1. A survey of the oral cavity microbiome of New Zealand fur seal pups (Arctocephalus forsteri).
- Author
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Emami‐Khoyi, Arsalan, Benmazouz, Isma, Ross, James G., Boren, Laura J., Murphy, Elaine C., Jansen van Vuuren, Bettine, Teske, Peter R., and Paterson, Adrian M.
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MICROBIOLOGY ,MEDICAL sciences ,MARINE mammals ,INFORMATION theory ,MICROBIAL ecology ,FUR ,BOTTLENOSE dolphin ,LACTATION - Abstract
New Zealand fur seals, I Arctocephalus forsteri i (NZFS hereafter), experienced a catastrophic decline in population size with the onset of commercial sealing in the southern hemisphere, from the 18th to the early 19th century (Lento, Mattlin, Chambers, & Baker, [38]). Despite the critical role of the oral cavity microbiome in the survival of NZFS pups and other marine mammals, its diversity and structure are still unknown. GLO:KQE/01jan20:mms12639-fig-0001.jpg PHOTO (COLOR): The different steps in the pool sequence analysis of New Zealand fur seal (NZFS) pups' oral cavity microbiome diversity. The microbiome structure in the oral cavities of NZFS pups resembles those already reported from the oral cavities of dolphins ( I Tursiops truncatus i ) and sea lions I (Zalophus californianus i ) (Bik et al., [9]). [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2020
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