial profile flock uniformity presents challenges for harnessing and manipulating intestinal bacteria to better serve the host. Methods. Cecal contents from high or low performing chickens were used to inoculate the surface of eggs prior to hatching and then the initial gut colonisation was monitored and subsequent changes in gut microbiota composition were followed over time. Two different cecal treatment groups were compared to an untreated control group (n=32). Bacterial communities were characterised using high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing techniques. Results. Cecal microbiota transfer via egg surface application did not transfer the performance profile of the donors to the recipient birds. One of the cecal inoculations provided a more uniform gut microbiota, but this was not reproduced in the second group with a different inoculum. Development of the intestinal community was reproducible in all three groups with some genera like Lactobacillus showing no change, others like Faecalibacterium increased in abundance slowly and steadily over time and others like Enterobacter were abundant only in the first days of life. Discussion. The cecal treatment reduced bird-to-bird variation in microbiota compo-sition. Although the high FCR performance of donor birds was not transferred with the cecal microbiota, all three groups, including the control, performed better than standard for the breed. The pattern of microbiota development was similar in all three flocks, indicating that the normal processes of microbiota acquisition largely swamped any effect of the cecal material applied to eggs. © 2017 Donaldson et al.
Funding
Category 4 - CRC Research Income
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Volume
5Start Page
1End Page
19Number of Pages
19eISSN
2167-8359Publisher
PeerJ, UKPublisher DOI
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CC-BY 4.0Peer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- Yes
Acceptance Date
2017-06-27External Author Affiliations
University of New England; South Australian Research and Development Institute; The University of Adelaide; RMITAuthor Research Institute
- Institute for Future Farming Systems
Era Eligible
- Yes
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