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Erratum: Rumen microbial community composition varies with diet and host, but a core microbiome is found across a wide geographical range

Authors :
Henderson, Gemma
Cox, Faith
Ganesh, Siva
Jonker, Arjan
Young, Wayne
Abecia, Leticia
Angarita, Erika
Aravena, Paula
Nora Arenas, Graciela
Ariza, Claudia
Attwood, Graeme T.
Mauricio Avila, Jose
Avila-stagno, Jorge
Bannink, André
Barahona, Rolando
Batistotti, Mariano
Bertelsen, Mads F.
Brown-Kav, Aya
Carvajal, Andres M.
Cersosimo, Laura
Vieira Chaves, Alexandre
Church, John
Clipson, Nicholas
Cobos-peralta, Mario A.
Cookson, Adrian L.
Cravero, Silvio
Cristobal Carballo, Omar
Crosley, Katie
Cruz, Gustavo
Cerón Cucchi, María
de la Barra, Rodrigo
de Menezes, Alexandre B.
Detmann, Edenio
Dieho, Kasper
Dijkstra, Jan
Dos Reis, William L.S.
Dugan, Mike E.R.
Hadi Ebrahimi, Seyed
Eythórsdóttir, Emma
Nde Fon, Fabian
Fraga, Martín
Franco, Francisco
Friedeman, Chris
Fukuma, Naoki
Gagić, Dragana
Gangnat, Isabelle
Javier Grilli, Diego
Guan, Le Luo
Heidarian Miri, Vahideh
Hernandez-Sanabria, Emma
Gomez, Alma Ximena Ibarra
Isah, Olubukola A.
Ishaq, Suzanne
Jami, Elie
Jelincic, Juan
Kantanen, Juha
Kelly, William J.
Kim, Seon-Ho
Klieve, Athol
Kobayashi, Yasuo
Koike, Satoshi
Kopecny, Jan
Nygaard Kristensen, Torsten
Julie Krizsan, Sophie
Lachance, Hannah
Lachman, Medora
Lamberson, William R.
Lambie, Suzanne
Lassen, Jan
Leahy, Sinead C.
Lee, Sang-Suk
Leiber, Florian
Lewis, Eva
Lin, Bo
Lira, Raúl
Lund, Peter
Macipe, Edgar
Mamuad, Lovelia L.
Cuquetto Mantovani, Hilário
Marcoppido, Gisela Ariana
Márquez, Cristian
Martin, Cécile
Martinez, Gonzalo
Eugenia Martinez, Maria
Lucía Mayorga, Olga
McAllister, Tim A.
McSweeney, Chris
Mestre, Lorena
Minnee, Elena
Mitsumori, Makoto
Mizrahi, Itzhak
Molina, Isabel
Muenger, Andreas
Muñoz, Camila
Murovec, Bostjan
Newbold, John
Nsereko, Victor
O’donovan, Michael
Okunade, Sunday
O’neill, Brendan
Ospina, Sonia
Ouwerkerk, Diane
Parra, Diana
Pereira, Luiz Gustavo Ribeiro
Pinares-patiño, Cesar
Pope, Phil B.
Poulsen, Morten
Rodehutscord, Markus
Rodriguez, Tatiana
Saito, Kunihiko
Sales, Francisco
Sauer, Catherine
Shingfield, Kevin
Shoji, Noriaki
Simunek, Jiri
Stojanović-Radić, Zorica
Stres, Blaz
Sun, Xuezhao
Swartz, Jeffery
Liang Tan, Zhi
Tapio, Ilma
Taxis, Tasia M.
Tomkins, Nigel
Ungerfeld, Emilio
Valizadeh, Reza
van Adrichem, Peter
van Hamme, Jonathan
van Hoven, Woulter
Waghorn, Garry
Wallace, John R.
Wang, Min
Waters, Sinéad M.
Keogh, Kate
Witzig, Maren
Wright, Andre-Denis G.
Yamano, Hidehisa
Yan, Tianhai
Yáñez-ruiz, David R.
Yeoman, Carl J.
Zambrano, Ricardo
Zeitz, Johanna
Zhou, Mi
Wei Zhou, Hua
Xia Zou, Cai
Zunino, Pablo
Janssen, Peter H.
Source :
Scientific Reports 6 (2016), Scientific Reports, 6
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Ruminant livestock are important sources of human food and global greenhouse gas emissions. Feed degradation and methane formation by ruminants rely on metabolic interactions between rumen microbes and affect ruminant productivity. Rumen and camelid foregut microbial community composition was determined in 742 samples from 32 animal species and 35 countries, to estimate if this was influenced by diet, host species, or geography. Similar bacteria and archaea dominated in nearly all samples, while protozoal communities were more variable. The dominant bacteria are poorly characterised, but the methanogenic archaea are better known and highly conserved across the world. This universality and limited diversity could make it possible to mitigate methane emissions by developing strategies that target the few dominant methanogens. Differences in microbial community compositions were predominantly attributable to diet, with the host being less influential. There were few strong co-occurrence patterns between microbes, suggesting that major metabolic interactions are non-selective rather than specific.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....52ac36edded679f71999a8384c669623