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FLORA AND FAUNA
The guts of vultures harbor microbes deadly to humans
by Brooks Hays
Copenhagen, Denmark (UPI) Nov 25, 2014


Scientists confirm new bird species in Indonesia
Jakarta (UPI) Nov 25, 2014 - The Sulawesi streaked flycatcher -- named after the Indonesia island it's found on -- was first observed 15 years ago. But a team of researchers have only recently been able to collect and analyze the bird's DNA, confirming the species' genetic distinctiveness.

In a new paper, researchers from Michigan State University, Princeton University and the Indonesian Institute of Sciences describe the Sulawesi streaked flycatcher (Muscicapa sodhii) as characterized by its short wings and tail, a sharply hooking beak, as well as a mottled throat.

Researchers say the new species sings a slightly different song than the bird's fly-catching relatives. While its whistles, chirps and trills are similar to other Asian species, the Sulawesi streaked flycatcher is higher pitched than its avian cousins.

"We were lucky to be able to make the first known recording of this bird singing," researcher Pam Rasmussen, assistant curator of mammalogy and ornithology at the Michigan State University Museum, said in a press release.

The work of Rasmussen and her colleagues -- and the specifics of the new species -- was published in the latest issue of the science journal PLOS ONE.

Researchers hope the new species recognition will lead to great protections for it and its preferred habitat, lowland and submontane forests on the Indonesian island.

"At this point, the species is not at risk for extinction," Rasmussen said. "However, this could change if agriculture intensifies in this region."

"Considering that 98 percent of the world's birds have been described, finding a new species is quite rare," added study co-author J.C. Berton Harris, a postdoctoral fellow at Princeton. "And despite being a globally important avian hotspot, Sulawesi has largely gone unstudied by ornithologists."

Dozens of recent scientific studies have looked the microbiomes of the human body, the collection of microbes in and on the full array of human organs, including gut, mouth, skin and lungs. But until recently, no one had thought to study the microbial colonies of carcass-eating vultures.

The dearth of scientific data on the microbiomes of New World vultures is no more, thanks to a group of researchers at the University of Copenhagen. As it turns out, the microbial makeup of a vulture is almost the mirror opposite of that of a human.

Whereas humans house a complex internal ecosystem of thousands of microbes, with only a few hundred or so on their extremities, vultures feature a smorgasbord of microbes on their beak and face (528 kinds of bacteria, to be exact) while hosting only 76 types of microbes in their intestines.

"They're sticking their heads into decaying carcasses, so it's not surprising that their faces have so many kinds of bacteria," study co-author Gary Graves told The Washington Post. "But when you get to the lower intestine, it's dominated by a small number of very common bacteria. There's a huge reduction from what they actually consumed."

Graves is the curator of birds for the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History; he was one a few scientists who collaborated with the Danish researchers on the new study.

As the microbes descend into the guts of the vulture, researchers explain, only a few dozen are able to survive -- a sort of race-to-the-bottom bacterial competition. The germs that survive and thrive in the bowels of these filthy birds would make many humans deathly ill.

Clostridia and Fusobacteria are two of the big winners of intestinal clash. Clostridia is the microbe responsible for human infections like botulism, gangrene, and tetanus. Fusobacteria can cause gum disease and encourage ulcers, and may also play a role in the development of colon cancer.

"On one hand, vultures have developed an extremely tough digestive system, which simply acts to destroy the majority of the dangerous bacteria they ingest," study author Michael Roggenbuck, a researcher of microbiology at the University of Copenhagen, said in a released statement. "On the other hand, vultures also appear to have developed a tolerance toward some of the deadly bacteria -- species that would kill other animals actively seem to flourish in the vulture lower intestine."

Researchers aren't sure if the microbes are simply tolerated or encouraged. Though these dangerous bacterium types do outcompete their way to a position of dominance in the vulture's gut, they also likely provide some sort of benefit to the animal. More research will be needed to determine what exactly those benefits might be.

Researchers hope further analysis could offer clues as to how vultures tolerate such volatile microbes, and potentially lead to insights as to how to battle them when they cause trouble for humans.

The study was published in the journal Nature Communications.


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