2024
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2024.1374209
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Microbial communities are thermally more sensitive in warm-climate lizards compared with their cold-climate counterparts

Xia-Ming Zhu,
Jun-Qiong Chen,
Yu Du
et al.

Abstract: Environmental temperature affects the composition, structure, and function of the gut microbial communities in host animals. To elucidate the role of gut microbiota in thermal adaptation, we designed a 2 species × 3 temperatures experiment, whereby we acclimated adult males of two agamid lizard species (warm-climate Leiolepis reevesii and cold-climate Phrynocephalus przewalskii) to 20, 28, and 36°C for 2 weeks and then collected their fecal and small-intestinal samples to analyze and compare the microbiota usi… Show more

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